How To Heal A Broken Heart & Move On After A Breakup

As someone who’s spent years helping people navigate love and loss, I’ve sat with countless broken hearts. I’ve watched people question everything they thought they knew about themselves, wonder if they’ll ever feel whole again, and struggle to imagine a future that looks different from what they’d planned. If that’s you right now, please hear me when I say this… your pain has a purpose, and your healing is not only possible but inevitable.
Let’s start with something important: there’s no “right” way to grieve a relationship. I’ve seen people who seem to bounce back in weeks, and others who take months or even years to fully heal. Neither approach is wrong. Your timeline is your timeline, and anyone who tries to rush you through it doesn’t understand the depth of what you’re experiencing.
What you’re going through isn’t just sadness. It’s a complex mix of grief, identity confusion, fear, anger, and sometimes even relief, all tangled together. Your brain is literally rewiring itself, letting go of patterns and pathways that were built around another person. That’s why everything feels so disorienting right now. You’re not losing your mind; you’re rebuilding it.
I often tell my clients that heartbreak is one of the most underestimated forms of trauma we experience. We’re expected to just “get over it” and move on, but the truth is, when a significant relationship ends, you’re mourning the death of a future you thought you’d have. You’re grieving not just the person, but the dreams, plans, and version of yourself that existed within that relationship.
Feel It All (Yes, Really)
I know everyone’s telling you to “stay positive” and “focus on the good things,” but right now, I’m giving you permission to feel absolutely terrible. Cry in your car. Scream into pillows. Write angry letters you’ll never send. Feel the full weight of your sadness, because the only way out is through.
The temptation to numb the pain is real and understandable. Maybe it’s binge-watching shows until your eyes burn, scrolling social media for hours, throwing yourself into work, or yes, diving headfirst into someone new. But here’s what I’ve learned from years of watching people heal: the pain you don’t process now will be waiting for you later, often at the worst possible moment.
Instead of running from your feelings, try to sit with them. Notice where you feel the heartbreak in your body. Is it a tightness in your chest? A knot in your stomach? A heaviness in your limbs? This isn’t about wallowing… it’s about acknowledging what’s real so you can begin to move through it.
The Dangerous Stories We Tell Ourselves
In the thick of heartbreak, our minds become storytelling machines, and unfortunately, they’re not very good at fiction. You might be telling yourself that you’ll never find love again, that something is fundamentally wrong with you, or that you should have seen this coming. These stories feel true when you’re in pain, but they’re not.
One of the most damaging stories I hear is “I wasted all that time.” Time spent loving someone, even if the relationship ended, is never wasted. You grew, you learned, you experienced connection and intimacy. Those weren’t throwaway years. No, they were chapters in your story that brought you wisdom, even if that wisdom came with a price.
If you struggle with boundaries in relationships, I made this video for you.
Rediscovering Who You Are
One of the strangest parts of a breakup is suddenly having to remember who you are outside of “we.” Maybe you haven’t eaten at your favorite restaurant in months because they didn’t like it. Maybe you stopped listening to certain music, watching certain shows, or spending time with certain friends. Now you get to reclaim all of that.
This rediscovery phase can feel lonely and unfamiliar, but it’s also quietly revolutionary. You get to remember what you actually enjoy, not what you compromised on. You get to take up space in your own life again. You get to be self-FULL with your time, your energy, and your choices in ways that might feel foreign but are absolutely necessary.
Start small. What did you love before this relationship? What dreams did you put on the back burner? What parts of yourself did you minimize to fit into the shape of a couple? This isn’t about erasing your past relationship, it’s about expanding back into the fullness of who you are.
The Healing Isn’t Linear
Some days you’ll wake up feeling strong and hopeful, convinced you’re turning a corner. Other days you’ll feel like you’re right back at the beginning, sobbing over a song or a memory that catches you off guard. This isn’t a sign that you’re not healing; this is exactly what the process of healing looks like.
Think of it like physical therapy after an injury. Some days you can walk a little further, lift a little more weight, move with a little less pain. Other days the injury flares up and you have to take it easy. But even on the bad days, your body is still healing underneath the surface. Your heart works the same way.
Progress isn’t always visible, and it’s rarely straightforward. You might have three good days followed by two terrible ones, and that’s completely normal. The goal isn’t to feel better every single day…it’s to gradually build more good days than bad ones.
Build Your Support Network
You don’t have to do this alone, and you shouldn’t try to. I know it’s tempting to isolate when you’re hurting, especially if you feel like you’re being “too much” for the people in your life. But the people who love you want to help, even if they don’t always know how.
Be specific about what you need. Maybe you need someone to sit with you while you cry. Maybe you need someone to drag you out of the house for a walk. Maybe you need someone to help you pack up your ex’s things or change your relationship status online. Don’t assume people know what kind of support you need…tell them.
If your usual support network feels depleted or unavailable, consider expanding it. Support groups, either in person or online, connect you with others who truly understand what you’re going through. Sometimes talking to someone who doesn’t know your whole history can be incredibly freeing. If you want to heal and learn how to open your heart up again, schedule a Free Relationship Readiness Review with me here.
Your New Chapter Starts Now
Right now, in the middle of this pain, your new life is already beginning. It doesn’t feel like it yet, I know. It feels like everything is ending, like you’re stuck in this hurt forever. But every day you choose to get up, to feel your feelings, to take care of yourself even when it’s hard. You’re writing the first pages of what comes next.
Your story isn’t over. This chapter was painful, yes, but it’s not the final chapter. You’re going to love again, but more importantly, you’re going to love yourself again. You’re going to trust again, dream again, hope again. Not because you have to, but because you want to.
So take it one day at a time. Be patient with your process. Trust that healing is happening even when you can’t feel it. And remember that the heart that breaks is the same heart that learns to love again, but this time, it loves with the wisdom that only comes from having been broken and choosing to stay open anyway.
You’re going to be okay. More than okay. You’re going to be extraordinary.
The post How to Heal a Broken Heart & Move On after a Breakup appeared first on Amie Leadingham - Amie the Dating Coach | Master Certified Relationship Coach | Online Dating Expert | Author .
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