There's an old saying I really like- it's darkest just before the sunrise.
Now, I'm not sure if that's actually true or not, LOL, but it's a great reminder that when we're going through something stressful or challenging, the next phase can't come until we actually let go of the past. And once we actually move on, we receive the light of a brand new day.
There are some on this forum who are stuck for months, years, and even decades because of a bad break-up with a BPD ex. It's truly heartbreaking, and what actually makes the difference is to stop looking backwards and start facing forward. It's so hard to do...and so easy to do at the same time. You just stop letting it define you as you absorb the lessons and move on.
I'm so thankful that you were able to navigate this process in a relatively short period of time. There will be challenging days ahead, but they're not setbacks...they're just your feelings coming to terms with everything. It's perfectly normal to grieve and there's nothing wrong with it. The only real goal is to not let it consume you to the point where it's the focus of your life.
Again, I'm thrilled for you and hope you won't be a stranger!
Now, I'm not sure if that's actually true or not, LOL, but it's a great reminder that when we're going through something stressful or challenging, the next phase can't come until we actually let go of the past. And once we actually move on, we receive the light of a brand new day.
There are some on this forum who are stuck for months, years, and even decades because of a bad break-up with a BPD ex. It's truly heartbreaking, and what actually makes the difference is to stop looking backwards and start facing forward. It's so hard to do...and so easy to do at the same time. You just stop letting it define you as you absorb the lessons and move on.
I'm so thankful that you were able to navigate this process in a relatively short period of time. There will be challenging days ahead, but they're not setbacks...they're just your feelings coming to terms with everything. It's perfectly normal to grieve and there's nothing wrong with it. The only real goal is to not let it consume you to the point where it's the focus of your life.
Again, I'm thrilled for you and hope you won't be a stranger!
Wise words! Also appreciate you. For me the idea of letting go has become something that's contradictory. In a good way though. I don't need to forget them or "move on" in the classical sense. I just choose to react with self care while accepting all my feelings. To be honest, this whole time I get feelings of anger still. I still get jealous thinking of them with someone else. I still miss them at times and at times I cry. However I understand my emotions now. They're fundamentally human and normal. There is nothing to erase or scrape away. I just keep redirecting them. I think all emotions are fine and good, just don't indulge if that makes sense.
For me the reason I mainly stayed in rumination is because of my own unhealed wounds from childhood. It wasn't them. It was the projection of my own hurt, feelings of unworthiness projecting onto them in a mix of grief. Point is, I choose to behave how I behave now. I try to not react. I just understand myself and let myself feel without reaction. Practice will make perfect and im still human after-all.
When I fully internalized that for them, moment to moment their perception literally can change and alter. I really shifted then. The implications of that for myself and them are insane. My ex is simply someone with a different amalgamation of reality than me. Think about it. Their fundamental sense of identity doesn't exist. For me there's some strand to the past and future. I imagine for them that's a really confusing thing and maybe doesn't even completely exist in their perception of reality.Their system works differently. I don't even want to use the word mental illness. They just are. They are the way they are. I can't change that. I saw their unique flame of reality, loved them as well as I could and unfortunately given their unique way of operating I just am not compatible with them.
I want something where the other person sees my unique flame and wants to keep that flame balanced and growing. Balanced love is what I'm looking for now. I think once you heal your own wounds, you quickly realize in a calm, peaceful and balanced way that this relationship won't work. However it fundamentally is disconnected from you. Whatever my ex says, whoever she's with next it doesn't matter. I need to let reality be reality. I don't need to control things in front of myself. I was too afraid of my own emotions and just being myself. I am who I am. I will try to continue being better. For them I now show love by letting them go completely. I made the choice. Their unique flame of existence will burn longer then maybe. I want them to have a healthy balanced life. This is just the way their flame works.
I truly hope everyone on here who goes through these relationships looks inward. The answer is within you. You miss your own spark. You are worthy of balanced love. Heal that inner child. Use this pain for growth. It's the key to all of this in my opinion.
I've reshaped my life goals according to what my inner child desired a long time ago. I'm my own companion now. I will take care of myself. If someone comes along that nurtures my flame with me, I will nurture theirs.
Reality is to be experienced. That means the good and the bad. The choices we make can dictate your environment to a degree. That is what im responsible for. I'm going to try and make myself as healthy as I can and enjoy my spark of existence.
I hope I'm not spamming too much, writing things down helps me (typing in this case). I want others in that weird emotional landscape to just hope and strive to something better. I hope that my story can inspire others to do the same.
You can achieve amazing growth from this pain. Pain is good. I like pain. It's just reality banging on your skull asking you to embrace it and grow.




