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A Breakup That Won't Heal: Understanding Stuck Grief

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychotherapist
5 min read

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TL;DR : A breakup is a grief — the loss of a person, but also of an imagined future, a version of yourself, a routine. Normally, the pain decreases in waves over several months. But sometimes it stays raw, or even intensifies: this is stuck grief. The causes are identifiable: an insecure attachment that turns loss into panic, rumination that replays the relationship on a loop, idealization of the ex and the relationship, maintaining contact that reopens the wound, or a breakup without explanation (ghosting) that deprives you of closure. Unblocking romantic grief isn't about "forgetting" but completing the process: accepting the reality of the loss, moving through the emotions instead of fleeing them, demystifying the relationship, and rebuilding a narrative. This article explains why some breakups get stuck and how to restart healing.

A Breakup That Won't Heal: Understanding Stuck Grief

At first, everyone is sympathetic. But after a few months, those around you expect you to "feel better." And you're still there, with the same knot in your stomach, checking their profile, replaying the last conversation, crying in the car. You start to wonder: "What's wrong with me?"

Nothing abnormal. A breakup triggers a real grieving process, and some griefs get stuck. Understanding why is the first step to restarting healing — because stuck grief doesn't resolve with time alone; it needs to be unblocked.

A breakup is a grief (not a weakness)

Brain imaging confirms it: romantic rejection activates the same areas as physical pain and as withdrawal in addiction. When you lose a partner, you lose several things at once:

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  • the person and the daily relationship;
  • the imagined future (the plans, the life you pictured);
  • a version of yourself ("us," your identity within the couple);
  • an emotional secure base.
That's why the pain can be disproportionate even when you "knew" it wasn't working. It's not the length of the relationship that determines the grief's intensity, but what you invested and what you projected onto it.

Why some griefs get stuck

Insecure attachment

For someone with an anxious attachment style, a breakup triggers not just sadness but abandonment panic. The attachment system, on high alert, pushes you to seek the ex at all costs — which prevents the separation from completing. Grief can't begin while the brain treats the other as a vital need.

Rumination

Replaying on a loop ("if I had said that," "why did they do that") gives the illusion of understanding, but it's a trap: rumination maintains the pain without ever resolving it. The more you ruminate, the more the circuits of grief strengthen. It's one of the most powerful drivers of stuck grief.

Idealization

With absence, memory sorts: it keeps the good moments and erases the reasons for the breakup. You start grieving a relationship that, up close, didn't make you happy. As long as the ex stays idealized, you're not grieving a real relationship, but a fantasy — impossible to let go.

Contact that reopens the wound

Keeping in contact, following the ex on social media, "staying friends" too soon: each interaction reactivates the attachment and resets the counter. It's like reopening a barely-formed scar.

Lack of closure

A breakup without explanation, or by disappearance (ghosting), deprives you of the narrative needed to turn the page. The mind stays suspended on an unanswered question, and grief without closure struggles to complete.

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When to talk about prolonged grief

Most romantic griefs ease noticeably within a few months, in waves. We speak of prolonged grief when, beyond several months, the distress remains overwhelming, prevents functioning (work, sleep, relationships), comes with a permanent sense of emptiness or dark thoughts. This isn't a character weakness: it's a process that has stalled, and it responds very well to support.

How to unblock grief

1. Accept the reality of the loss

Grief's first task is to admit, not just intellectually but emotionally, that it's over. This often involves concrete gestures: putting objects away, stopping watching for a return, stopping keeping things "just in case."

2. Move through the emotions instead of fleeing them

Grief isn't bypassed, it's moved through. Allowing yourself to feel the sadness, anger, fear — in waves — lets them discharge. Fleeing them (through alcohol, work, a rushed new partner) only freezes them.

3. Cut contact for real

No contact isn't a punishment toward the ex: it's self-care. It gives the attachment system time to deactivate. It's the most effective measure, and the hardest.

4. Demystify the relationship

Against idealization, it helps to remember honestly: why wasn't it working? what do I never want to live again? Restoring a realistic memory deflates the fantasy.

5. Rebuild a narrative and an identity

Healing means moving from "they destroyed me" to "here's what I lived, learned, and who I'm becoming." Reinvesting in what makes meaning outside the relationship — bonds, activities, plans — rebuilds the "I" beyond the "us."

Seeing the relationship as it was

Idealization feeds on the blur of memory. Re-reading the real exchanges of the relationship when calm restores reality: the tensions, the broken promises, the repeated patterns reappear alongside the good moments. This return to facts powerfully helps demystify: you stop grieving an idealized version and grieve the relationship as it actually was. It's often this return to reality that finally lets you turn the page.

Takeaway: A breakup is a grief, and some griefs get stuck — through insecure attachment, rumination, idealization, maintained contact, or lack of closure. Unblocking doesn't mean forgetting: it's completing the process — accepting the loss, moving through the emotions, cutting contact, demystifying the relationship, and rebuilding your narrative. If the distress stays overwhelming beyond several months, it's not a personal failure: it's prolonged grief, and it can be treated.
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About the author

Gildas Garrec · CBT Psychopractitioner

Certified practitioner in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), author of 16 books on applied psychology and relationships. Over 900 clinical articles published across Psychologie et Sérénité.

📚 16 published books📝 900+ articles🎓 CBT certified
A Breakup That Won't Heal: Understanding Stuck Grief | Analyse de Conversation - ScanMyLove