On Purpose with Jay Shetty - Still Thinking About Your Ex? (Use This 2-Step Reset to Stop the Spiral for Good!)
Episode Date: May 15, 2026You know that moment after a breakup when you find yourself going back to their photos. Not all of them, just the best ones. The trips, the laughs, the versions of you that felt happiest together. And... before you even realize it, it starts to feel like you lost something perfect. This is about that moment. The quiet spiral where you begin to question your decision, wondering if you made a mistake, where the relationship in your memory starts to feel better than it actually was. Jay breaks down what’s really happening there. Your mind is editing the past, holding onto the highlights while slowly letting go of the reasons it didn’t work. The arguments, the doubts, the patterns that hurt you all start to fade. So what you’re missing isn’t the full relationship. It’s a curated version of it. Jay unpacks why heartbreak can feel so overwhelming. It’s not just emotional, it’s biological. Your brain responds to the loss like withdrawal, craving the connection it got used to, which is why checking their profile or replaying old conversations can feel almost impossible to resist. Even deeper than that, Jay explains how breakups often tap into something older, patterns of attachment, fears of being left, or the need to feel chosen. When you think you’re missing them, part of what you’re really feeling is the loss of security, identity, and the version of yourself that existed in that relationship. In this episode you'll learn: How to Stop Romanticizing Your Ex How to Break the Late-Night Thought Spiral How to Let Go Without Losing Yourself How to Resist the Urge to Check Their Socials How to Heal Without Reaching Out How to Rebuild Your Identity After a Breakup If you’re in that space right now, missing them, questioning everything, going back and forth in your mind, just know this: what you’re feeling is real, but it doesn’t mean the story you’re telling yourself is true. It means you cared, you attached, and now you’re learning how to let go. With Love and Gratitude, Jay Shetty JAY’S DAILY WISDOM DELIVERED STRAIGHT TO YOUR INBOX Join 900,000+ readers discovering how small daily shifts create big life change with my free newsletter. Subscribe here: https://news.jayshetty.me/subscribe Check out our Apple subscription to unlock bonus content of On Purpose! https://lnk.to/JayShettyPodcast What We Discuss: 00:00 Intro 02:20 The Version You Miss Isn’t the Whole Truth 07:29 Why Your Mind Rewrites the Past 10:46 The Hidden Patterns That Break Relationships 12:29 What You’re Really Grieving 17:22 The Real Work of Letting Go 19:32 #1: No Contact Rule 21:07 #2: The Full Picture Exercise 22:01 #3: Interrupt the Spiral 23:38 #4: Rebuild Your Identity 26:09 #5: Grief is GriefSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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I know what you've been doing. You've been going back through the photos. Not all of them,
just the good ones. The one from that trip. The one where they're laughing at something and the
light is hitting them exactly right. You've looked at it more times than you would ever admit to
anyone. You've been listening to songs that you have no business listening to right now.
You know which ones. The ones that you basically turned into a soundtrack for a movie about the two of you,
relationship, a movie that's much better than the relationship actually was. You've been checking
their Instagram. Maybe not their main feed, you're smarter than that, but their stories for sure.
At 1 a.m. trying to figure out who that person in the background of the photo is. You've been having
conversations with them in your head, long, articulate, emotionally devastating conversations
where you finally say everything you should have said and they finally understand and something resolves.
and then you come back to reality, and they haven't texted,
and somehow that hurts more than the imaginary conversation.
You've been doing the math.
How many days since you last spoke?
Whether they're thinking about you, what they're doing right now,
whether the thing you said in that argument three months before the end
was the thing that actually ended it.
And in your most honest moments, the 3 a.m. ones,
or the Tuesday afternoon ones when you're supposed to be working,
you've been telling yourself a story.
The story goes something like this.
It was so good.
I've never felt that way before.
I don't know if I'll ever feel that way ever again.
Maybe we gave up too soon.
Maybe they were the one.
I'm going to need you to sit with me for 30 minutes today
because I need to tell you something about that story,
about your brain, about what's actually happening
when you romanticize your ex,
when you romanticize someone you've lost,
and about what's waiting for you on the other side of this spiral
if you're willing to walk through it rather than loop it around forever.
This is not a you'll be fine pep-toop.
This is not toxic positivity wearing a therapy speak costume.
This is the real thing, the neuroscience, the psychology,
the ancient wisdom and the practical tools
because you deserve the actual truth more than you deserve
to feel temporarily soothed.
Ready? Let's go.
this is the harsh truth.
Your brain is lying to you.
And I want to share with you the neuroscience of why they seem perfect now that they're gone.
Let's start with the most important thing.
The person you are missing does not exist.
Not doesn't exist anymore.
Not exists but is different now.
Not exist but is with someone else.
The specific person you're currently grieving,
the one who appears in the photos you keep returning to,
the one who stars in the mental highlight reel you keep playing,
the one who felt irreplaceable and perfect and like coming home,
that person is a construction.
A story your brain is telling you,
and your brain right now is a profoundly unreliable narrator.
Here's why.
When we experience loss,
the brain does something that is genuinely astonishing
from a neuroscience perspective
and genuinely cruel from a human one.
It edits.
Memory is not a recording.
We have known they've known they're,
in psychology for decades, but it runs counter to how memory feels. We experience our memories
as faithful replications of what happened. They're not. Every time you retrieve a memory,
you're not playing it back. You're reconstructing it. And every reconstruction is influenced by your
current emotional state, your current needs, and your current narrative about who you are and what your
life means. This was established definitively by the cognitive psychologist Elizabeth Lofton.
one of the most important and most underappreciated scientists of the 20th century.
Her research on memory distortion showed that human memory is extraordinarily malleable.
We had details that weren't there. We removed details that were there. We unconsciously rewrite
what happened to fit what we believe, what we feel and what we need to be true.
Now, apply that to a relationship you've just lost. Your brain is in a state of loss. And in a state of
lost, the brain is a very specific and predictable bias. It amplifies the positive and suppresses
the negative in memories of what was lost. This is not a quirk. This is not weakness. This is a documented
neurological phenomenon. The moments of warmth, connection, laughter and intimacy get vivid. The
chronic pattern of dismissal, the way they made you feel small in front of their friends,
the way they went cold when you needed the most, the Sunday arguments that always circled the same
drain, those get fuzzy, dimmed, explained away. You end up remembering a relationship that was
approximately 40% better than the one you actually had. And here's the other thing happening in
your brain simultaneously. When you were in the relationship, your brain's reward system, the dopamine
circuits, adapted to the presence of your partner. They became a predicted reward, something
your brain had learned to anticipate and plan around. When the relationship ends, that reward prediction is
suddenly violently disrupted, and the disruption of a predicted reward is neurologically identical
to withdrawal. This is not metaphor. Researchers at Rutgers University, Helen Fisher and her colleagues
put people who had recently been rejected in romantic relationships into an fMRI scanner and showed
them photos of their ex. This will shock you. The brain regions that activated were the same ones that
activate in cocaine addiction, the ventral tegmental area, the obsessive thinking, the physical
ache, the craving, the compulsive checking behavior, these are not signs of how deep your love was,
they are signs of withdrawal. You're not pining for a person, you're detoxing from a neurochemical.
And here's where it gets even more interesting and more uncomfortable. The brain doesn't just
romanticize by boosting the positive memories. It also uses a mechanism.
called deprivation amplification.
Things we cannot have become more desirable,
not despite their unavailability,
but because of it.
The psychological literature calls this reactance.
When something is taken away,
we instinctively want it more,
independent of how much we actually wanted it before.
Think about that for a second.
You might be partially in love with the unavailability itself.
You might be confusing the ache of deprivation, the biological screaming of a reward system that's been cut off with evidence of exceptional, irreplaceable love.
Not because you're foolish, but because you're human.
There's a line I think about all the time from Victor Frankel.
Between stimulus and response, there is space.
In that space is our power to choose our response.
understanding what's happening in your brain right now is that space.
It is the difference between being controlled by that neurological process
and being able to look at it, name it and make a different choice.
So let's look at the other thing your brain is doing.
Let's look at the story.
The story you're telling is fiction.
There's a difference between your highlight reel and the full picture.
There's a concept in cognitive behavioral therapy called selective
abstraction, the tendency to focus on one element of a situation while ignoring the broader context,
to take a fragment and let it represent the whole. We do this all the time, right? You judge someone
based on your first interaction. In plain language, you're watching the trailer for your relationship,
not the film. The trailer. Trailers, as you know, are masterpieces of selective editing. Have you
ever been to the theatres and you watch a trailer before the movie that you're going for? And then you think,
I can't wait to watch that movie.
Then you watch that movie and every joke was in the trailer,
every action moment was in the trailer,
every beautiful romantic moment was in the trailer
and the movie was average.
Every great line, every beautiful image,
every moment of connection and tenderness and electricity
cut together to make you want to see the movie.
The trailer for a mediocre film
can make it look like the most important
cinematic experience of your lifetime.
If you've just gone through a breakup,
this is what your brain is doing.
it has cut a three-minute trailer for a two-year relationship
and you have watched that trailer so many times
that you've started to believe the trailer is the relationship.
So I want to do something with you that's going to be uncomfortable
and I want you to do it honestly.
I want you to watch the full film.
Not to be cruel, not to demonize them or to erase what was real and good,
but because you cannot make clear-eyed decisions about your own recovery,
about whether you should reach out, about whether this deserves to be mourned or released,
about what you actually want if you're working from a distorted source.
Think about the thing that ended it.
Not the surface event, the moment, the conversation, the actual underlying pattern,
the pattern that kept reasserting itself, that you kept hoping would change that never quite did.
What was it?
Was it that they made you feel like an afterthought?
that your needs were inconvenient,
that they were emotionally unavailable in a way
that made you work constantly for reassurance
you should have just been given,
that there was always something more important than you,
the job, the friends, the general principle of their independence,
or was it something in you?
A pattern of your own that this relationship was surfacing,
an anxious attachment style that turned you into someone you didn't like,
a habit of losing yourself in someone else
until you couldn't find the edges of where you ended and they began.
Whatever the pattern was, it was real, it was consistent, and it did not go away.
And if you got back together tomorrow, it would still be there, still consistent, still real,
with the added weight of everything that's happened since.
One of my favorite Buddhist teachings is this.
You cannot step in the same river twice.
The river changes, and you change as well.
you're trying to return to doesn't exist anymore. The relationship of the highlight reel is not a
place you can go back to. It was barely even a place you were actually at. Psychologist John Gottman,
who has spent 40 years studying couples, identified what he calls the full horseman of relationship
failure, contempt, criticism, defensiveness, and stonewalling. And his research found that by the time
relationships end, these patterns have usually been present and consistent for an average of six years
before the breakup. Six years, which means you'd probably have evidence, memories, feelings,
moments that the relationships had these patterns for a long time. But those memories are now fuzzy,
explained away, rewritten as misunderstandings or your fault or understandable given their
circumstances, because your editing brain has decided the relationship was better than it was.
I'm not saying it wasn't real, I'm not saying it didn't matter, I'm not saying there wasn't love or beauty or genuine connection.
There probably was.
And that's what makes it harder, not easier, because you're not mourning a lie.
You're mourning something that had real value and real limitations simultaneously.
And the human brain finds that complexity almost impossible to hold.
Here's the questions I want you to ask yourself after a breakup.
Who were you when you were in that relationship?
Were you more yourself or less yourself?
Were you growing toward who you want to be?
Or were you just tolerating, accommodating, shrinking or performing?
Were you genuinely seen or were you constantly trying to be seen and often failing?
Because your answer to that question tells you something far more important than whether they were wonderful.
It tells you whether the relationship was actually good for you.
Now here's what you're actually grieving and surprisingly it's not them.
it's something much older.
This is the part of the episode
where I need you to stay with me
because this is the hardest part
and also the most important.
When someone comes to me
or a trusted friend and says,
I can't stop thinking about my ex,
I think I made a mistake,
I think they were the one.
There is almost always something
underneath the grief
about the specific person
that doesn't get examined
because grief is not simple
and romantic grief is almost never
just about the person in front of you.
The psychologist
and attachment researcher Sue Johnson
has spent her career studying
what happens in the nervous system
when intimate connection is threatened
or lost. And what she
found is that adult romantic attachment
doesn't operate in isolation.
It operates on the top
of the entire architecture of attachment
you've been building
since you're an infant.
When your earliest caregivers
were consistent and responsive,
you developed what's called
a secure attachment style.
You learned at the level of the nervous system programming before language even existed,
that people are safe, that you're worthy of love, and that separation is temporary.
That you can let people go and they will come back.
Or if they don't, you will survive and find connection again.
When your earliest caregivers were inconsistent or absent or overwhelming or emotionally unavailable,
you developed a different program.
You might have anxious attachment to constant background hum that love is precarious,
that you have to work to maintain it,
that the other person's withdrawal
is evidence that you've done something wrong.
Or avoid an attachment,
the learned belief that needing people is dangerous,
that you're better off not needing,
that closeness is a trap.
Most people reading this,
most people doing the 3am spiral,
are not just grieving a relationship,
they are re-experiencing a very old wound.
The grief about this person
is a portal into a grief
that has been sitting in the body
for much longer. The anxious, attached person isn't just missing their ex. They are re-experiencing
every moment in childhood when love felt conditional, when approval could be earned and then suddenly
withdrawn, when they tried their very hardest, and it still wasn't enough. The avoidant person
who is pretending to be fine, and yet finds themselves inexplicably devastated, isn't just
managing a breakup. They are brushing against the thing they
have spent their whole life running from, the terrifying evidence that they needed someone and then
lost them. I'm not saying this to psychoanalyze you, but to offer something critical. Compassion for the
scale of what you're actually carrying. Stop hating yourself for not getting over your ex. You're not
weak because this is so hard. You're not pathetic because you can't stop thinking about them. You're a
person who formed a deep attachment that is connected to something much larger and older and more
foundational than this one relationship. And when that attachment is disrupted, the pain reaches
all the way down into that original wound. As shocking as this sounds, this is actually good news.
Because it means the healing you do right now, if you can do it properly, if you do it honestly,
is not just about getting over this person. It is about attending to something that is needed attention
for a very long time.
This breakup, as terrible as it feels, is also an invitation.
The Zen teacher Pema Children writes about something she calls groundlessness,
the terrifying experience of having the floor fall away from under you,
of being in free fall with nothing solid to grab.
And she argues counterintuitively, provocatively,
that groundlessness is not a problem to be solved.
It is the most spiritual condition available to a human being.
Because when the ground falls away,
you discover whether you are standing on solid ground at all,
or whether you are standing on the illusion of someone else holding you up.
The spiral of romanticizing your ex is at its core
the desperate attempt to find the floor again,
to go back to the thing that felt like solid ground.
But the floor was never solid.
It was a person, which means it was a person,
which means it was always going to move.
Stop romanticizing your ex.
You're not missing them.
You're missing the version they showed you
before you saw the full picture.
You're not missing them.
You're missing the future.
You're already planned in your head.
You're not missing them.
You're missing feeling chosen.
You're not missing them.
You're just not ready to let go of the story yet.
But you will be.
If you've gone through a breakup,
the work, the real work, is not to find new ground to stand on,
it's to find yourself standing without anything to lean on.
In the groundlessness, for long enough to realize you are always capable of standing alone.
There's a Japanese concept called mono-no-aware, often translated as the pathos of things,
the bitter sweetness of impermanence.
the particular beauty and sadness that comes from knowing that nothing lasts.
The Japanese don't treat impermanence as a problem.
They treat it as the very thing that gives experience its beauty.
Cherry blossoms are the most revered symbol in Japanese culture,
not despite the fact that they fall in a week because of it.
What you had was real, what you had could have been beautiful in parts,
and it is gone.
And all three of those things are true simultaneously.
And sitting with that truth, all of it, without rewriting the ending, without fantasy editing it into something it wasn't, without bargaining with the past or that person is not resignation, it is not giving up, it is the most courageous thing you can do.
The willingness to feel the full beauty of something that is over.
Now let me tell you how to actually do that, how to interrupt the spiral, how to work with your brain instead of being controlled by it, because knowing the science doesn't make it stop.
hurting, but it does change what you do with the hurt. Let me be really honest with you about
breakups. There is no version of getting over someone that doesn't involve feeling it. There's no
cognitive hack that bypasses grief. There is no framework that makes this painless. There are
two types of pain. The first is the pain that moves you, that transforms you, that carries you
somewhere new. And then there's the pain that loops, the pain that keeps you exactly where you are
circling the same drain for months or years, pretending to be the depth of feeling when it's actually
just a broken record. Experience Harry Styles live in London, England at Wembley Stadium.
This is Harry Styles. I-R-Radio wants to send you in a mate across the pond with flights from
Virgin Atlantic, hotel from tripcentral.ca, tickets, and $1,000 cash.
Here we got to.
Download the free IHeart Radio app.
Listen to IHeart new music for 10 minutes.
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Every day is another chance to see Harry Styles.
Very excited to see you with the show.
Kiss all the time, disco occasionally available now.
Hey, I'm Nora Jones, and I love playing music with people so much that my podcast called Playing Along is back.
I sit down with musicians from all musical styles to play songs together in an
intimate setting. Every episode's a little different, but it all involves music and conversation
with some of my favorite musicians. Over the past two seasons, I've had special guests like
Dave Grohl, Levei, Mavis Staples, Remy Wolf, Jeff Tweedy, really too many to name. And this
season, I've sat down with Alessia Cara, Sarah McLaughlin, John Legend, and more. Check out my new
episode with Josh Grobin. You related to the Phantom at that point. Yeah, I was definitely the
phantom in that. That's so funny.
Share each day with me each night, each morning.
Say you love me.
You know I...
So come hang out with us in the studio and listen to Playing Along on the IHeart Radio app.
Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Ready for a different take on Formula One?
Look no further than no grip.
A new podcast tackling the culture of Motor Racing's most coveted series.
Join me, Lily Herman, as we dive into the under-explored pockets of F-1, including the astrology of the current grid.
Lewis Hamilton, Crapicorn Sun, Cancer Moon. Wouldn't you know it? Michael Schumacher is also a Capricorn Sun, Cancer Moon.
The story of the sports most consequential driver strike.
We have one man who, upon hearing that he was going to be fired, freaked out, and apparently climbed out the window of the bathroom.
And was Daniel Ricardo's illustrious F-1 career, a success story, a cautionary tale, or some combination?
of both. He started getting all this attention and he maybe started to think I'm bigger than this.
I'm better. And plenty of other mishap scandals and sagas that have made Formula One a delightful,
decadent, gumster fire for more than 75 years. Listen to No Grip on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts. Here's how you get to the pain that moves you. Tool number one,
the no contact rule. And I want to talk to you about why it's actually.
biology. You've heard about no contact, but you may not know the real reason it works. And the real
reason is not about playing games or winning the breakup or making them miss you. The real reason is
neurological. Every time you check their social media, you are feeding the addiction. You are
reactivating the dopamine circuit. You're telling your neural pathways, this is still relevant.
Keep tracking it. Your brain cannot begin to withdraw, cannot begin to heal. While you keep
administering micro doses of the drug. No contact is not punishment. No contact is detox. And it includes
the things you're pretending don't count. The casual social media check that you tell yourself is harmless.
The friendly text you're composing in your head. The driving past where they live. Every one of these
is a hit. Every one of these restarts the clock on withdrawal. You're not cutting them off
because you're cold. You're cutting off the supply because you're trying to heal. Those are completely
different things. Stop checking their feed. They're not coming back because you watch their story.
They're not coming back because you like something from 47 weeks ago at 2 a.m. They're not coming
back because you figured out who that person in their photo is. They're not coming back because
you've refreshed their profile 11 times today. They're not coming back. But your piece is
the second you stop looking. Tool number two, the full picture actually.
I want you to do something. Tonight, if you're brave enough, take a piece of paper, draw a line
down the middle, on the left side, write down the things you genuinely miss. The real things,
not the imagined, perfect version, the actual things that were good and real and valuable.
On the right side, write down the things you've been selectively forgetting, the pattern that
kept repeating, the way you felt bad on days, which were more frequent than your highlight
real admits, the specific moments where you felt unseen or dismissed or too much or not
not enough, the days you cried. Write down who you were on your worst days in that relationship.
Write down the cost, personally, professionally to your family. This isn't bitterness. It's not
revenge. It's accuracy. You're correcting your memories editing. You're forcing your brain to
hold the full picture rather than just a trailer. Tool number three, interrupt the spiral
literally. The romanticising spiral is a thought pattern and thought patterns are neurological
pathways, neural circuits that have been strengthened through repetition. Every time you indulge
the spiral, you strengthen the pathway. Every time you interrupt it, you begin to weaken it. It's not
suppression forcing yourself to not think about something. Actually, this increases the frequency
of the thought. It's the don't think about a pink elephant problem. The harder you try not to
think about the pink elephant, you think about the pink elephant. What works instead is what
neuroscientists call pattern interruption, a brief but genuine redirect of neural attention to something
that requires full cognitive engagement. When the spiral starts, when you catch your hand moving toward
their Instagram, when the imaginary conversation begins, when the maybe we gave up too soon,
story starts playing, you do something that requires your genuine attention. Immediately,
something physical works best. A short, vigorous walk, cold water on your face, five push-ups,
something that activates your body and breaks the cognitive loop.
Then, and this is key, you do not fight the feeling.
You name it.
I am experiencing a craving for this person.
Just that.
The simple act of naming and emotion,
one neuroscientist call affect labeling,
activates the prefrontal cortex
and measurably reduces activity in the amygdala.
You move the feeling from the reactive part of your brain
to the observing part.
You become the person watching the spiral rather than the person inside it.
Tool number four, rebuild identity, not find yourself.
I know find yourself is tired advice.
Bear with me because this is different, I promise.
One of the most underappreciated effects of a significant relationship ending
is what psychologists call self-concept contraction.
In a long or deep relationship, your identity expands.
you become someone who is part of a we.
You have shared friends, shared routines, shared references, shared futures.
When the relationship ends, that whole dimension of identity collapses.
You don't just lose the person, you lose the version of yourself that existed in relation to them.
The antidote is not to immediately seek a new relationship to fill the gap,
but to actively rebuild your own independent self-concept, to recover your own narrative.
This means what did you stop doing when you were in that relationship?
What did you let atrophy?
What parts of yourself did you set aside to make room for the we?
Friendships you let drift, interests you abandoned, ambitions you quietly shelved,
the parts of you that existed before them and are still there waiting.
Go find them.
Not as therapy, not as distraction as recovery of self.
Every time you do something that is purely authentically yours,
something that reflects who you are independent of any relationship.
You are rebuilding the self-concept that the relationship and the breakup have eroded.
You are answering the question, who am I without them?
And discovering that the answer is more than you remembered.
Please stop making excuses for them in your mind.
Don't forget how small they made you feel.
don't forget they had every chance to choose you.
Don't forget the excuses you made for them.
Don't forget you cried because of this person more than once.
Don't forget how many times they disappointed you and you stayed anyway.
Please don't forget your worth.
Please don't forget you deserved more than what they gave you.
Please don't forget you always gave them the benefit of the doubt.
Please don't forget you always saw the good in them and received the bad
Please don't forget you bent over backwards when they barely moved
Please don't forget someone who deserves you won't make you question if you're enough
Tool number five let the grief be grief
Don't dress it up as love
This is the hardest one and the most important grief is grief
It needs to be felt not managed
not optimized, not rushed through or bypassed
or processed into insight before it's ready.
Grief is a biological process, the nervous system integrating a loss,
and it takes the time it takes.
But there is a crucial difference between grief and romanticization.
Grief moves, comes in waves, intense than quiet,
then intense again, gradually spacing out.
It doesn't ask you to do anything except feel it.
It doesn't require you to figure out whether they were the one
or whether you made a mistake or whether you should text them,
it just hurts and then hurts less,
and then hurts again,
and eventually, if you don't keep feeding it,
it hurts differently,
not as a wound but as a scar,
as evidence of something real that changed you that you remember.
Romanticizing a relationship doesn't help you move forward.
It loops, it keeps you in a story,
it asks you to stay in the question,
what if, maybe, perhaps, if only,
because the story needs you to stay in it to stay alive.
The story is not serving your grief.
It's serving itself.
So let yourself grief.
Actually grief.
Feel the loss, feel the sadness,
feel the particular ache of missing someone
who is genuinely important to you.
That grief is true, that grief is healthy,
that grief is the right response to loss.
Just don't let the grief become a story
that keeps you from moving through it.
feel it and then let it move.
You've been telling yourself that you're holding on to them because of how much you love them.
I want to offer you a different possibility.
You've been holding on to the story of them because it's safer than the thing on the other
side of letting go.
On the other side of letting go is the open question of what comes next.
The terrifying freedom of not being defined by this grief, the vulnerability of being available
to yourself, to life, to whoever might.
come next without the protection of still being someone's ex. On the other side of letting go is the
work of figuring out who you actually are, not in relation to them, not in comparison to what you had,
just you. Standing in your own life, making choices from your own center, building something from
where you actually are, rather than from where you wish you still were. But here's what I know.
The love that is coming for you, the life that is waiting for you, is not located.
in the past. It is not in the photos you keep looking back to or the songs you keep listening
to or the imaginary conversations where they finally understand. It is in front of you, in the
version of yourself that has been through something real and survived it and learned things you
couldn't have learned any other way. I really hope that this episode helps you. I hope you'll pass
it on to a friend who may be going through this right now. Thank you for trusting me. Remember,
I'm always in your corner and I'm forever rooting for you.
If you love this episode, you're going to love my conversation with Matthew Hussey
on how to get over your ex and find true love in your relationships.
Make a list of the things that are truly important for you to find in a partner and then be that list.
I'm Bailey Taylor and this is It Girl.
This podcast is all about going deeper with the women's shaping culture right now.
Yes, we will talk about the style and the success, but we are also talking about the pressure,
the expectations, and the real work behind it all.
As a woman in the industry, you're always underestimated.
So you have to work extra hard in a way that doesn't compromise who you are in your integrity.
You know, I like to say I was kind of like a silent ninja.
Listen to It Girl with Bailey Taylor on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, everyone. I'm Cheryl Stray, author of Wild and Tiny Beautiful Things.
I'm excited to share that I have a new podcast called Mind Over Mountain.
In each episode, I interview athletes, adventurers, and adrenaline seekers
to discuss the inner landscapes that informed and inspired their extraordinary feats.
So we, too, can better understand how to face our own seemingly insurmountable challenges.
Listen to Mind Over Mountain every Thursday on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Stephanie Young, host of Love Trapped, the story of former Bachelor Star.
Clayton Eckerd,
caught in a pregnancy hoax.
You doctored this particular test twice, Ms. Owens, correct?
I doctored the test once.
As the season continues,
Laura, Scottsdale Police.
Laura Owens finally faces consequences.
Breaking news at Americopa County
as Laura Owens has been indicted on fraud charges.
Open your free I-Heart Radio app,
search Love Trapped, and start listening now.
This is an I-Heart podcast.
Guaranteed Human.
Thank you.
