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  • 07-17-2012, 03:57 PM
    Anatopism
    Re: How do you get through ambivalence?
    Thanks for the kind words everybody. I know I'll be okay, I just kind of feel lost. He's planning on finding a place where he can keep most of the snakes, so we can continue that, and I have the extra room to rent out. Might have to put in some extra overtime at work to make sure I can afford any time lost between him moving and finding a new roommate.

    I love his family more than my own, and fortunately I still get to see them, and he's OK with it :P They have a habit of absorbing people as one of their own, and have been my replacement family since I don't really have anyone else out here in Washington (my messed up family moved to Illinois).

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Fidget View Post
    Ouch! Yeah, it sucks going through the pain of a breakup. Just know that in the long run, you're saving yourself more heartache and more years of ambivalence. And IDK if you were joking about going back on Prozac, but if there's ever a time for it, this is probably it. I'm a Wellbutrin achiever myself :) It can really help when life is more difficult than usual (or in my case, all the time).

    Yeah not joking about the Prozac. Both my mom and dad's genes are full of depression and anxiety. I've noticed a trend in my anti-depressant usage though, and it tends to only be necessary when I'm feeling particularly bad at the end of a relationship/beginning of a breakup. The rest of the time I'm typically able to handle whatever gets thrown at me.
  • 07-17-2012, 04:05 PM
    wilomn
    Mourn the loss. Something died. Then move on. You're alive. You're healthy. You're free. It's all about perspective. Pain is temporary.
  • 07-17-2012, 04:45 PM
    Anatopism
    Re: How do you get through ambivalence?
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by wilomn View Post
    Mourn the loss. Something died. Then move on. You're alive. You're healthy. You're free. It's all about perspective. Pain is temporary.

    I know, and thank you, especially for being blunt, as I need it sometimes. Starting to feel better already, now that a decision is made and over with.

    There is a nice quote about pain in the book The Handmaid's Tale... something about forgetting what it ever felt like once it's gone.
  • 07-17-2012, 05:12 PM
    MrLang
    Few things frustrate me more than ambivalence in relationships.

    There simply shouldn't be a debate.

    Glad to see you got things done.

    Don't relapse - embrace your freedom and move on.
  • 07-17-2012, 05:23 PM
    Kaorte
    Re: How do you get through ambivalence?
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by MrLang View Post
    Few things frustrate me more than ambivalence in relationships.

    There simply shouldn't be a debate.

    Glad to see you got things done.

    Don't relapse - embrace your freedom and move on.

    Good advice. I wish I could give it to some people I know.. and that they would listen for once. I know a lot of people in a similar position and I wish they would stop torturing themselves and get on with their lives.
  • 07-17-2012, 05:25 PM
    chet1028
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by jbean7916 View Post
    Flip a coin. the outcome doesn't matter, in that split second that it's in the air you will know what side you are hoping lands face up.

    Sent from my PC36100 using Tapatalk 2

    I love this advice. I've never thought about it like this but this is so true.
  • 07-17-2012, 05:35 PM
    Vasiliki
    "The Art of Happiness" is an interesting little book a friend gave me. While it never applied to me directly (they were things I already lived by), the quotes in the book were worth a read. They are derived from the teachings of a greek philospher back in the day, from his verbal lectures to his students.

    I think you might enjoy picking it up and giving it a quick read. If you were closer, I'd lend you mine, as I have lent it to numerous people now.

    Relationships ending is never easy. As said by someone above me, it is a form of death. Something that you once relied on isn't there anymore. It's changed. Essentially, you are alone right now, when you once weren't. That's hard to come to terms with.

    I don't believe depression is soley genes. It is far too common to just be blamed on chemcials in your brain. You are allowed to feel sad, angry, hurt, frustrated, helpless, lonely, regretful, unresolved, without direction.... We've all been there, and all gone through it. It's just a matter of allowing yourself to feel these emotions, but not have them rule you for too long. Give in to them for now, allow yourself to be weak. Cry. Give yourself up to this moment for now. Only then can you start to rebuild, after all the pieces feel like they've fallen away.

    It will take time. Goodness knows it's not something you can fix easily. Sometimes it takes years. But you'll get there, one step at a time. Don't let it overwhelm you, and don't try to shoulder this by yourself.

    Every ending is just a new beginning in disguise. Gosh, it sounded so corny when someone told that to me when my common law partner of 6 years left me for his girlfriend on the side.... and their baby girl (which I had no idea about). It broke me. And people kept telling me it gets better, it gets better. Well, it didn't for a long time. But I did get stronger. And eventually I found someone who was everything I'd always hoped for but never dreamed I'd have. But it was only after I stopped trying to control my life and started doing things for myself did everything start falling into place.

    You'll get there. It's just raw right now. Hard to feel anything but pain. But wounds heal. They'll mend, scar over. You'll remember them, but eventually they won't hurt anymore to think about.
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