Browsing Tag

healing

How to Get Over a Breakup – Part 2 (Learning from Loss)

Though I sit in darkness, the LORD will be my light.
Micah 7:8

If you’ve ever gone through a relationship breakup, you’ve probably heard something like this:

“It’s not you, it’s me.”

“I’ve found someone else.”

“This isn’t working anymore.”

Or, maybe something worse.

Whether the ending was sudden or gradual, your life has a different pace now. It has more empty spaces. But unfortunately, you may want to fill the absence with what you think will satisfy—and it could be an unhealthy way of coping. A false comforter.

Getting comfort and support is essential to the healing process. It may feel like the darkest time—like it’s always midnight—but, thankfully, light always overcomes darkness, and God provides nightlights of hope.

Here are some ideas for getting the comfort and support you need from your breakup:

• Let yourself cry. Crying is a normal and healthy response to a sad situation.

• Pray. Talk to God about your situation and invite Him into pain. Ask Him to heal and show you the way through. Rest in the comfort of the One who loves you more than you know.

• Talk with trusted friends or family members. Telling your story can help to ease your heart’s pain. When someone listens, we feel validated. However, be selective about how much you choose to tell and with whom you share.

• Write in a journal or notebook. When your feelings appear on a page (or even typed online), they are no longer swirling inside your head. You can vent your emotions, release your pain and do so in the privacy of your personal journal.

• Be encouraged. This is a time of transition. You’re going from a being couple to a single, from a “we” to a “me.” Change takes time and we all handle it differently, so be good to yourself in the process.

Grieve your losses. One of the biggest lessons I learned in my season of post-breakup darkness was the importance of grieving losses—going through not around the pain. It was a pivotal point in getting back to freedom and joy.

Here’s the thing: The pain won’t just go away if you ignore it. It can get stuck inside of you if you don’t deal with it. Emotional pain can pile up like garbage, blocking your movement forward into healing, wholeness and joy.

For some people, getting over a breakup takes a few weeks or months. For others it can take a year or more depending upon the level of relationship, the depth of love, the person’s emotional past, and how they handle emotions in general.

Everyone heals in their own way and their own timing because love and loss are unique for each person.

Here are some ideas on how to process your pain and release your sadness through grieving:

Acknowledge your loss. Getting through this season of grief and sadness begins by acknowledging that a loss has happened. Whether you left, he left, or it was a mutual agreement, something that was there is now gone.

Ask for help. Pray and ask the Holy Spirit to help you do what you cannot do on your own. With His power, you will be able to express and release emotional pain. In time you will get unstuck, and move back to feeling good again.

Recognize what you’ve lost and what remains. It can be helpful to make a list of your losses. Losing a significant love relationship is a loss, but you may have also incurred other losses during this time.

For instance, you may be feeling the loss of companionship and friendship, time spent with that person, the loss of affection and physical touch. Breaking up could mean the loss of a dream of a life together with that person.

And then make a list what remains. For example, you could list your life, your health, your family and friends, your creativity and other things. Thank God for those things.

Celebrate all you have and you will find that thankfulness leads to joy.

One day at a time, once choice at a time, healing happens.

With God’s strength at work in you, you can release the heartaches of today, and come closer to the freedom and joyful days of tomorrow.

When it feels like the darkness is closing in, trust that God is at work in your life—even when you cannot see. He will be with you through the night and lead you to hope, healing and brighter days ahead.

Just follow the Light…

Getting Over a Breakup – Jackie M. Johnson on Dr. James Dobson’s “Family Talk” – Day 2

Are you going through a painful breakup?

Do you know someone who is? If so, listen up.

This week I’m talking with Dr. James Dobson on his radio show, “Family Talk” about getting over a breakup and my helpful breakup recovery book, “When Love Ends and the Ice Cream Carton Is Empty.” (Moody Publishers)

Here’s the link to Day 2 of the program.

I hope it helps, heals and blesses you.

 

Excerpt from “When Love Ends”…

“You may not believe this right now but the day will come when you don’t think about him every day. And the mention of his name doesn’t pierce your heart like a verbal arrow.

You can drive past your special place and it no longer has a hold on you. It’s just a place. You know God loves you and he is with you and that makes all the difference.

And you come to realize that endings are a part of life and so are new beginnings.

You learn that God heals brokenness and brings joy and hope and healing and one day everything really will be OK. Maybe not today, but some day.

And one day you look up and smile as it begins to settle in your heart that God really is in control, that he cares, that he’s working all things together for the good and in the midst of your mess, God surprises you.

And things begin to change.

It’s time to heal your broken heart. The rest of your life is waiting.”

 

Dealing with Grief and Loss: Powerful Hope for Finding Joy Again

Losing someone you loved is difficult. No doubt about it.

Whether the loss was due to a death, a separation, a divorce or a relationship breakup, it’s often a difficult and messy process to get through the sadness and back to joy again.

Recently, a friend of mine lost her mother. Her passing was unexpected. Sudden. She is wondering how to find her way forward.

Rev. Billy Graham passed in February. His life and ministry have touched the lives of people around the globe.

Although I never met him personally, he was an excellent example of a life well lived. Surely, he will hear the words from the Lord as he greets Him in Heaven, “Well done, good and faithful servant!”

How do you move forward from grief and loss?

Navigating the strange and stormy waters of grief is hard. But not impossible.

Everyone’s healing journey will be different. And God may use different methods to lead you from sorrow to joy. And that’s okay. He is God. He knows what He is doing. We simply need to trust Him.

Comfort and support

Many people find comfort and support in the warm embrace of a close friend, a listening ear, or kind words. We need our friends to help us remember what we already know, or to say nothing and simply be there with us in the midst of the pain.

Soul support also comes thought journaling (writing down) prayers or feelings.

Healing can come through rest, or a change of scenery. Being out in the beauty of nature, God’s creation, is restorative. Music can be comforting, too.

Knowing God is with you, and that He is your comforter, brings peace as the words of Matthew 5:4 affirm, “Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted.”

Cling to God’s promises, hold on to hope, and surrender your pain to Him in prayer. He is with you—always.

Remember, that grief unprocessed, ignored or denied, will fester and build up inside you. But processing the pain brings release and relief. Feel your feelings and then chose to move forward, one step at a time, in the power of God’s Holy Spirit working in you.

Worship and the Word

When you are feeling hopeless the most powerful thing you can do is worship. Sing songs of praise. Or listen to them.

Despair cannot journey where praise and worship reside.

You may be too grief-stricken to know what to say. But you can put on a worship music CD, or even just sit with your eyes closed and ask God to heal your heart as you rest, focusing on His amazing love and comfort.

As we give God our praises, He gives us His presence.

Focusing on His character and what He has done for you lifts you to a new place.

Like rain soaks the desert and brings forth colorful cactus blossoms, worship and prayer bring renewal to a withering heart.  

Soak in God’s Word

In addition to worship, spending time reading God’s Word, the Bible, brings comfort and hope.

Discover the treasure that is in the Word of God. It is your spiritual food, nourishment every day; essential in times of need.

Open your Bible, there’s hope inside. Read it, ask God to open your eyes to the truth.

The good news is that there is life after loss. Day by day, step by step and choice by choice things start to change and light replaces the dark corners of your heart.

In March 2011, a tsunami caused by an 8.9 magnitude earthquake devastated northeastern Japan. It caused widespread destruction and extensive damage to coastal cities. The official death toll exceeded 9,000 lives. The landscape is now a sea of debris—a once thriving community is a veritable wasteland.

I once watched a TV program about that disaster and one survivor said, “There’s a different kind of strength you find after you’ve survived something terrible.”

Tragedies can undo us; they can also make us stronger.

When you are weak, God is your strong comfort. When you are exhausted, He is your strength—firm and secure. The Light of the World shines as your beacon—a lighthouse in the midst of the storm to guide you to safe harbor.

Light always overcomes the darkness.

 

Prayer: Lord, I come before you today. You know my heart; you see my tears. You hear my cries for help in this time of adversity. Some days I am sad, other days I am just numb. But you are with me always, and that makes all the difference. Help me through this time of grief and loss. You are stronger than anything that comes against me and I put my trust in You, the One who loves me most. I choose to leaning on you and your unchanging love and truth. Comfort my heart. In Jesus’ name I pray. Amen.

For more help and hope on handling grief and loss or other difficult times, see Jackie M. Johnson’s Hope on the Go and Praying With Power When Life Gets Tough.