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12 Ways to Let Go of Past Loves 

 

 

Come unstuck with these techniques and discover yourself, happy and free.

At a recent dinner with five friends, my friend Julie mentioned that she had been unable to stop thinking about a former boyfriend she hadn’t seen in years. In fact, she confessed, she thinks about him every day.

As she glanced helplessly around the table not one person appeared surprised. By the time dessert was served, every woman present admitted a persistent emotional attachment to a former relationship. Most surprising? Every woman at the table was happily married!
 
If you are stuck in an emotional tie that no longer serves you, it’s time to set yourself free.

 

Here are 12 fool-proof ways to enjoy the present and release your past:

 

1.) Get Real About What Was

 

According to Harville Hendrix, we are most magnetically attracted to people who embody the characteristics of our parents or early caretakers because we unwittingly seek in a partner someone who will re-injure our childhood wounds. Our adult selves can finally heal those wounds, but the more negative those characteristics are (from critical and controlling to charmingly irresponsible) the more intense the attraction we feel.

 

We can get relief from our nostalgia for a passionate love by remembering the intensity of the memory does not hold some great truth about the relationship’s sacredness. Remember, what fueled the attraction may not have been love, but your soul’s desire to heal the past.

 

2.) Purge the Merge-Urge

 

Subliminally, people in love promise they will meet all of each other’s needs while having none of their own. (Like mommy did!) Listen to the language of lovers and you will hear the echoes of that infantile bliss: “Baby, Sweetie, Honey, Darling.” We long for the feeling of fullness again, of merged egos. Getting free means understanding that the completeness you felt with your past love echoed a memory from infancy. It was an illusion and temporary and in reality it was not love.

 

3.) Are You Romanticizing?

 

Brain scientists now recognize that nearly 20 percent of us suffer from “complicated grief.” According Rob Stein of the Washington Post, “One of the hallmarks of complicated grief is a persistent sense of longing for the lost one and a tendency to conjure up reveries of that person.”

18 Comments

very very good

29 months ago

very nice

29 months ago

my god very very nice full proof how to forget your ex

29 months ago

I agree with you, happily married women need to forget their "impossible love".

29 months ago

aree with you

29 months ago

ms. erica really how you made it, i want to follow your ideas on how to get this kind of beautiful blogs on the net and to share it with the people here, dont forget to send me an email ok, pls... thank you again! Really your blogs are more interesting!

29 months ago

so nice and so interesting one

29 months ago

another nice posts ms. erica very interesting

29 months ago

very nice and interesting topic

29 months ago

nice and interesting

29 months ago

very interesting post

29 months ago

so nice and interesting one...

29 months ago

very nice and interesting post

29 months ago

so nice post and interesting

29 months ago

very nice in interesting post

28 months ago