Skip to page content |

Tiscali Quicklinks. Please visit our Accessibility Page for a list of the Access Keys you can use to find your way around the site, skip directly to the main navigation, to the page content, or to more links within lifestyle.

Advertisement starts



Advertisement ends

Content Starts Here


How to get over being dumped

Health and Nutrition > Health Centres

How to get over being dumped


Written by Christine Webber, psychotherapist and lifecoach

It happens to everyone

Virtually everyone has been dumped at some time in their life. I certainly have - so I know it hurts like hell.

This kind of very personal rejection is in fact so painful that it can make you feel as though you've been injured. Rejected people often feel as though their feet have been cut away from under them, rendering them unsteady and unsure. All too often they also succumb to every cold and stomach bug going.

I have often seen people in my consulting room who are coming to terms with the end of a relationship, and frequently they look as though they are recovering from a major operation or a car accident. Their pain is so palpable that they could well be suffering from a physical illness.

Losing someone you love leaves you with a dull, heavy weight in your chest that often, without warning, explodes into lacerating pain. This torment makes you long for a time when life was easier, so you tend to hope that your ex will return - sometimes even after a couple of years of single-living.

Skewed thinking

You might also feel that if they do not come back, no one else will ever fill that gap in your life and you will never find love elsewhere. This is nonsense of course, but grief skews our thinking.

Accepting it's really over

So, how can you get over the pain? How can you learn to live again? How can you start viewing your single status as a fresh and fun opportunity instead of a punishment? How can you stop feeling that you are unlovable and unwantable - and that fate has marked you out for a lifetime of solitude, misery and bad luck?

Well, the first step towards a new positive future is to finally accept that your ex-partner has gone and will not be coming back.

This means facing your grief and allowing yourself to cry for the loss of your hopes and dreams. I am afraid that this is a painful process whether you are a young man who has just lost the girl of his fantasies or a 50-year-old woman whose cruel, philandering husband of 30 years has finally walked out.

The most important thing to remember at this point is that you will get over this. I know it does not seem like it right now, but you will, believe me.

Get bored, get better

The next most important thing is to lean on your friends and to talk about your ex until you have no words left to say.

You will know you are getting better when you realise that you are actually bored with the subject yourself. Talking is the key to feeling better. When we talk about our hurt it gradually ceases to have power over us and - step by step - we recover.

But during this shattering time, it is vital that you look after yourself properly. In fact, you should treat yourself like an invalid, or like someone who has had a terrible shock.

Take long, hot, scented baths, play music that helps you to let your feelings out, tempt yourself with favourite foods and allow other people to get close to you and to care for you.

The LEARN process

I devised this acronym, LEARN, many years ago now for a TV programme. I am very pleased to say that since that time it has helped countless people put the past behind them and move onto new happiness in their lives. Hopefully it will also help you.

L stands for LIST Make a list of all the things about your ex-partner that you did not like. It may start off small, but if you pin it up in your kitchen so that you see it daily, you will be amazed at how it will grow.

Remember how he or she always told the same jokes? Or got drunk at parties? Or put you down in company? Or could not be bothered to get involved in your job or hobbies?

Write it all down and start realising that maybe your lost relationship was not so great after all.

E is for EXPERIENCE

After a relationship is finished, we tend to think that we can never be loved again. This is not true, of course, but it is what we believe at the time.

The fact is that there is every probability you will be loved again. Not by your ex-partner, of course: you will never again share exactly what you had in that relationship, but you can have just as important feelings with someone else.

A stands for APPRECIATION

Appreciation of yourself, that is.

You need to look at yourself in the mirror and focus on your best features and congratulate yourself on them. Do this often.

Another helpful task is to write a list of 50 things that you like about yourself. This might take some doing, but it is a rewarding exercise.

You see, when we are dumped we tend to take the blame on our own shoulders. We mentally beat ourselves up for not being more fun or more intelligent, or more attractive, or much better in bed.

Try to stop this destructive thinking and - just for a change - allow yourself to feel your own goodness. So, deliberately recall times when you have helped someone, or been kind to a stranger, or put yourself out for a neighbour.

Learning to accept and value your own kindness, beauty and talent is very healing.



Go To Next Page>>



The documents contained in this web site are presented for information purposes only. The material is in no way intended to replace professional medical care or attention by a qualified practitioner. The materials in this web site cannot and should not be used as a basis for diagnosis or choice of treatment. Conditions for use

Powered by netdoctor

© Copyright 1998 - 2004 NetDoctor.co.uk - All rights reserved

Health Search
Search all
Diseases
Medicines
 
 

Advertisement starts



Advertisement ends

Page Footer