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Self destructive behaviour after a break up?

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  • #156086
    Mina
    Participant

    Hello guys. I just very recently had a break up, and even though we broke on good terms – I found myself to find the break up very hard to accept. Me and my ex are still very much good friends, we don’t contact each other but we know that we will always love and support each other. To give you a general background, he broke up with me due to the fact that he will move to another college and will also have to serve a mandatory military service for 2 years. I expected this break up coming because … it is just obvious that we will definitely break up due to distance and military service (no phone, only 20 days of holiday per year). We are both are only 19, its our first semester at college. He decided that it was too much for him. I completely understand because I know how it feels to be just so young and feeling lost, you dont even know yourself, how can you take care of other people? But I spend the last week in my house, I didn’t eat, I didn’t take showers, I cannot sleep, I didn’t interact with anyone, I basically was not living my life. I realise that I do all of this because I was still in denial, My brain accepted that its done for, but my heart somehow cannot let go. I was hoping that by doing this, time will stop. At least MY time will stop. My time stops at the time he broke up with me. If I continue living, it means that I am accepting the break up and accepting the fact that life EXIST after the break up. It has been really hard. I am not hoping for a reunion with this person, I dont have any unsaid words to him, I dont have anything against him … I really do wish him the best in his life because I genuinely think that we are the right person for each other – just the wrong time. I often feel really lonely, to the point that I feel like my heart cannot feel anything except for the loneliness. I dont like seeing couples, I just refuse to accept love exist to make you happy. I refuse the fact that after a relationship had ended you often question whether the love, the feelings and most importantly the person was real or not. People say that break ups are always hard, its a process and it takes time …. but I feel like I am kind of stuck here. I would appreciate any replies / responses. Thank you.

    Mina

    #156178
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Mina:

    You developed a strong emotional attachment to this man. What you are experiencing is the loss of that attachment. Maybe looking deeper into the nature of emotional attachment to another person will help you:

    The first and most powerful emotional attachment to another person that a child experiences is to one’s primary parent, the one there taking care of the baby/ young child. For the young child the attachment to the caring parent is something like this: there is no separation between herself (the child) and the parent. The two are one entity, in the child’s mind. The thought, if it occurs, of losing the parent feels like death, certain and immediate death. There is no existence possible, in the perception of the child, without the parent.

    We forget, as we age, how we felt as young children. And then we get involved romantically, as you have. In your relationship, you formed the same kind of attachment with added romance and physical intimacy to it, an intimacy of  a different kind, but the attachment is the same. When the relationship ended, it feels like death, just like it would have felt if you lost your caring parent as a young child.

    This response to the loss of emotional attachment cannot be otherwise: having mutually agreed to the breakup, having predicted it, knowing it is the right thing, wishing him well… all these do not change the nature of attachment. Losing it feels like death.

    It is not “self destructive behavior” that you are experiencing, I believe. It is the loss of emotional attachment.

    I hope you post again with your thoughts and feelings.

    anita

    #156252
    Mina
    Participant

    Dear Anita,

    Your reply truly have change my perspective.

    You mentioned “Maybe looking deeper into the nature of emotional attachment to another person will help you” can you elaborate more on this thing? If it is the loss of emotional attachment, how can I let go and most importantly how do I get back up again? I appreciate your response very much.  Thank you.

    #156256
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Mina:

    You are welcome.

    In case it isn’t clear, I qualified emotional attachment “to another person” because people do get attached to things, which is not the case here.

    Looking deeper at attachment is what I did in my reply to you. I can elaborate a bit more: when you formed an emotional attachment to your boyfriend, there was a feeling of safety in that attachment, for you, much like a baby feels in the arms of her mother, safe. The threat of losing the mother feels like a great danger because safety is taken away. In nature baby animals do die when losing their mother, so the feeling fits reality.

    In a romantic relationship, when you form an attachment, there is also the feeling of safety in it and when the relationship ends, so is the safe feeling and the person goes into a kind of shock, as if the ground you stood on is shaking and you can fall, or maybe you feel like you are falling.

    The good news is that you are not a baby or a young child and in reality, you will survive this. It only feels as bad as it feels, but it isn’t. Back to the comparison to the ground shaking underneath you: the ground will settle after a while and you will feel safe again.

    What to do in the meantime? Take good care of yourself, be kind to you just like you would be if a young child who lost her mother was in your care: be gentle with yourself at this time, rest, watch a good movie, listen to your favorite music, take a nice walk, a nice bath, etc. Don’t look far into the future, take one hour, one day at a time. Eventually the ground will settle and you will feel okay again.

    anita

    #156382
    Mina
    Participant

    Dear Anita,

    Thank you for your amazing reply again. I understand your point, but I have a question regarding this break up that I feel like you might have an opinion on. One of the way that I have been effectively dealing with this break up is by thinking and having the mindset that we broke up BECAUSE we love each other. Him letting me go, and me letting him go is the biggest proof of our love. Just because we are not with that person due to several conditions does NOT change a thing about how we felt for each other. We will love and take care of each silently and from afar. It is just right now – we are not in a place to have a long term commitment. I express this mindset to several people, some agrees, some strongly disagrees thinking that by having this mindset – it means that I am not moving on with my life. What I am saying is that sometimes love itself isn’t enough to keep a relationship going, which on my case is true. But it doesn’t change the fact that its was love, is love and probably in the future will always be love.

    I would appreciate your opinion – Anita. Thank you very much.

    -Mina

    #156386
    Mina
    Participant

    And to just make it a little more clearer, I am not hoping for any kind of reunion with him in the future. I just want me and him (us) to still be a part of each other’s live in a way, by wishing each other well. I just genuinely think this person is still an amazing person and a friend regardless of the break up. It is true that I had a lot of attachment to this man as a partner, but I have the intention to keep the friendship going. He also agrees on this. What I mean by staying friends is that we contact each other 2-3 times a week on special occasions like birthday etc and maybe saying hi when we accidentally bump into each other instead of avoiding each other.

    -Mina

    #156388
    Mina
    Participant

    I mean 2-3 times a year not a week. Sorry for the confusion.

    -Mina

    #156418
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Mina:

    You are welcome and thank you for your appreciation.

    I will be back to your post in the morning, about ten hours from now, with a better ability to focus.

    anita

    #156430
    Mina
    Participant

    Anita,

    Thank you. I will be waiting.

    #156436
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Mina:

    I re- read your original post and it reads very reasonable to me. I am impressed that you are only 19 and showing more clarity of thinking and understanding than a lot of people of any age.

    Regarding your posts from yesterday and my input on various parts of it:

    “we broke up BECAUSE we love each other. Him letting me go, and me letting him go is the biggest proof of our love”- I agree. It was loving to break up so that he can have the peace of mind he will need doing his military service and studying in a distant college. The break up will prevent unnecessary distress for the two of you, and that is definitely loving.

    “Just because we are not with that person due to several conditions does NOT change a thing about how we felt for each other.”- I agree.

    “We will love and take care of each silently and from afar.”- I don’t agree or disagree because I can’t predict the future and neither can you, or him.

    “It is just right now – we are not in a place to have a long term commitment.”- I agree, very reasonable, logical, makes sense.

    “… some strongly disagrees thinking that by having this mindset – it means that I am not moving on with my life”- would have been true (that you will not move on with your life) only if loving him “silently and from afar,” meant that you will not be available for another relationship any time in the future, being occupied with loving him “silently and from afar”, expecting him to do the same. But your second post yesterday clarifies that these are not your expectations, that you are okay with a limited friendship, which you specified. Therefore, I disagree… with those people who disagree with your mindset.

    “What I am saying is that sometimes love itself isn’t enough to keep a relationship going, which on my case is true. But it doesn’t change the fact that its was love, is love and probably in the future will always be love”- I agree with the qualifying note that the love you are expecting is of the limited friendship kind that you specified in your second post yesterday.

    I hope you feel better soon, that you adjust to the breakup. Give it time as you take good care of yourself and please do post again anytime. I will be glad to reply.

    anita

     

    #156468
    Mina
    Participant

    Anita,

    thank you very much for the helpful and detailed feedback, it feels really great hearing a compliment from you. I genuinely think that you’re giving so many helpful advices to so many people here, and I think you have a gift yourself. I do wish that I would get through this break up very soon, it has not been very easy but I know that I will be able to love again someday (hopefully soon) and I have to start that with loving myself again. thank you, once again. x

    -Mina

    #156516
    Anonymous
    Guest

    You are welcome, Mina, and thank you for your kind words. I believe you will be able to love again, sooner than you think. Your clarity and maturity of thinking are very promising. Till your next post, take good care of yourself.

    anita

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