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Been on an event, holiday or tried online dating? Help others make an informed choice by adding your rating.
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20 years ago my partner died in a car crash. From the moment of being told about the accident to the funeral and way beyond I was carried up on a wave of sympathetic and helpful friends.
If that same partner had left me for another woman do you think for a moment that I'd have received the outpouring of sympathy and concern from all those people for such a long time? I think not.
Sure my close girlfriends would have listened and sympathised, but somehow there is a stigma still attached to a partner leaving that generates different attitudes. 18 years later I mentioned the death of my partner to someone and they were profuse in their sympathy. I have long since healed, but it made me think. I wonder if that person would have even dreamt of expressing her sorrow had I told her that my partner left me 20 years ago. I suspect she'd think I should have got over it by now!!! Strange how we humans work isn't it!
When a loved one dies, there is a finality. We know that he/she didn't leave us for someone else so it seems easier to feel honoured and loved. When a loved one leaves and especially when they leave for or quickly find someone else and you have not, the loss is even more tearing because you know they are out there. There is no finality. There is always the possibility that somehow you can put back the pieces.
Both types of loss share common factors. The person you loved is no longer in your life. Your grief can be as deep when someone leaves you as when they die. It seems to me that we don't give the same degree of concern and tender care to those whose lover has left them as we do to those whose lover has died.
When someone leaves we need to go through the same process of grieving, acceptance and moving on as we would if that person died. We need to create our own sense of finality so that we can move on and we need the sympathy and tender support of our friends for as long as we need to learn to move on.
So, how do you get over it. What is it that you need to do in order to heal quickly and move on with a smile on your face and hope for the future?
And when you are looking back at yourself from having got over it, what would you tell yourself from there in the future that you have learned. Make it something worthwhile.
Written by world renown flirt coach Peta Heskell of Attraction Academy and Flirtzone.
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