Home→Forums→Relationships→Trying to deal with anxiety and loss after relationship break up
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August 10, 2020 at 12:41 pm #364341KkasxoParticipant
@ Shelbyville,
Dont be silly! Nobody expects a perfect, fairy tale happy ending. I for one am of the belief that life is all round pretty shitty with snippets of happiness… I sound like a real party pooper but it’s my truth anyway! Do fairy tales even exist? Probably not, life is a ‘journey’ haha! I should put a stamp on that word the amount of times I have used that.
I think with the new job prospects and dating and just generally, you are sounding a lot more confident and that ‘comfort zone’ is getting bigger and bigger. Although change will always feel scary, I don’t think you realise just how far you have actually come! The Shelby I know was afraid, this Shelby is shaking BUT still ready to conquer the world – so lovely to see that! My soul is a little lighter hearing from you and how much you are growing and learning and healing!
I think you are right. I think I needed Mr A at the time. Maybe to some extent I always will, after all a lot of history and trauma bonding although beyond comprehension is a real thing. But I am definitely more aware now. I was in absolute despair then. I feel a bit more woke now. So the journey continues.
@Tim oh how I would’ve used and abused that male advice some time ago! I would’ve done anything for a male perspective on things! Nonetheless, thank you very much! Who knows, maybe I will take you up on that sometime 🙂
@Lucie, that definitely does sound like panic attacks. I think therapy was a major major major part of my healing. I didn’t really see it then, and especially not during my therapy as I mostly hit my lowest at that point. You know when they say it gets a lot worse before it can get better? That was me. Therapy was painful – that’s the easiest way to put it. There were times I avoided going and really just wanted to end it there and then because it was too much! I didn’t know how to cope. But I’m grateful I persevered because it really did make a world of a difference and to be honest, saved my life. Therapy taught me how to not avoid my feelings. Because that’s what I did, distracted myself away from the triggers, kept busy, pretended I was okay when really I’d research how to kill myself in the quickest way possible. Therapy made me feel less alone, it gave me the knowledge that I am not the only one suffering. That I’m not actually weird, or broken, and that these are all human responses. It made me love my body and soul for creating these responses with the aim to protect me. Once I finished therapy I was able to put everything I’ve learnt into practice and that’s actually when the real journey began. Identifying my triggers, learning about myself all over again.
If you read back on some posts you’ll know that sleep was and still sometimes is a major thing for me, that is usually when my flashbacks happen and then I eventually just refuse to sleep to avoid them. I’d rather be exhausted than have my brain exhaust me with painful flashbacks. Whilst I’ve never been on medication and hopefully won’t be in the future, I do take supplements, Serotone 5HTP occasionally, particularly when I’m having a bad ‘no sleep’ episode again and I’ve found them to be really really helpful.i would really recommend you visit the MYPTSD forum, it was a God send when I couldn’t understand what was happening to me!
August 11, 2020 at 9:48 am #364450LucieParticipant@Kkasxo thank you so much for your reply! You don’t know how much it helps. Actually this whole thread by @shelbyville has kept me going. I’ve been trying to cope by this all myself. To read you managed to adapt and survive a combination of PTSD, anxiety and depression without meds has given me so much needed hope. I can’t afford meds or therapy but i was scared i would end up drugged up to my eyeballs to survive. I know it helps so many but I rather try the above recommendation then become reliant on medication. You are such a fighter. Thanks for the advice on the PTSD forum. I’ll definitely check it out.
If any other questions come up can i message you on here?
August 12, 2020 at 3:59 am #364521SammyParticipant@Tim @Shelbyville where are you???? please do not give up on me, reading your replies keeps me going. I’m finding this whole experience even more isolating since booze came into the mix.
August 12, 2020 at 3:11 pm #364603TimParticipant@Sammy – sorry I did not get a notification. What’s bothering you?
I think you are so focused on getting to the finishing line asap, but let me tell you all of these trials and setbacks are normal, try to heed sage advice and you will get there faster with less pain but in the end, what happens is down to you. Yes, you have the control, even if it feels like you are spiraling out of control, it takes a small adjustment in that mind, to steer you back from the edge. Letting emotions flow so you can set goals and make more decisions. See the relationship as a rehearsal it was just preparing you for a better and stronger one, so persevere despite the mishaps.
Are you using a buddy or are @Shelbyville and I your buddies? I detect sarcasm or at least I hope in this comment;
” I now wait until midday to drink…can I toast to that? Progress?” You can toast to any progress with a pint of milk or orange juice.
It can feel incredibly isolating and lonely after a break-up, we become tired of friends and family repeating the same realistic advice which is always correct but never quite registers because we are wanting to hear that hope, the answers to make us feel better, I am happy to provide conversation to at least make that loneliness less overwhelming and ease up on the advice on the basis you on your side undergo the work to resolve the issues; letting go, self-worth and drinking, Work on these and before you know it that loving long term relationship you desire will happen.
I’ll try not to take offense to your sexist digs :P, after all, you are hurting, us men can be “Thirsty” but not all of us are after primarily sex, we want cuddles and companionship too!
August 13, 2020 at 6:06 am #364599TimParticipant@Kkasxo – Haha, I feel the same at times, the pain I could have avoided if I had some sound neutral female advice to navigate the ex! You are welcome to use and abuse my assistance anytime! You seem to have turned a major corner, so kudos to you!
@Lucie – My offer still stands, I am of the opinion we should always give back. So I’m happy to cut into my sessions to ask any hypotheticals. @Kkasxo has given you some excellent insight there, I hope it helps and any other guidance required do ask. Without you having touched upon any of your story/ background, I will give you a few answers to your question, you can then assess which one best fits your circumstances.If someone hurt you can you really trust or be close to someone again?
Trust is broken when a partner puts their own needs and desires ahead of what’s best for your relationship. Trust is also damaged when partners break their promises or violate important expectations. It takes a lot of work to regain trust and in certain circumstances once broken it is irreparable so trying to repair it will do you damage such as;
Scenario 1: TOXIC relationship – manipulation, gaslighting, stonewalling (these are all forms of emotional abuse), and/or physical abuse.
Once you have been exposed to this or seen any red flags indicating a partner has these toxic tendencies, walk away, block, and never look back for your own sanity. This is easier said than done because toxic relationships by their very nature leave your self-esteem decimated and believing you’ll never be able to start fresh again or this is all you are worthy of, so you keep going back to a person who continues to abuse your trust. With healing and growth, you can let go, I have done it and countless others. It takes willpower and courage. With physical violence, if the situation has escalated and you feel it is dangerous to remove yourself immediately, seek help to create a safety plan through domestic abuse channels/law enforcement.
Scenario 2: Cheating
Any partner who cheats has issues such as dissatisfaction emotionally/ low self-esteem./sex addiction, etc – instead of communicating to resolve it with their partner they cheat without even contemplating the impact of their action. Cheats are emotionally stunted. Again leave, and walk away for good, very few undergo therapy/rehab/growth so most will continue to hurt if you stay, they will do it again because you have now become complicit to their behavior. You have indicated how far they can push the boundaries and you will still be willing to return. Again, when you walk away initially you will blame yourself, but it will be the best thing for your own emotional health.
Sometimes it is US. We feel hurt eg;Scenario 3: Feeling hurt due to High Expectations, Control issues, Fears or Baggage
Now with this scenario, it is possible to feel hurt but remain close to your partner by working on yourself. Sometimes in life, we have baggage, fears, high/unrealistic (key killer) expectations, and a lack of empathy for our partners so we feel hurt by their response to a certain scenario without looking at the bigger picture – does my partner on the majority of occasions show attentiveness, love, care, selflessness, wants to nurture the relationship or work on any mistakes? If the answer is yes, the reason you are feeling let down is YOU. The simplest solution to resolving this is introspection and communication. An example, my current partner, I felt very hurt and abandoned when she walked away, but it was my lack of vulnerability due to past baggage, my projections, etc which led her there. To blame her for the issues and not work through it would have resulted in me losing the opportunity of having a good woman by my side. We are all humans, we will make mistakes and let one another down but in a relationship it is about balance, picking up the slack on occasion as long as overall both are committed to growing the love and relationship. Manage expectations, assess the situation from both perspectives and as long as the person has not let you down consistently in a significant way I think a reality check should be carried out to check the validity of our thoughts, to prevent throwing away a perfectly normal relationship. A good link I checked out when getting back into a new relationship as I had put up walls which were causing me to behave in ways to protect myself but having a negative impact on my connection with my partner. https://www.harleytherapy.co.uk/counselling/feeling-let-down.htm
You have two choices: victimisation or resiliency to any hardship in life. Support is an essential component of a healthy relationship but do not rely fully on your partner to react to your needs in an exact way(control) or begin to look for security or validation in their actions. Be resilient and self-sufficient too so when you are faced with a scenario your partner can not be 100% there for you, you do not start to self victimise and feel hurt/abandoned like I was.
Hope that helps doll.
August 14, 2020 at 7:20 am #364748ShelbyvilleParticipantHi Sammy,
You are going through the mill right now. It’s not easy. Alcohol does not help. As I said I can’t offer advice on that end, as it wasn’t something that was part of my journey, but it does seem to be at the point where you may need external help to get through this difficult period. We can’t always do it all by ourselves. My therapy sessions have been invaluable to me at various times and the help of my GP with medication honestly got me to be able to see through the fog for a short time and now I don’t need it anymore.
From my perspective and this could be totally off, but lack of self worth didn’t come from the relationship with your ex. The relationship with your ex triggered a wound that was probably already there. Something from younger life. Anyway, you’re smart, you’re self aware. You can see what’s happening, even in the midst of a spiral. You don’t want to stay like this. But anything any of us on here say to you is not going to flip a switch inside you and magically make it all better. Enlightenment or growth or progress is a personal, internal trip. You might be ready to seek help, you might not. That’s okay. It takes time. It takes as long as it takes to reach where you want/need to be. But it does take a bit of discipline too, even if it’s not what you want to do. At some point, your higher self has to over rule your hurt self and make decisions in the best long term interest even if it’s not at all what you feel like doing.
Whether that’s binning all the booze or waking up every day and committing to going for a 3km walk somewhere, no excuses, no rainchecks. Little steps lead to big steps and we call all offer advice along the way. But it has to be you who takes the action. Words without action cause little change. It’s not easy to be strong when you’re heartbroken and hurt, so that’s why it’s important to start with little steps.
Tim,
Thanks for the insight, much appreciated. Some things resonate and others maybe not as relevant to my particular circumstances. I know many may think I caught feelings for the ‘friend’ and he has many lovely qualities, but months ago i was just getting to know him and now that I know him much better I do see that he actually is a little unreliable and flaky as a person! I’m still friends with him and we jest sometimes. But now I can see, that he’s not for me. And that’s okay. i could only figure that out with time, getting to know someone over a longer period of time. My new boundaries are about providing a space in my life for people who truly add to my life and who feel nourishing as I would offer them the same. It’s uncomfortable to establish boundaries when people are not used to them, but it’s helping me and after the initial awkwardess, I feel my soul thank me. That friend finds it impossible to be fully present and had let me down with lunches, coffees, work sessions, phonecalls etc – he’s not a bad person by any means, but he just doesn’t merit a spot in my close circle.
@kkasxo Change is scary and it’s funny I always feel more ‘in control’ having an escape plan! Look who has turned in to a commitment-phobe! Ah no, I recognise that I’m risk averse these days, however I have made a conscious decision to know let that aversion stop me, so while I’m anxious and scared, I try it anyway. Because if the sh1t hits the fan ultimately I’ll survive, because look where we were two years ago…..the two of us have survived! So each time I get scared, I say, Shelb, go for it, yeah it might fail, but everything is survivable! Now….where i fully believe that is debatable….but remember how we try to trick our minds! I’m hoping it will work. Did you get a new job? Are you happy?August 14, 2020 at 7:27 am #364749ShelbyvilleParticipantLucie….
I’m not sure if I always had anxiety to be honest. Because before my breakup/breakdown with the ex, it was never really something I thought about or had a vocabulary around. Perhaps when I was younger and got ‘scared’ about things, that was anxiety but I didn’t label it as that at the time.
Yes I went on anti-anxiety tablets for a period of time, they weren’t strong dosage and didn’t numb me or even make me feel like sunshine and roses, but what they did do for me was give me that one per cent I needed to come out of the fog of doom I was in, they allowed me to see the wood for the trees. When I got that little hook back in to reality, I was able to use other resources and supports then to get myself back on track and thankfully have been off any medication for quite a while now.
I wouldn’t have a huge knowledge of PTSD, even though sometimes I have lingering trauma relating to things that happened me many years ago, but @kkasxo has given you some guidance on this I think. There are a couple of US based accounts that do free workshops such as catapult coaching and jrni coaching. Also my GP recommended a service that ran 6-week counselling on a pay what you can afford basis, as little as 5$ pounds if that’s all I could pay etc. I find Brene Browne interesting also and Dr. Joe Dispenza, they have so many youtube videos and talks.
I had a panic attack in my therapists office earlier this week, so I’m by no means ‘on top’ of this crap, but when it happened on Monday, I knew exactly what it was, it did not feel great obviously, but I was aware it would pass and I’d be okay. So I’ve just learned that through practice over the years. I hope this helps in even the tiniest way x
August 14, 2020 at 12:26 pm #364762SammyParticipantHey all,
@Tim that’s ok, I can’t expect you at my beck and call. Sorry for being impatient, but I was a bloody saint with my ex. One of my many negs! I was having a tough day because my ex’s sister got engaged, we were quite close and she did reply to my congratulatory message but I expected more I was once part of their lives and now I’m reduced to nothing. You are right in the sense I’m trying to rush to a place where I’m stable because I have no idea where to go, who I am anymore. The more I think. the more I sink probably why I resort to the alcohol.I need a proper buddy and it would be unfair to put that on you and Shelby. Although I would definitely appreciate your advice as well as a conversation to aid my loneliness. I am wary though, what if I begin developing a co-dependency. What is your view on that?
I have asked my best friend, she was unaware of how much I was drinking and it felt like a relief to share it and she is very firm. I wasn’t being sarcastic about my toasting, but that has made me see I need proper professional advice.
I’m sorry for being the female equivalent of a male chauvinistic pig. I can see some of my angst I release on you and I’d prefer it if you were not so nice and rather just gave me tough love. It is what I need I think.
I liked what you wrote to Lucie about victimisation. I do feel lately I am being more self pitiful. It makes me angrier with myself and so another cycle continues. So fucking tired of shit!
Firstly you are right I am a self-aware person but why can I not muster enough strength to act on it? What is wrong with my willpower? I see all my stupid mistakes! Do you believe it is wrong to act on your emotions, in truth, I am avoiding therapy because I’ve seen a lot of people come out of it just over aware and everything becomes an over-analysis of each and every decision, I would want enough insight to not ruin future relationships like Tim offers but I wouldn’t want so much knowledge where I assess a person rather than let things happen as they should naturally. I am a bit skeptical about spending so much money on a therapist, at what point do they become a crutch too? I do feel they draw out info slowly and sometimes just want to rehash your childhood? Not everything is rooted in childhood, is it? I was a very confident person before I fell in love, I loved myself and would have often done the rejecting. Maybe it is just karma?
I like the idea of pushing the body to detox, maybe walks will clear my head and have me reaching for water. Maybe I can set goals to work towards that seems like a good idea. Thanks
Also, to both Tim and Shelby what did you do with your mutual ex-friends and ex-family? Delete and block too? Does that help you move on better?
Sucks you had a panic attack @Shelbyville, what is causing it? Is it your ex still or work?
Also soz for us all jumping to conclusions about you having caught feelings, again that selfish hope if Shelby can do it, I can too. It’s amazing how our brains can fill information from the snippet of information we read, the friend you described previously sounded amazing and like a gem, like someone who was always there and cared for you and I thought maybe like Tim mentioned you may have begun to have high expectations, as you mentioned this yourself once too but when you add all the above then it becomes clear he continually lets you down and you don’t want someone like that. Urgh, men! Bet he went flaky when he knew he wasn’t getting some! Probably doing what most men do in the friend zone biding their time.
Your new attitude is totally motivational, go for it even if shit hits the fan, so much of it flying around anyway !!
August 14, 2020 at 5:15 pm #364797TimParticipantYou’re most welcome, some things will be relatable others will be pure drivel. Only you are the best judge of your circumstances or situation and can decipher what advice is applicable. If it doesn’t apply to you it may help someone else reading. With further descriptions that does make him sound very fishy indeed, although@Sammy is on a hate males tirade she raises a good point, I hate to admit this as a man but if you two are just friends after a to and fro, and he is not gay, chances are he is sexually attracted to you and most men are notorious for manipulating a woman’s emotion to get what they need. They prey on friendship to just get into your pants. So if he has gone from the gushing description to being flaky be wary he may have realised it isn’t happening so is now doing the bare minimum. Doesn’t sound like a good friend. Unless you have a “When Harry met Sally” thing going on!
It is great to read you are setting boundaries and this is an important aspect of growth, I actually really commend you on the growth you appear to be undertaking. It is nice to read like-minded people wanting to improve. Just a tip, especially if in the past you have been a people please like myself, be aware you do not end up on the opposite end, this can happen so easily. We start to set rigid boundaries under the guise of asserting our higher self but in certain situations, if we practiced kindness or compassion in our judgment it would be more apt. Nothing is ever black and white. We do run the risk of becoming selfish and can end up feeling lonely and even more isolated by throwing up one too many walls. I’ve done it myself, so everything in moderation. I always ask myself a simple question; does this connection have equal give and take? If I’m doing too much, I pull back a little, set some boundaries, and if I’m taking too much, becoming selfish with someone I will slap myself into action to give back and loosen my boundaries. A real good quote I live by;
“Boundaries should be firm enough that you feel emotionally [and] physically safe and comfortable, yet permeable enough that you allow love and intimacy to flow between you and another person.”I picked up you mentioned you are now risk-averse/commitment-phobe – absolutely normal. Fear is powerful. In contexts to relationships, you will sabotage good relationships for the smallest of reasons, once you allow the mind to start thinking negatively about the relationship it seems to careen out of control and before you know it you have already left in your head. You will know from therapy the only way to overcome it is to find the root, face it and it will diminish in size. Think of it this way, the only thing certain in life is death and taxes, the rest of the crap blows over no matter how hard it hits us! Fear and worry tell us that we have control when we really have zero control. It’s a trap to keep us in a comfort zone but no real change just going through the motions, what a shit way to allow ourselves to live?
I noticed you mentioned to @Lucie you had a recent panic attack, have you ever tried any unconventional therapies? Let me know if you want me to go deeper into it with you.
You are right, I have three women mum, sister and the partner who I am at the beck and call of so can’t take on another! However, I am always happy to help when I can. I may be slow to reply over next week, have few interviews to prepare for.
The increase in impatience is probably more to do with the stress and anxiety you are under right now. A buddy online and offline is the best bet add in some professional help and you will really have a handle on this thing!
The suggestion of setting a regular activity to do like walking, running is an excellent one from @Shelbyville. It will really help channel some of that energy and release endorphins.
You do appear to have a lot of anger towards men, where is it coming from?
You said you don’t know who you are, who were you before him? This all comes down to boundaries, in relationships sometimes we give so much, contort to meet our partner needs we lose our identity. Instead, a healthy partnership requires you to stand strong alone too. I gave up a job I loved! I plunged money into a forever home. Completely lost myself, why? because deep down I didn’t feel worthy so kept trying to validate it through my relationship and ex. Begin to set goals, choose a passion project, rediscover your interests. Bit by bit you’ll find life in these things, hope and you’ll have learned to next time speak up for your wants and desires,
Want me to firm? Stop feeling sorry for yourself and tired of your shit, be proactive, go do something rewarding volunteer, go help your parents out or help a neighbour. Stop wasting your time dwelling. Any help? Usually on women let alone those enduring heartbreak, tough love is not the answer?I think you are being over critical, isolating yourself further by not leaning on the support which you have in person. What you probably need is an actual big cuddle from your nearest and a tub of Haagen Daaz and to get everything off your chest. Instead of trying to do it all by yourself and spiraling further because it is hard to cope. It is ok to ask for help, you will not become co-dependent.
With ex-family, it is dependent on if you are close it wouldn’t hurt to keep those ties but be aware that the dynamic has changed to save yourself further disappointment. Life is all about managing expectations. I suppose you would have been chosen to be a bridesmaid or played a significant role in hen party etc and it is ok to feel that loss but if it starts to affect you too much then maybe consider a totally clean break. Only you know how much you value those relationships or connections formed through your ex.
I am a believer exes that are toxic are best to block from the get-go. Saves so much hassle and turmoil. Like I said no universal method in heartbreak. Everyone deals with fallout differently. I eventually blocked my ex. It was easier to have no baggage to carry forward into a new relationship. I still have love/care for her but I’m no longer in love with her. You’ll get there too, I can guarantee you will.
Your opinion on therapy in some aspect is valid and in others is misguided but you are entitled to it. A good therapist will not just focus on your past. Some I admit talk codswallop and the very first one is may not be the best fit for you but there are some really amazing insights to be learned, it helped me hugely. It is an interesting point you raised about it becoming a crutch for all your decisions and an hour to have someone listen to all the ins and out, it has made me think, do I really need it so regularly? I think if you have the goal of becoming better equipped and acquiring the tools to deal with issues and letting it take its course that is better. I don’t wish to become so reliant on therapy. I do think therapy makes you over analyze but it has more positives than drawbacks, The negatives are easily adjusted if you are aware.
August 18, 2020 at 4:15 pm #365084SammyParticipant@Tim you really have been watching the rom coms! “When Harry met Sally” is a classic!!! It is a film that stands the test of time. Every man and woman should watch it, it is basically relationship 101.
I think my anger towards my ex I have been aiming at every other male except him. I know he will be back out there whilst I’m still suffering the after-effects. I’m just angry in general with myself for the years wasted, with my inability to stabilise my fluctuating emotions, I even dream about him, going 1 step forward then what seems like 100 back.
If you want the truth the reason why I am isolating myself is that bar my best friend no one else bothered reaching out once I put my brave face on. I felt like they had been going through the formalities instead of real concern.
It is another pain I did not need, which made me drink more to numb those emotions too. It made me question everything about who I am, my choices, my friends. You spoke of boundaries and it feels shit when for everyone you would do anything and unless you reach out they don’t. I expected the collateral after my ex and I ended so losing his family and mutual friends. What I didn’t expect is I would lose my own. It made me realise who was there and who isn’t. I loved my exes family, you are right I will always have higher expectations, they are no longer mine, and now I don’t even have the energy to be cordial because all I think of is the what-ifs, if he had chosen me like you said I’d be a bridesmaid and that just makes me so sad. I don’t know. Lately, I’m questioning everything.I have a new colleague at work and I’ve known her for a few weeks and she has done more for me in that space then some friends I have known for decades. It has really shaken me in the sense I feel were any of my connections authentic, have I been investing time and energy in all the wrong people just like my ex, I feel used and drained.
Some positive though I started to do a run every evening for the past few days as @Shelbyville suggested and so far it is going well, I have cut down on my consumption. I want to tackle it myself for now.
I thought about therapy and it is still not appealing, I think the idea of sitting in front of someone real and releasing my most inner thoughts is a little daunting, I don’t want to feel judged or upset if the therapist raises his/her eyebrow or grimaces.
After reading your feedback and insight made me realise your partner is actually lucky to have a man who wanted to change for the better. Not many men do. all the women in your life are lucky. Good luck with the job interviews, knock them dead! Do you feel pressure to find work in a relationship?
August 19, 2020 at 1:56 pm #365159LucieParticipant@Tim that is one of the kindest gestures I have ever been offered and you don’t know how much you have touched a strangers heart. I am just scared to open up as I don’t know how i’ll cope once things have been spoken out. Thank you for taking so much of your time to explain about trust and why I may be wanting to go back. I am scenario one, my scars are deep but I still want him.
Thank you @Kkasxo for the PTSD help the forum recommended makes me feel less alone, less like damaged goods. Did you try anything like CBTor EMDR?
@Shelbyville I often wonder was I always prone to not being able to handle things without feeling the loss of control or was it the trauma I experienced in my relationship which led me to spiral?I know you went back to your ex x3 do you still remain in contact even after all that has happened? Or is it impossible?
Thank you so much for your youtube recommendations and free coaching, i’ll definitely look into that. I can not afford therapy after this covid pandemic, I’m just about surviving to keep a roof over my head.
The tablets do they cause any other side effects I’m really struggling with the sleeping and panic attacks so eventually might need to save and look into medication. How long were you on them for?
Thank you so much for your thread it has been so useful.
August 20, 2020 at 5:31 pm #365221TimParticipantThere are many wonderful people on this thread and forum who would gladly help you. You can take all the time you need but know you don’t have to do it alone. If it was scenario 1 then I can only reiterate from my own past the sooner you let go the quicker you will heal. I do not think it is wise to go back into a toxic relationship but if you feel it is something you need to do, then you will. Just think about it logically, try to remove emotions. Will the outcome be the same and set you back and deepen those wounds? If so, do not do that to yourself. Just my advice based on the very little background I have. You can ask me anything at any time. Good luck doll.
Thanks for the good energy, the interviews have gone well, so fingers crossed!
I shall not deny it, I’ve seen them all. “When Harry met Sally” is one of the few which is realistic. What has my life come to? Discussing rom coms over the interweb haha! My dear sister has a lot to answer for, but it helps score points with the ladies.
I think although you are not able to see it right now, you are actually going through a transformation that will make you a more resilient and better version of yourself, often it takes something significant or someone significant to really get you to look inwards and do some soul searching. You had clearly become stagnant in all elements of your life, which includes your ex and all other connections etc. I experienced the same and knew to evolve it meant letting go of deadwood and change is good.
When I tried to kick the gambling and alcohol to the curb, some friends were unsupportive or negative influences. I was a people pleaser, still am to a degree but I have learned to set better boundaries. I let go of people who never helped me become a better individual or made the effort to support me in any form. I may have a smaller circle but it is consists of genuine people who are honest, transparent, caring, and demonstrate reciprocity. I have people in my life who helped build me back up after I took an unimaginable spiral to a very bleak place and it those people I’ll never lose. When I look back now, the whole experience is humbling.
A lot of men I must admit believe they need to be established so a woman is not a burden. Some men also feel very threatened if the woman is highly successful, the ego can come into play. The irony is the men who have achieved greatness throughout history did it with a strong woman by their side. I have matured emotionally, I have developed my EI.
So even though I lost my job, I do not feel it is a worry in regards to my relationship, my current partner has a good career but has never made me feel inadequate, I have had enough therapy to now know not to project pr let my own insecurities play havoc on my relationship. She also has the emotional intelligence and sensed my anxiety when I lost my job, one simple sentence made a significant difference she said: “It was a minor setback and I am known for my comebacks.” Simple affirmations like that are so important. I now live by the rule those who can not accept me at my lowest, do not deserve me at my best, I let go of a lot of people including my ex and I have evolved into a much better human as a result of my knockbacks and that is what you should focus on Sammy. YOU. It will lead you to become a stronger, wiser, and happier person.
For a long time, I was immature, I thought to feel essential I needed to provide a woman with money, gifts, etc but the right woman (my current partner) wants a man’s time, effort, honesty, and choosing her as a priority. So in return, I do offer that but never at the expense of my own needs, which is why this relationship has felt so much healthier after overcoming the initial fears and doubts. It is balanced. My ex I treated like a queen at the expense of myself, she still left me.
I think you are at a point you can hear this, again just a male point of view, do not need to accept just consider, I’d be interested in all your ladies’ perspective too, challenge me if I’m wrong (@Sammy, @Kkasxo, @Shelbyville )
My current partner demonstrated a lot of compassion when she met me, I was still on my journey, when she realised she was not having her needs met she walked away and although she tells me now she felt awful, she believes it is what made us and I couldn’t agree more.
I did feel abandoned by her she supposedly meant to be different and care. However, therapy made me reassess a lot as previously noted. In turn, it made me want her not need her, I ended up respecting her more for not settling for less so she became even more attractive because she had the foresight to see if she continued to coddle me we would never have got to a place of even footing, which is important to men.
Men have egos unfortunately they are easily threatened, we do have an innate need to be the strong ones/hero in a relationship, so when you have a strong woman who is capable of everything whilst you feel a mess it inadvertently makes us feel inferior if you continue to coddle. My current partner knew what she wanted (non-casual relationship) and knew she deserved more and decided not to accept less. I worked damn hard on myself and got to a point where I felt challenged, I wanted to chase and court her all over again but this time with intent, I wasn’t going to give up without a fight, but I accepted the risk of rejection, I accepted she had control, I accepted if I didn’t end up with her at least she had got me to a place to be better for the next person.
So never keep giving to a man as you did with your ex, if like most men ( boys at this stage is more apt) he is not emotionally developed enough to appreciate and commit to a good woman when he has her, he will still want to keep you around without any commitment but that should tell you he is immature, selfish, has become comfortable, and is taking you for granted. I know it is a good woman’s natural instinct to care and give more but if he is not reciprocating, walk away never let him use, drain and deplete your self-esteem completely and then put the cherry on top by leaving you too. This is a mistake you made, do not make it again.
If you are ever in this position again, leave, if he has any sense he will look inwards and return a better version just as I did for my current partner. If you really love and see something worth fighting for then give him that ONE CHANCE – for boys it takes months to even realise our mistakes let alone work on ourselves. If he hasn’t become that better version never accept less, you gave too many chances doll to your ex after that 6-month break, he proved he wasn’t going to change, you should have left, he did not deserve you and left you questioning your value and worth. Never do that to yourself again. Love yourself enough to walk away if your needs are not met, it doesn’t make you a bad person for loving yourself first. A real developed man will never give up on a good woman who reciprocated. Real men who have a woman who stands by him at his lowest, will always love her, he will never risk losing her. If he does he is a jerk, doesn’t know what he wants, and until he does soul searching he never will and most likely will continue to perpetuate the toxic cycle. THIS IS COMING FROM A MAN!
If you are hearing through the grapevine your ex is dating, let him, I guarantee you he will have not done any work on himself if he is moving on so fast. Men are wired to hunt and have an intrinsic motivation to get better. Take peace in knowing the day will come maybe 5 years from now or at some point in the future, but it will come it always does, he will realise what he lost, he will regret his choices.
Men go into shutdown, we do not admit our regret right away, we ignore these emotions. We do not have the emotional maturity until we have gone on our journey. How long that takes to happen, varies for each individual, some never do, but those who have chosen to grow, it is a given. Why? Because real good women are irreplaceable and hard to come by. There is plenty of fish in the sea but when you are no longer a spring chicken you realise the foolishness in letting go of a woman who offered emotional nourishment etc. you will one day understand the folly of your decision of being selfish, will realise you had the woman who loved you the most before you had found yourself and made it in life, the one who would have stood by your side through everything. You will regret losing this woman because the other women who will love you when you’re at your best may easily say goodbye to you when they see you at your low points (these lows are inevitable). The new woman can easily move on when she sees that you’re not as perfect as she once thought you were. These thoughts flood a mans head and at some point, sooner or later, a man will learn that the purpose of his goals is to contribute back to society, that real relationships are what matters in life, not money, not the career goals and it’s not about taking from those relationships, it is having the humility to be vulnerable and nurturing one with a good woman.
I would like your views ladies @Sammy, @Kkasxo, @Shelbyville…I’m fascinated, many of the female figures in my life have said with women, they tend to be more emotionally mature than men and know what they want. They never regret their decision to walk away from a good man, because for them to leave a good man it takes a lot more than a man to leave a good woman, they really ponder over their decisions but once it is made, they are done and know there is fundamentally something wrong; to quote the women “no attraction, no love, he is not the one.” The only time they will ever come back is when they have been dumped (this is what happened with my ex) and need an ego boost from someone they think will still be pining and wanting to do anything for them, my ex was shocked when she learned I no longer did. My current partner even said she had no regret, felt awful to split up initially as it went against her natural instincts to nurture but she knew she deserved the best so never looked back and effectively kept dating and living. When the moment presented itself she gave me a chance because she always knew I was a good man, felt there was a strong connection, and could see I had just needed time to grow. Otherwise, women never look back. Is this true?
I think you are a very smart individual, Sammy, I do not think it is necessary for you to go to therapy and you have a lot of reservations which means you will probably construct further walls when in a sesssion. So considering you have a person at hand who you trust with a psychology background (best friend) and this forum to give you insights from our anecdotal evidence/experience. A great way to turn your anger into positive energy is to channel it into a project or something you are passionate about. Out of all the emotions, anger is one of the strongest emotions we feel and most useful in heartbreak. If you use it to motivate and drive you forward whilst you are feeling it, it will help you overcome that big hurdle of looking back at your ex and questioning it all. Soon you will be so engrossed in working towards your goal that you will naturally lead to a place of indifference without even realising. When you are there, you will look at yourself, the new environment you have created, the new you and the new circle and only want to bring positive energy to it. You will naturally attract better. All the pain experienced will just be lessons on what to avoid in future relationships and what you need.
I think deep down you already have that self-worth it just got buried under the baggage of holding onto a toxic relationship, you are determined enough and just need that push. That push will not come from alcohol, that push will not come from knowing what your ex is up to, that push will not come from pity. It will come from the anger that you are done from being tired of all the shit, it is there use it. Push forward. Cut all the trash in your life and recentre yourself. You can do this Sammy!
You are very receptive, look how quickly you took on @Shelbyville advice. That shows you want to move forward.
I also have some news I will share with you in a few days time, once I hear back from my job interviews. I will definitely be needing you help ladies @KKasxo, @Shelbyville and @Sammy so watch this space. I hope you can help.
August 23, 2020 at 2:57 pm #365369LucieParticipant@Kkasxo @Shelbyville are you still active? Please help me today I tried to do some normal activities and called over a few friends, at night I’ve had these vivid attacks where i feel paralysed but during the day nothing to this extent i dont know what and how. I’m so scared, it felt like the trauma was happening all over again. I tried to tell myself It’s not real but it caused me to feel like i couldn’t breathe. my friends stayed with me held my hand and fanned me until i was able to come out why is this happening during the day too? What do i do? no one knows and ive just been crying all evening. I can’t live my life like this.
August 24, 2020 at 1:13 pm #365445TimParticipantLucie – stay strong doll. I don’t know too much about PTSD in-depth as it wasn’t a part of my journey, I will ask my therapist the next time I have a session so I can offer you informed advice.
Meanwhile, I’ll tag @KKasxo she may get the notification and be able to offer you some comfort right now.
Some of what you describe sounds very much like panic attacks which I’ve experienced. For them, I can recommend some broad tips but to get control of them you do need to find the root cause of the anxious thoughts.
1) Deep breathing – inhale and exhale deeply to gain some control, mindfulness- download an app
2) Ice – I find placing my hands in freezing water if available causes a shock and the feeling of heart in my throat always settles as focus changes.
3) Grounding yourself is another helpful technique that forces your mind to consider something outside yourself e.g. naming 3 things you can see around you, 2 things you could touch, 1 thing you can smell, etc the sillier the better. Using your senses as distraction.
4) I sometimes lay upside down, the disorientation helps focus my breathing.
There are other non-convential methods but they require money. I hope things get better, maybe time to reach out to a few trusted confidants if not to confide but maybe for financial support, so you can get the professional help you need.
Things do get better, keep up the good fight, the tide will turn.
@Kkasxo, I think you have a better scope on this. Tagging so you may be able to help.August 25, 2020 at 6:29 pm #365573MichelleParticipantI was told to post here. I am on my 2nd day of a break-up and I’m totally incapacitated. I have sat in silence all day just pretty much starring out into nowhere just finished about my 4th bought of crying for theday. Trying not to dwell but it’s only day 2 and my first day not talking to him.
I was in the best relationship of my life. Except it was long distance. We were set to officially end the distance this month. We planned it in October of 2019. He was going to move here, but then due to circumstances outside of our control with the anti immigration policies of this country and COVID it seemed there was nothing to do but break up. We held onto hope and have not seen each other for 8 months. I never would have imagined that the last time I would see him in my life would be in December 2019. But it just does not seem possible to be together anymore. I went on another forumn because i can’t seem to do anything else but think about him regardless of how much i try. There they told me if he didn’t somehow manage to make it here to be with me then he wasn’t so good and it wasn’t really love. I disagree the only ways he could be with me would mean risking total and utter fincial wipe out and then having to return to china in these bad times. I wouldn’t want that for him that would make me selfish and self serving but it made me feel worse to have it repeated to me multiple times.
Anyhow I managed to eat something. I have been through this type of pain before in my life more times than I wish to have done it. I have gotten past it but right now it feels impossible and being stuck in my apartment alone because of the virus is making it all the much harder. So much suffering. I had written the original story on my own thread a couple of nights ago so i don’t feel i need to write it again but everything just feels so undair. I know life is not always magical but it just feels so awful right now having to give up the best relationship i ever had because of some stupid virus. Even if it had happened later he would have already been here.
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