On Purpose with Jay Shetty - They Weren't The One For You and That's Ok (8 Steps to Breakthrough Heartbreak)
Episode Date: August 23, 2024How did you realize they weren't the one for you? How did you cope with the heartbreak? Today shares a detailed exploration of the emotional journey involved in recognizing and accepting that someone ...you once believed was "the one" for you, wasn't actually the right person. Often, it’s common for people to convince themselves that someone is the perfect partner, even before that person has committed or shown signs of being a suitable match. This can lead to heartbreak when the relationship fails, but it’s okay because the person wasn't truly right for them either. Jay also discusses the importance of understanding whether the person was truly healed from past wounds or whether they were presenting a version of themselves that wasn’t authentic. Consider the idea that sometimes people stay in relationships out of fear of being alone rather than genuine love or connection. And if a partner is unable or unwilling to engage in meaningful conversations, they might not be the right person. In this episode you'll learn: How to recognize when someone isn't right for you How to focus on your partner's reality, not ideals How to prioritize meaningful conversations How to stay self-aware after a breakup How to balance emotions in a relationship Remember, it's okay if someone wasn't the one for you—what matters most is that you remain true to yourself and continue to seek the love and connection you deserve. With Love and Gratitude, Jay Shetty What We Discuss: 00:00 Intro 01:54 They Weren’t For You and That’s Okay 05:04 #1: When People Show You Who They Are, Believe Them 09:09 #2: They Never Showed Up When It Mattered 10:55 #3: They’re Still Healing 12:41 #4: They Kept Saying We Can’t Do This 16:37 #5: You Were Chasing the Whole Time 18:53 #6: They Made You Feel Detached 19:13 #7: You Are More Scared Of Being Alone Than Be With Them 20:58 #8: They Couldn’t Open Up in Meaningful ConversationsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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And that's the interesting thing about this idea that they weren't for you,
and by the way, you weren't for them either.
We often think I'm the perfect person for them.
They're never gonna find someone like me.
Sure, they're never gonna find someone like you,
but you weren't the person for them either.
The number one health and wellness podcast.
Jay Shetty. Jay Shetty.
The one, the only Jay Shetty.
Hey everyone, welcome back to On Purpose.
Thank you so much for joining me.
Whether you're on a walk, whether you're cooking,
whether you're with a friend,
whether you're driving, wherever you are,
thank you for tuning in, thanks for being here.
And I'm guessing you tuned in
because someone in your life sent this episode to you
or you saw the title and thought to yourself,
I've been there, I'm there right now.
I know how that feels.
I'm here to remind you that they weren't the one for you,
and that's okay.
I speak to so many people every week
who tell me that they thought they were so close to having found true love,
to having found the one, to having met their partner.
And for some reason it didn't work out.
Some of these people had been together for years and they were waiting for this
person to propose.
And when they shared their ultimatum, the person walked away.
Some of these people thought everything was on track until one day their partner turned
around and said, I don't think this is working anymore.
And for some people, they were engaged to be married and their person turned around
and said, I'm not in love with you anymore.
Now, all of these things are hard because you built up
the belief that someone was meant for you.
And what a lot of us don't realize is that we start
believing someone is the one for us,
even before they agree or commit to it.
How many of you have seen yourself future tripping?
You meet someone and you're already thinking
about your wedding day,
you're thinking about having kids together,
you're thinking about moving in,
you're thinking at least three steps ahead.
How many of you are feeling the pressure
that the next person you meet has to be the one,
must be the one,
because you feel you're getting old, time's ticking?
We put all these artificial pressures on ourselves
only to make ourselves believe that someone is our person.
And when that person takes away that thought,
that belief, that idea,
we're often left broken and brokenhearted.
And I'm here to remind you
that they weren't the one for you, and that's okay.
They didn't want to love you, and that's okay.
They didn't want to show up for you, and that's okay.
They didn't want to be there for you, and that's okay.
Because they weren't the one for you, and you're okay.
And you'll be okay, because you're still here for yourself.
Because a no from someone else doesn't have to feel
like a rejection of your true self. Because someone walking away from you doesn't have to feel like a rejection of your true self.
Because someone walking away from you
doesn't mean you have to abandon yourself as well.
And I think this is one of the biggest challenges I see
is that when someone walks away from us,
when someone chooses a different route,
we start to follow them on their path,
wondering why they left us,
not realizing that we're leaving ourselves behind as well.
Don't leave yourself behind following someone else
who wasn't meant for you.
I wanna guide you through how to deal with that heartbreak,
to how to reconcile this idea that someone wasn't for you
when you felt that they must have been the person for you.
The first thing I want to talk about is a beautiful quote from Maya Angelou.
She said, when people show you who they are, believe them.
Let me say that again. Maya Angelou said,
when people show you who they are, believe them.
How many of you made excuses for this person?
How many of you constantly created justifications for their actions, behaviors, mindsets, attitude,
communication style? I mean, I could go on and on and on.
How many of you would jump on the phone to your friend and your friend would say something like, yeah, they were a bit off that night. You'd be like,
oh, no, but they've got lots of stuff going on at work. Maybe even your parents said something
like, I'm not sure about this. And you're like, no, no, mom, you just don't understand.
Right? Maybe you had a brother or a sister who just said, look, I can just sense that
and you stopped them. You said, no, I'll stop you right there. This is my person.
A lot of us do to ourselves.
A lot of us deceived ourselves.
And yes, that person may have
feel like we should do that, but they didn't deceive us.
We lied to ourselves about them.
Right. Let's really reconcile that for a second.
So many of us lie about someone else
and lie for someone else in order to protect them
because we're protecting why we like them.
Let's just talk about that for a second.
We try and protect someone's reputation
because subconsciously we're trying to protect our own.
We're trying to protect the reason we like them.
We're trying to protect the reason we're with them.
We're trying to protect the reason we're with them. We're trying to protect the reason we feel that way.
And often what I find is that we've tried to protect
a perfect image of someone else
when in reality what we experience from them
is completely different.
But the thing is when you repeat that pattern,
when you keep
protecting this perfect image of them, you start to believe that's who they are. And so when they
walk away or it doesn't work out or it doesn't pan out that way, you're left thinking, wait a
minute, but they were so great. They loved me. They're amazing. But really, you were the one
justifying, you were the one creating excuses, you were the one
making it feel like it was going in the right direction. So how do we deal with
this? Because that story and that narrative in our mind is intoxicating,
right? It feels great to tell ourselves that story. We found the one, it's
working out, we love them, they love us. How do we not do the opposite? A lot of
us experience the opposite where we get really cynical, right?
No matter what someone does, we go,
oh, they're not my person.
Oh, no, no, they're not right for me.
Oh, no, no, we self-sabotage, right?
So there's two sides to this coin.
One side is, they're the perfect person.
I'm gonna protect that image.
The other side is, they're not my person,
no matter how great it is.
And both of those lead to pushing people away
or people walking away.
And the balance view is, well, no,
let me get a realistic view
of what story they're telling me.
They're showing me that sometimes they prioritize me
and sometimes they prioritize work.
Okay, am I good with that?
They're showing me that actually they never prioritize me
and they only prioritize work.
Okay, let me make note of that.
They're showing me that they value me when it's convenient.
They're showing me that they love to show up
for the physical intimacy and when things are great,
but when things are bad, they turn away.
And what you did at that time was just
amplify the good, focus on the positives. Now here's the challenge, right? We're scared of
becoming cynical, but then the other end is we become celebratory about all the little tiny
things they do well. And we don't find that balance. That balance comes by truly taking it for what it is and observing
whether we like that, whether it works for us. Number two, they never showed up when
it mattered. They weren't the one for you. And that's okay, because they never showed
up when it mattered. Think about someone who, whenever it was tough, whenever it was hard,
they weren't the first person you called. They weren't the first person to be there.
Actually, they found a way to duck out every time and they had good reasons for it. Now,
that's not the kind of person you want to build a life with. That's not the kind of person that
you want to grow with because what you practice before commitment is what you receive after commitment.
Right? It doesn't really change. People think the big wedding day, the marriage changes behavior.
It doesn't always. It rarely does. It continues as is and if anything it may even dissolve.
Now it's harder when you look back and you think,
well, they always showed up when it mattered.
Maybe they helped you through a really tough time
in your life.
Maybe they helped you through a really difficult time
and you're thinking, they must be my person.
They helped me through that time.
Well, maybe they were just with you
to help you through that time.
Maybe they were just there to guide you
through that difficult time,
and that was their role in your life.
And I know that made you believe that they must want to be around forever, that it must work out forever.
But it's accepting that they actually helped you in your time of need and that was beautiful.
It's not a negative thing. It's not a horrendous thing, but they were there for you when it mattered.
And you can accept that you can receive that and you can appreciate that as it is. Now
this third one's really interesting. They weren't the one for you and that's okay because
they told you they had healed, but you realize they hadn't. A lot of the time, maybe you got back with an ex,
maybe things took you away, maybe you got back together,
maybe this is someone that presented them in a certain way
and they said, hey, I've healed, I've grown,
I'm a different person now.
And you thought, yes, this must be my person,
they've been through a transition,
they've been through a transformation,
we're made for each other, it's gonna work out.
And they weren't the one for you because they hadn't healed.
And so you built up a picture of the version of themselves that they said was healed.
And you imagined a life with that version.
You imagined a life with that character.
And that's sadly what it was.
It was a character from a movie.
But in reality, they weren't there.
So they weren't the one for you.
That character was that image was again.
And so you start to notice how more often than not, the one that was for you was an
image you built or an image they built for you.
And in reality, they weren't the one for you.
So what do you do with that information?
You remind yourself that they weren't for you
because it was a character they built.
The version they told you they were.
You recognize that, you sit with that
as uncomfortable as it is.
To recognize that the person you wanted to be with
didn't actually exist.
And it frees you from that constant thought analysis
of they were the one, I know they were,
they could have been that, they said it, they knew it.
And this all comes back down to a realization
of how we spend so much time in what if,
instead of what is.
Something that makes me crazy is when people say, well, I had this career before, but it was a waste.
And that's where the perspective shift comes.
That it's not a waste that everything you've done has built you to where you are now.
This is She Pivots, the podcast where we explore the inspiring pivots women have made and dig deeper into the personal reasons behind them.
Join me, Emily Tish Sussman, every Wednesday on She Pivots as I sit down with inspiring women like Misty Copeland, Brooke Shields, Vanessa Hudgens, and so many more.
We dive into how these women made their pivot and their mindset shifts that happened as
a result.
It's a podcast about women, their stories, and how their pivot became their success.
Listen to She Pivots on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Get emotional with me, Radhita Vleukya, in my new podcast, A Really Good Cry. you get your podcasts. healthier life. We're going to be talking with some of my best friends. I didn't know we were going to go there.
People that I admire.
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Number four, they weren't the one for you because they kept saying, we can't do this. When actually what they meant is they couldn't.
A lot of people will say, look, I don't think this is good for us anymore.
I don't think we're right for each other.
I don't think we're willing to do what it takes.
I don't think we have what it takes to last.
They're speaking on your behalf. If you've ever had a partner who's spoken on your behalf or used
the word we to summarize their feelings, used the word us to summarize their emotions, they weren't
the one for you. Because what they're saying is, I'm scared of acknowledging.
I don't have the courage to actually express how I feel,
so I'm gonna make it about both of us.
I don't have the guts to take accountability
and responsibility for how I'm feeling,
and therefore I'm gonna make it our feeling.
And guess what, you'd read that, and you'd even think at one point,
yeah, maybe I'm not cut out for this.
You know what? Maybe they're right.
And maybe you even reflected on yourself and thought,
maybe I'm the problem.
Maybe I'm the reason they feel this way.
And we have to do that reflection. It can be us.
There is a middle ground.
There is a spot in between
where we have to recognize that we have to take accountability. We have to recognize
where we've contributed to this. But I think the mistake becomes when they're getting to
choose our emotions about the relationships rather than us getting to share what they
are.
The reason why this one's really interesting
is because their language, when you reflect on it,
will show you what frequency they work on.
So if your frequency is, hey, we can solve this.
Hey, we can do this.
Hey, let's take responsibility.
Hey, let's figure it out.
That's a high vibration frequency.
If their frequency is, we can't do this, it's never gonna work out, that's figure it out. That's a high vibration frequency. If their frequency is we can't do this,
it's never gonna work out, that's a low frequency.
Now if your frequency is, hey, you need to change,
you need to figure it out,
that's also a low level frequency.
So in the Bhagavad Gita,
it talks about the four types of frequency.
The fourth and lowest type of frequency
is fear and insecurity.
It's where we're either scared of commitment or we like to make the other person feel scared,
or we exercise manipulation and control.
Better than that is the frequency of passion where we may want something for someone else.
We may demand things. Again, not good for the long term,
but better than the first one.
Above that is the frequency of duty, responsibility, accountability.
And above that is the frequency of love and joy and connection.
And often what I find in this is that we want to jump
from the passionate love to the love-love.
We want to jump from, here's who I want you to be
to can we just be madly in love?
And the most important step is the mode of goodness,
the frequency of goodness,
which is about responsibility and accountability.
I find that actually those two are probably the most
under-talked about values in a healthy relationship.
Can each of us be accountable for our own emotions,
our own actions and feelings?
And can we take responsibility
for how they affect the other person?
Can we take responsibility for re-energizing,
rejuvenating this relationship?
Accountability and responsibility
are things that they didn't have or you didn't
have for them and that's the interesting thing about this idea that they weren't for you and
by the way you weren't for them either. We often think I'm the perfect person for them, they're
never going to find someone like me. Sure they're never going to find someone like you but you
weren't the person for them either. Step number five you were chasing them the whole time.
You'd made up this story in your head that they were better than you,
that they were the catch, that they were the one that all your friends
and family would approve of.
And throughout the time you were with them and even before you got them,
you were chasing them.
And even when you were with them, you were chasing them.
And often we chase someone before we're with them.
We chase someone when we're with them, you were chasing them. And often we chase someone before we're with them. We chase someone when we're with them.
And then eventually we chase them away.
We're running behind someone for so long that they don't know what else to do,
but run away.
We're running after someone for so long that they continue to run away.
And the reason I'm raising that is because if you feel like you're constantly chasing someone,
they're not for you.
And so often we feel like, yes, I got them.
Yes, like I'm just making it perfect.
Yeah, they get it now.
Like, oh, I feel a bit safer now.
And it's like, no, your person will be peaceful.
Your person, you'll feel safe and they'll feel safe.
You won't feel like you're constantly chasing them,
only to chase them away.
And I feel so many of us do that.
We constantly feel, oh, they're out of my league
or they're better than me.
I better do everything to hold on to them.
If you're feeling that way, they weren't for you.
They're not for you.
And that's okay because you've realized,
well, I shouldn't be feeling anxious and nervous
and on edge and in a lower frequency of fear and insecurity
if they're my person.
Do I feel peaceful around them?
Do I feel stable around them?
Do I feel peaceful around them? Do I feel stable around them? Do I feel supported around them?
Do I like how I feel when I'm around them?
If they're making us insecure, fearful, anxious,
or if that's who we are and we're not healing that,
because often I find that people take their anxious skew
into a relationship and reflect it even on someone stable.
But hey, if I was triggered that way
and I wasn't working on it, they weren't for me either
because I've got to heal.
We have to reflect on where we need to heal.
As much as we keep saying they're not for us,
we're not for them either.
Number six, they made you feel that they were aloof.
If people always seem detached, aloof, not committed, not connected, they weren't for
you and that's okay.
Because if someone's already detached, that detachment is only going to get stronger.
There's a couple more things I want to share with you.
You were more scared of being alone than you were excited about being with them.
Be honest with me for a second.
How many of you were in a relationship because you were just scared of being on your own?
You were scared of being lonely?
You were scared of being single?
And if that was the case and they left,
they weren't for you.
Because if they were for you,
you'd be more excited about being with them
than you are scared of being alone.
Now, we're all scared of being alone.
We're all scared of being lonely.
It's somewhat natural.
And of course, in my book, Eight Rules of Love,
I talk about how you can build that into solitude,
but we all want to be with someone.
We want to be connected.
That's okay.
But what's not okay is that we're
with them out of that fear and insecurity. We're with them because of that anxiety. We're with
someone because of that overwhelming feeling we have of we'd be inadequate and lost without them.
So it's not an excitement. It's not a positive. It's a negative motivator.
It's a negative drive that's keeping us connected to this person.
And that's not for us. We don't want to be with someone because we don't want to be alone.
We want to be with them because we love being with them.
We enjoy their company. We engage with them. They listen to us.
They make us feel seen, heard and understood.
It's a really, really important thing to think about.
And often we keep saying, oh, really important thing to think about.
And often we keep saying, oh, I wish they were for me.
They were for me.
We were so good together.
But the truth is we weren't because you were just with them
because you didn't want to be alone.
And that's a great thing to reflect on and talk to yourself about.
The eighth and final step that I wanna discuss with you is,
and a lot of people struggle with this one,
is that they want their partner to open up,
they want their partner to engage in conversation,
but the person could never open up
or prioritize meaningful conversations.
They couldn't prioritize the conversations
that you knew were integral
to the healthy heart of the relationship.
And they weren't for you.
I think sometimes we don't know our priorities
and preferences and when someone ticks our preferences,
we make ourselves believe that they have our priorities
and we get our priorities mixed up.
And I would focus the other way around. Where can we focus on our priorities more?
What are the things that are important to you? And these are important things to reflect on
when something ends because when something ends, we always get focused on the beginning, right?
When something ends, we start focusing on how things were at the start.
We often, even maybe to protect ourselves, we hide all the things that were bad for us
in the hope that things will work out once again.
I think it's so important in that moment to just say, you know what?
I recognize that they weren't for me because we weren't actually getting any of this right and the reason I'm feeling this way is because I don't want to be alone
I don't want to be single I don't want to be lost and I don't want to be confused
but guess what I've said this and I'll say I've said this before to so many
people I'll say it again it's better to be sad and single than it is to be sad
and with someone because the pain of the baggage of the commitment the pressure
of someone else's mind,
the potential of thinking about family, future,
all of that kind of stuff creates so much.
I've had so many people say to me, they had children
because they were trying to save a relationship
and it only made it harder.
And we make worse decisions that way.
I hope this episode helps you be honest with yourself.
I know that I've been direct,
but I really want you to reflect on these things.
And I wanna thank you for listening so deeply.
And please share this with a friend who might need it.
Pass this along.
There's gonna be someone in your life who's heartbroken
and hopefully this real talk guides them
to their true authentic self.
And realize that they weren't the one for you,
and that's okay, because there is someone for you.
And that's not going to be someone who's fully prepped, fully packaged,
fully delivered.
It's going to be the person you want to build with and they want to build with
you.
It's going to be the person that you're willing to put in the work with and
they're willing to put in the work for you. Remember,
I'm forever in your corner and I'm always rooting for you. Thanks for listening.
Hey, everyone.
If you loved that conversation,
go and check out my episode
with the world's leading therapist, Laurie Gottlieb,
where she answers the biggest questions
that people ask in therapy
when it comes to love, relationships,
heartbreak, and dating.
If you're trying to figure out that space right now,
you won't want to miss this conversation.