
Breakups
... It Wasn't Meant To Be
How to be
Irresistible to Men | Amy Waterman
A few months ago, I read Greg
Behrendt's book on breakups, It's Called A Breakup Because It's
Broken. I am a huge fan of He's Just Not That Into You, and I
expected great things from the sequel.
It disappointed me. Not
because the information wasn't good. Not because the style
wasn't lively and engaging.
It was simply because nothing
was revolutionary.
He's Just Not That Into You
revolutionized my perspective on dating. Friends who read it
suddenly "got" why previous relationships had dissolved. Greg
explains that the simple reason why some relationships stuck
together and others didn't was because the guys who are really
into you want to be with you ... no matter WHAT.
Why didn't he call after the
second date? He just wasn't that into you.
Why did he dump you? Because no matter how he claimed he felt
about you, he just wasn't that into you.
Why should you not want him back? Because breaking up with you
proved that he's not into you as much as you
deserve.
The latter is the entire
topic of It's Called a Breakup Because It's Broken.
How a woman deals with a
breakup tests her emotional maturity more than any other
scenario. In order to grow as a woman, you MUST learn how to
deal with breakups well, without poisoning your ability to love
again. That's why studying this topic is so
important.
At Triple O Relationships, we
receive emails from so many women wanting to know how to get
their previous boyfriend back. In fact, it would be fair to say
that getting an ex back is one of the top three issues women
hope we'll solve.
The problem is that 99.9% of
these exes aren't worth having back. Many of them are abusive,
have a personal life in shambles, are already with another
woman, or have proven through their actions that they're unable
to act in a mature way in a relationship or make the commitment
to trying to become a better person and partner.
Yet these women would prefer
to be with an imperfect partner than to be alone. Of course
they would.
We all prefer the demon we
know. Being single again means facing the dating scene, the
lack of someone to depend on, no one to cuddle with, and
putting on false bravery to one's friends. It is stressful,
lonely, and hard to be single. It's an emotional challenge to
feel fulfilled when there is no "special someone" in your life
to whom you can give the gift of your abundant love.
But Greg's answer to the
situation isn't adequate, either.
In his book, Greg tells us,
"You deserve better than that ex of yours. He just wasn't that
into you; otherwise, he wouldn't have broken up with you. Never
settle for that. Demand a man who's truly into you."
Is getting over a breakup
really that simple?
I don't think it
is.
Don Miguel Ruiz, in The
Mastery of Love, explains that the amount of abuse we tolerate
in a partner is equal to the amount of abuse we heap on
ourselves. If a woman is used to telling herself that she's
ugly, that she fails at everything she tries, and that she's
not capable of performing in the world without someone holding
her hand, then she'll accept--and even feel most comfortable
with--a man who reinforces these beliefs.
For example, if your partner
makes a cutting comment about the horrible dinner you cooked
that night, and one of your beliefs about yourself is that you
are a bad cook, then you will accept his comment and berate
yourself even more for not being better in the kitchen. If, on
the other hand, you feel quite self-assured about your
competence in the kitchen, you will challenge him on it and
refuse to let his rudeness slide.
As a result, many women find
it difficult to set higher standards for themselves in the
dating world without re-evaluating how well they treat
themselves.
Women who have a litany of
negative self-comments running through their heads will accept
partners who criticize them.
Women who don't value or
respect themselves will accept partners who don't value or
respect them either.
So what should we
do?
Greg does his best to pump up
our self-esteem. He calls us all "Superfoxes." He wants all of
us women grieving over breakups to believe that we are totally
hot babes who deserve princes. But (to point out the obvious)
Greg doesn't know each of his readers personally. Greg's belief
that I am a Superfox isn't enough to transform whatever
personal beliefs I have inside about myself.
The 000 Relationships
perspective on breakups is much more simple. Yes, women need to
improve their sense of self-worth. Yes, women need to set
realistically high standards when choosing partners. However,
the only thing that women need to know when a breakup occurs is
this.
It wasn't meant to
be.
Can I repeat that? It wasn't
meant to be.
If he decides that he no
longer wants to be with you, then clearly it wasn't meant to
be.
Let me explain.
A relationship is composed of
two people. When one of those people backs out, then there is
no longer a relationship. Even if the two people decide at a
later date to get back together, they aren't simply continuing
the old relationship. That's over. They are starting a new
relationship, with new rules, that may be completely different
from what they had in the past.
The number one thing women
need when a breakup occurs is faith that things are happening
as they are meant to happen, according to the Divine Plan that
the Divine Power has for each one of us.
For me, my faith in the
Divine helps me accept when life takes a different path to the
one I desire. It doesn't mean I'm fatalistic. On the contrary.
When I am in a relationship, I am actively seeking to improve
it, to be the best partner I can be, and to grow in
love.
But I am in the relationship
ONLY to give my gift of love and learn how to give that gift
better. I am NOT in the relationship to ask for what I give to
be given back to me.
Most people, unfortunately,
operate on the barter principle of love.
I'll give you love if you give me love.
If I give you love that isn't
returned, then you owe me.
If I give you love, and you
throw it back in my face and walk away, then I have the right
to hate you, because you're a bad person for not wanting to
accept my love.
That's just plain
ugly.
If you want to learn to face
a breakup maturely and grow even more beautiful, more loving,
and more open as a result, then this is what you need to
do.
Love through the breakup.
Love him. Love him even though he isn't yours. Send all your
love to him as best wishes for his future. Use the opportunity
to grow in love and embrace all that was best in yourself when
you were with him.
Don't let the poison of the
dying relationship enter your soul. Don't take away from the
relationship the arguments, the hurtful things he said or did,
and the mistakes made. You can forget those now. It's
over.
Just take away the beautiful
things. Take away how you felt in your best moments. Take away
how you felt your heart open, how you learned to give him more
than you'd ever given anyone else.
Then let him go with
love.
I firmly believe that
whatever happens, happens for a reason, and I trust that the
reason lies in the Divine. I don't have to know why a man broke
up with me; I simply have faith that God is leading us both
down the right path for each of us.
So when a man breaks up with
you, all you need to do is recognize that this particular
relationship wasn't meant to be (even though you may start a
new one later down the track with the same person) and let the
decision rest with the Divine. Believe, if it helps, that he
wasn't the one who dumped you; it was the Divine Spirit acting
through him for the benefit of you both.
It's called a breakup because
life has different paths for you at the moment. Breakups don't
have to hurt. They're only about rejection if you make them
about rejection. You have the power inside yourself to decide
how you are going to make meaning of the end of your
relationship.
If you are a mature woman,
you will bid him goodbye and bless his future with all of your
continued love, and then you will turn to the Divine and
meditate on the what possible plan the Divine has for you that
requires your newfound freedom.
If you are like most women,
you will despise him, transform all the love you once had into
hate, focus on the pain, and let your self-esteem plummet in
the face of rejection.
Which choice do you
prefer?
Amy Waterman is a member of
the 000 Relationships Network. To Read More About 000
Relationships go to:
000relationships
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