18 months ago, I got dumped. No, I didn’t see it coming. Not for a second.
We’d been together for almost three years, living together for one, and my ex was hardly the type to voice any emotions he was experiencing or things he was struggling with in the relationship, so I truly had no idea.
I’d always been the dumper in my past relationships, so I was completely unprepared for the amount of pain and heartache that was in store. I spent six months processing, going to therapy, working through the grief and the loss. It didn’t necessarily get easier, I just got better at tolerating the pain, and eventually my eyes stopped leaking constantly, to the point where I could go about my day (relatively) normally.
What you need to listen to post-heartbreak, according to Fill My Cup. Article continues after podcast.
Yet we remained in the same friendship group, and he’d continue to call me when he was upset about things happening in his life and needed comforting. It was all pretty toxic.
I came to realise I wasn’t grieving the loss of him, I was grieving the life I’d thought we had planned: the marriage, kids (far down the track – at least five years away we’d agreed), the white picket fence. The things you’re supposed to want.
Suddenly, that had all been ripped away from me, yet my other closest friends continued to get engaged and married, to announce pregnancies and new babies, to buy houses and live out the lifestyle I’d believed I too was destined for.