After a Breakup: 7 Mistakes That Delay Healing
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TL;DR : After a breakup, we spontaneously do exactly what we shouldn't — not out of foolishness, but because the brain in withdrawal seeks immediate relief at the expense of long-term healing. Seven mistakes recur systematically: monitoring the ex on social media, staying in contact or "friends" too soon, idealizing the lost relationship, throwing yourself into a rebound to avoid the emptiness, ruminating to "understand," blaming yourself entirely (or blaming the other entirely), and seeking a closure the ex won't give. Each soothes in the moment and lengthens the pain. Avoiding them isn't heroic discipline: it's understanding why they trap you, so you can replace them with what actually heals.
After a Breakup: 7 Mistakes That Delay Healing
No one goes through a breakup "cleanly." The brain, deprived of an attachment, reacts as if facing withdrawal: it demands its fix, again and again. That's why we almost mechanically do the things that reopen the wound.
Knowing these seven mistakes isn't about feeling guilty for having made them — everyone does. It's about spotting them faster the next time the urge returns, and knowing what to do instead.
1. Monitoring the ex on social media
Watching their stories, new follows, who likes their photos: each glance gives a micro-dose, followed by a crash. Worse, the brain interprets everything in the worst light ("already someone else?"). Digital stalking reactivates the attachment each time and prevents the system from deactivating.
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Prendre RDV en visioséance→ Instead: unfollow, mute, or block if needed. Not out of spite — out of care. You can't ask a wound to heal if you scratch it every day.
2. Staying "friends" too soon
The intention is noble but premature. Maintaining contact while the wound is raw prevents grief from beginning: you stay suspended, halfway between couple and stranger. No contact isn't a reconquest strategy or a punishment: it's the space needed for the attachment to unwind. Friendship, if it makes sense, will come much later — when there's no longer anything at stake.
3. Idealizing the lost relationship
With absence, memory keeps only the good moments and erases the reasons for the breakup. You end up grieving a relationship that, in reality, didn't make you happy. This idealization is one of the most powerful engines of stuck grief.
→ Instead: remember honestly. Why wasn't it working? What do I never want to live again?
4. Throwing yourself into a rebound
A new partner in a hurry anesthetizes the emptiness — temporarily. But the unprocessed grief doesn't disappear: it shifts, and often resurfaces in the new relationship, which carries a weight that isn't its own. A rebound isn't forbidden, but when it serves to avoid feeling, it only postpones the reckoning.
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Prendre RDV en visioséance5. Ruminating to "understand"
Replaying the relationship on a loop gives the illusion of useful mental work. In reality, rumination deepens the groove of pain without resolving anything. Understanding is useful once; rehashing it a hundred times is torture disguised as clarity.
→ Instead: write down once, on paper, what you learned — then redirect attention to action when the loop restarts.
6. Blaming yourself entirely (or the other entirely)
Two extremes trap you equally: making yourself solely responsible ("I wasn't good enough"), which destroys self-esteem; or putting all the blame on the ex ("they're a monster"), which prevents learning anything and freezes you in resentment. A breakup almost always has a share of shared dynamic — except, precisely, in cases of abuse or coercive control (see below).
7. Seeking a closure the ex won't give
Waiting for THE conversation that will explain everything, the message that will soothe: this quest keeps the bond open. The truth is closure doesn't come from the other. You give it to yourself, by accepting you may never know everything — and that you don't need to in order to move forward.
An essential nuance: leaving a toxic relationship
Everything above assumes an "ordinary" breakup. After a coercive or abusive relationship, some rules reverse: no contact is no longer an option but a protection, idealization is fueled by the abuse cycle itself, and seeking "your share of responsibility" can become an unfair form of self-blame. If your ex pulls you back through guilt or false promises — what's called hoovering — healing requires firm distance first.
Re-reading to stop idealizing
The most stubborn mistake — idealization — feeds on the blur of memory. Re-reading the real conversations of the relationship when calm restores reality: the tensions, the gaps, the repeated patterns reappear alongside the good moments. This return to facts deflates the fantasy and speeds up grief far more reliably than a thousand sleepless ruminations.
Takeaway: After a breakup, the brain in withdrawal pushes toward the gestures that soothe fast and heal poorly: monitoring, staying in contact, idealizing, rebounding, ruminating, self-blaming, chasing closure. Avoiding them isn't heroism, it's understanding their trap to prefer what works: cutting contact, remembering honestly, moving through the emotions, and giving yourself the closure the other won't give. And after a toxic relationship, the priority isn't analysis — it's protection.
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