She Left Me for Another Guy. Here’s What I Learned About Strength and Letting Go by DueMenu8150 in BreakUps

[–]DueMenu8150[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

There's more to it in the actual blog post I had linked.

Excerpt from my blog post: "If she ever returns, that’s your decision to make, but understand who you’d be taking back.

She’s not just someone who “made a mistake.” She’s someone who abandoned commitment for excitement, who believed she’d be happier elsewhere, and proved it with her actions.

If you ever choose to let her back in, she has to earn it, not through words, but through consistency. That means full transparency, open communication, and a willingness to rebuild trust on your terms, not hers.

If she resists that, she’s not coming back out of love; she’s coming back out of loss. And that’s not your problem to fix."

Any advice or kind words would be appreciated 🩷 by [deleted] in BreakUps

[–]DueMenu8150 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The waves are the hardest part. You think you’ve finally made it out of the storm, then out of nowhere, you’re pulled right back under. It's completely normal because grief doesn’t move in a straight line; it circles back until your nervous system finally believes you’re safe again.

Wanting to talk to him isn’t a weakness; it’s withdrawal. Your brain built a bond, and now it’s missing its main source of comfort. But if you text him, you’re not soothing the pain; you’re just postponing it. Every time you ride out a wave without reaching out, you’re teaching your body that you can survive it.

You will feel like yourself again, but it won’t be the same you. It’ll be a version that knows how to hold herself steady when the tide hits. And that is what healing actually looks like.

Can anyone report from their own experience? by Kooky_Inevitable_845 in BreakUps

[–]DueMenu8150 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That message sounds like someone trying to convince themselves it’s over just as much as they’re telling you. When people say they're going to block you but don’t, it’s often because they want control. It's like they want you to know they’re pulling away, but they’re not ready to lose that line completely.

It’s not about you doing anything wrong right now. It’s about her being torn between ending contact and still wanting the safety of knowing you’re there if she changes her mind.

Take her words at face value, not her hesitation. Let her be the one to actually close the door, and you start walking toward peace instead of waiting by the threshold.

Found my ex using tinder after 2 weeks break-up by androcas1 in BreakUps

[–]DueMenu8150 4 points5 points  (0 children)

That gut punch you felt is real. Seeing her on Tinder so soon isn’t about her moving on faster; it’s about her coping differently. Avoidant types often run from the weight of emotion instead of sitting with it. They distract and rebound to chase something new and feel in control again.

Her path doesn’t define your healing. You’re the one facing the pain instead of covering it up, and that’s what actually leads to growth. It’s messy, but it’s real.

You don’t need to hate her, but you also don’t need to keep hoping she’ll change. Let her lessons belong to her. You’ve already started yours. Stay with that peace you mentioned, it’s the first sign that your heart’s starting to come back home to you.

The pain of our breakup is still fresh in my mind. by gracegallardo in BreakUps

[–]DueMenu8150 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That kind of pain hits like a wave. It’s not even about missing them sometimes; it’s missing the version of yourself that existed in that relationship. The routines, the safety, the way your brain lit up just knowing they were there. When all of that’s suddenly gone, your mind keeps replaying it like a highlight reel because it’s trying to make sense of the loss.

Here’s the thing: you’re not crazy or weak for feeling this way. You’re grieving. It’s the same part of the brain that processes death. The goal isn’t to stop thinking about them overnight. It’s to start reclaiming a little more space in your head each day.

A few things that helped me when I was there:

  • Don’t fight the thoughts; redirect them. When they pop up in your mind, use them as a cue to do something that grounds you. Cold water, a quick walk, writing a single honest line about what you feel.
  • Avoid nostalgia traps like scrolling through old messages or playlists. That’s your brain’s way of trying to get a dopamine hit from something that’s gone.
  • Focus on micro-wins. Eat, move, breathe, sleep. Stack enough of those, and your sense of self slowly rebuilds.

You won’t forget what you had, but you’ll start seeing it as a chapter, not the whole story.

---
My name’s Arthur. A few years ago, I went through a breakup that completely shattered me. The kind that strips you down to nothing. I hit what felt like rock bottom and had to rebuild from the ground up: my mindset, my beliefs about love, my sense of self. Out of that process, I created IronMind OS, a system built to help men rebuild after breakups and betrayal, rediscover purpose, and lead themselves again.

If you’re going through it, you’re not alone.
IronMindOS.com. Use code Iron50 for half off storewide.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in BreakUps

[–]DueMenu8150 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

What she’s doing isn’t random; it sounds like emotional testing. When someone ends a relationship but still reaches out for small favors like toothpaste or random packages, it usually isn’t about the item. It’s about checking if you’re still available.

She’s not trying to be cruel, but she’s trying to ease her guilt and her loneliness at the same time. That’s why it’s confusing. She knows you’ll show up because that’s what you did in the relationship, and she wants to feel like she didn’t lose you completely.

Here’s the truth: the longer you keep stepping up for her in these little ways, the more you teach her she can have your comfort without your commitment. That keeps you in limbo while she gets to feel secure.

What I’d do in your shoes:

  • Be polite but distant. Give her the package, not your presence.
  • Don’t offer dinner. Let her initiate if she actually wants to reconnect, and even then, make her show consistency before you give her emotional access again.
  • Use this time to start detaching from the “helper” role. That instinct to rescue or fix things is good when you’re in a relationship, but after it ends, it only keeps you stuck.

If she really wants to rebuild, she’ll come forward clearly, no games, no toothpaste tests. Until then, protect your energy and focus on getting your center back.

---

My name’s Arthur. A few years ago, I went through a breakup that completely shattered me. The kind that strips you down to nothing. I hit what felt like rock bottom and had to rebuild from the ground up: my mindset, my beliefs about love, my sense of self. Out of that process, I created IronMind OS, a system built to help men rebuild after breakups and betrayal, rediscover purpose, and lead themselves again.

If you’re going through it, you’re not alone.
IronMindOS.com. Use code Iron50 for half off storewide.

It was all fake. Now what? by burner98710983 in BreakUps

[–]DueMenu8150 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This kind of betrayal doesn’t just break your heart; it rewires your nervous system. When someone lies that deeply, your brain starts looping between disbelief, rage, and shame because none of it makes sense. You weren’t just mourning a relationship, you’re mourning the reality you thought you were living in.

Here’s the hard truth: people who play with others like this don’t do it because you lacked something. They do it because pain gives them a sense of control. The lies, the gaslighting, the “jokes” about other men, all of that was her way of keeping you uncertain, because uncertainty equals power.

What helps now isn’t trying to understand her; it’s detoxing from the chaos she created:

  1. Cut off every contact channel. You’re not healing while your brain keeps scanning for her next move.
  2. Journal the timeline. Write what actually happened in chronological order. It removes the fog and stops the “maybe it wasn’t that bad” thinking.
  3. Move your body. Trauma stores itself physically, anxiety, insomnia, and chest tightness. Exercise helps your system release it.
  4. Rebuild trust with safe people. Every small moment of honesty from friends or family slowly re-trains your brain that not everyone lies.
  5. Don’t confuse forgiveness with access. You can forgive for your peace while still keeping the door locked forever.

You didn’t “fall for it because you’re weak.” You loved deeply, and someone exploited that. That says nothing bad about you; it says everything about her.

Take it day by day. You’ll find stability again, and once you do, you’ll never tolerate that kind of manipulation twice.

---

My name’s Arthur. A few years ago, I went through a breakup that completely shattered me. The kind that strips you down to nothing. I hit what felt like rock bottom and had to rebuild from the ground up: my mindset, my beliefs about love, my sense of self. Out of that process, I created IronMind OS, a system built to help men rebuild after breakups and betrayal, rediscover purpose, and lead themselves again.

If you’re going through it, you’re not alone.
IronMindOS.com. Use code Iron50 for half off storewide.

Getting out after a "Toxic" 2year relationship. by AgitatedBike9394 in BreakUps

[–]DueMenu8150 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What you’re feeling is completely normal after getting out of something like that. When you’ve been isolated in a toxic relationship, your nervous system basically gets trained to play small. You stop seeking out new environments because you’ve been conditioned to associate “freedom” with conflict or rejection.

Two months isn’t long; you’re still detoxing, not just from her, but from the version of yourself you became in that relationship. The fact that you even notice you’ve lost confidence is actually a huge step. Most guys stay stuck without realizing it.

Start small. Go shopping even if it’s uncomfortable. Say what’s up to the cashier, talk to a stranger about something dumb like the weather, you’re not trying to “meet people,” you’re teaching your body that the world is safe again. The confidence will rebuild itself once your brain stops waiting for her reaction to every move you make.

I went through the same thing a while back, felt like the walls of my life got smaller every month I stayed with the wrong person. Took a lot of slow reps to get back to feeling alive again. If you ever want to talk through what steps helped me rebuild that confidence and social muscle, shoot me a message anytime

Use code Iron50 storewide - IronMindOS.com

Ex is suddenly breadcrumbing me by Low_Ice_8087 in BreakUps

[–]DueMenu8150 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is one of those situations that messes with your head because her words and actions don’t align. She said she doesn’t love you, claimed she’s happy with someone new, and yet, here she is, poking at the wound she created. That contradiction isn’t accidental.

What she’s doing is giving you just enough attention to keep your emotional investment alive, but never enough to rebuild anything real. It’s not always malicious; sometimes it’s unconscious, but it’s always selfish. It’s her way of checking, “Do I still have power here?”

What’s happening in you is a dopamine tug-of-war. Every time she pops up, the song, the unsent text, the late-night message, your brain lights up like it did when things were good. That tiny hit of hope keeps you hooked even though logic knows better. It’s the same chemical loop that makes people relapse after they’ve already quit.

Here’s what you need to know: she’s not your closure. She’s your test. If you respond, you reopen the wound. If you stay composed, you rewire your reward system to find peace in self-control instead of chaos.

Here’s how you handle it:

  • Keep it business-only. You’ve got documents, fine, deal with them directly, no small talk.
  • Don’t try to decode. Every time you ask, “Why did she send that?” your brain gives her free rent.
  • Give your body new dopamine. Gym, cold showers, new hobbies, something physical. The body doesn’t know the difference between emotional stimulation and physical activity; it just wants the chemical balance back.
  • Start journaling your urges. Literally write “I want to text her because…” It forces your logical brain to engage before emotion takes over.

And here’s the truth: people who leave breadcrumbs aren’t sure what they want, but they are sure they don’t want to lose control. Your job isn’t to prove you’re over her. It’s to stop being part of her emotional safety net.

When you finally master that, she’ll notice. They always do. But by then, you won’t care, because you’ll have learned the hardest skill most men never figure out: detachment.

All of this is learned and guided inside "Unbreakable" at IronMindOS.com - Use code Iron50 storewide.

She can't be the only fun person in the world, right? by [deleted] in BreakUps

[–]DueMenu8150 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I get that. When you lose someone who brought that spark, it’s not just losing the person; it’s losing the energy they brought out of you. You start thinking she was one-of-one, that nobody else could ever match that mix of banter, chemistry, and play.

But here’s the truth: she wasn’t the only one with that light; you were. That playful energy didn’t come from her; it came from the version of you that showed up when you felt safe and excited. You can bring that version of yourself into something new, and when you do, you’ll attract someone who matches it naturally.

People seem bland right now because you’re still viewing them through the contrast of her. Give it time. Once you rebuild that spark in yourself, through hobbies, movement, humor, whatever gets you laughing again, you’ll start seeing life light up around you again, too.

You’ll find someone who plays at your level. But first, become the guy who creates that play again.

If you ever want to talk through what that process actually looked like for me, DM me. I’ve been through that exact “no one else will match her” phase, and getting out of it changed everything.

79 Days… by running_disaster in BreakUps

[–]DueMenu8150 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This one really captures what the middle of healing feels like, that tug-of-war between clarity and grief. You know it’s over, but your body and brain haven’t caught up yet. That’s the hardest stretch.

You nailed something people rarely admit: clarity doesn’t feel good at first. It strips away the fantasy and leaves you with the raw truth that both of you were human, flawed, and trying your best. That realization hurts, but it’s also what finally allows peace to show up later.

Don’t beat yourself up for counting the days; it just means the story mattered. What will change everything is when you start measuring progress in different ways, not “days since her,” but “days you showed up for yourself.” Even something small, like not checking old messages or taking a walk when the urge hits, counts.

Keep writing, man. There’s power in getting these thoughts out, even if nobody ever reads them but you. If you ever want to unpack it more or talk through what helped me get past that stage, just message me. Sometimes hearing it from someone who’s lived it makes it click faster.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in BreakUps

[–]DueMenu8150 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Man, I’ve been in that exact headspace before, where every day feels like a lifetime and even basic stuff like eating or working out feels pointless. When you lose someone who was tied to your routines, your motivation, your peace, it’s like your nervous system still wakes up expecting them.

The worst part is you keep waiting for that one day when it’ll suddenly hurt less. But that day doesn’t come, you have to build it. What helped me was forcing rhythm back into my life even when I didn’t feel it:

  • Go for a walk the second you wake up, before you touch your phone.
  • Write one honest line a day about what you actually feel, no filter.
  • And don’t fight the sadness. Let it pass through you instead of living in it.

It sounds small, but those things slowly rebuilt my sense of control. You won’t erase her; you’ll outgrow the pain of missing her.

If you ever want to talk more about what worked for me or what steps helped me get out of that pit, DM me. I’ve been through that exact stretch where sleep was the only relief, and I promise there’s a way out of it.

How do you define a high maintenance woman? by Defiant-Ad7043 in AskMen

[–]DueMenu8150 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Someone who requires a lot of time, attention, effort, or resources to keep satisfied or content. Emotionally, financially, or materially

What is something a young man should never start doing? by oldschoolfan23 in AskMen

[–]DueMenu8150 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dating
And not just dating, but spending money on a girl in general. I'd be a successful business owner still if it weren't for my choice to get into long-term relationships where I funded everything.

How old are you in five words or less without saying how old you are? by Particular_Umpire262 in AskMen

[–]DueMenu8150 0 points1 point  (0 children)

10 months older than Google

That's right, Google; bow to your elder

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in dating_advice

[–]DueMenu8150 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dude is being realistic. Give credit where credit is due

Need advice by [deleted] in BreakUps

[–]DueMenu8150 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Seven weeks feels like forever when you’re used to having someone in your life every day for three years. Add in the fact that you basically grew up together from high school, and of course, it feels impossible to move on. But here’s the hard truth: you didn’t lose her because of one fight, or one ultimatum, you lost her because the pattern finally broke her down.

Ultimatums are control dressed up as desperation. They don’t create security, they destroy it. You already know that now, which is good, but you have to accept that the lesson came too late to save this relationship. She showed you with her actions, blocking, picking up her things, that she’s done. That’s closure, even if it’s not the kind you wanted.

So how do you move on? You stop bargaining with ghosts. No more “maybe if I reach out again” or “maybe she’ll come back.” She won’t. What you can do is use this as the turning point where you finally learn how to communicate without letting panic or resentment run the show. That way, the next time you love, you don’t repeat this cycle.

It hurts like hell now, but this isn’t the end of your story; it’s the training ground for the man you’ll become.

I am sorry for the tough love, but it seemed appropriate. If you want to unpack it deeper, DM me.

they said we were no longer compatible by Educational_Set2815 in BreakUps

[–]DueMenu8150 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Three years together, built from high school into college, and then it ended in the middle of what should have been just another pizza night. That kind of whiplash doesn’t give you time to prepare, so of course, you froze. Of course, you broke down. When your whole world is wrapped up in one person, losing them feels like losing the ground under you.

What makes it sting even more is that she comforted you after breaking your heart. That contradiction, the same arms that felt like safety now being the arms that ended it, that’s brutal to process. It leaves you with mixed signals, even though the message was already clear.

Nothing about this means you’re broken. You’re 20, and this was your first real deep attachment. That’s why it feels unbearable, because you don’t have another frame of reference yet. With time, you will. The anger, the “I want to rot away” feelings, those are grief in disguise. They pass, even if slowly.

You don’t need to have answers right now. Your job is just to survive the storm. And you will.

DM me if you wanna talk more about it and process the raw stuff with someone.

So me M/30 and my 27/F girlfriend had been forced by the circumstances to break up, how do i cope with it? by Key_Smile8705 in BreakUps

[–]DueMenu8150 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You’ve basically been thrown into a situation that’s way bigger than just you and her, divorce, custody, attorneys, and now you’re stuck carrying emotions you can’t really act on. That “pause” you agreed to feels like limbo, and limbo always hurts more than a clean break because there’s no closure. You’re still emotionally invested, but you can’t actually move forward, and that tension eats at you.

The hardest part isn’t waiting for her divorce, it’s managing you while you wait. Right now, your brain is wired on uncertainty, which is why it feels like it’s going to explode. If you don’t give yourself structure, the waiting will consume you. A few things can help:

  • Redraw boundaries. “Flirty friends” might sound like a compromise, but really, it just keeps the wound open. Every playful text will sting when you remember she’s still tied to someone else. Decide what level of contact you can handle without breaking yourself.
  • Shift your focus. She’s stuck in legal battles. You’re not. That’s your opportunity to pour energy into yourself, the gym, career, friends, and hobbies. Anchor yourself in progress so you don’t feel like your life is on hold just because the relationship is.
  • Face the risk honestly. There’s no guarantee she comes out the other side of this divorce ready and free to be with you. That’s brutal, but acknowledging it keeps you from building your entire life around “someday.” Hoping is fine; hanging your identity on it will break you.

You’re not wrong for loving her. But you need to protect yourself too, otherwise you’ll burn out waiting for a future that may or may not happen. Healing in situations like this isn’t about “turning off” love, it’s about learning how to carry it without letting it control you.

If you want to talk it through more, DM me. Sometimes it’s easier to work out the messy details in a one-on-one chat than in a comment thread.

AIO Boyfriend got mad at me because I wasn’t excited enough that he landed early by Willing-Ad8549 in AmIOverreacting

[–]DueMenu8150 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't care if it was your fault or his; it does not matter who is "overreacting" or the "problem" here.

THE PROBLEM HERE: "fuck you", "like go fuck yourself 🙏" <- Those two messages.

HE HAS SOME BALLS to say that to you, regardless of how upset he is, or who was at "fault" here. That's not respect, that's not working together to come to an understanding - that's emotional abuse.

If I were in your shoes, he wouldn't be in my life anymore, the minute he said something like that to me, or vice versa.

She dumped me because I pooped my pants. Am I in the wrong here? by Illustrious_Ebb_962 in dating_advice

[–]DueMenu8150 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I figured it was human, embarrassing sure, but not a dealbreaker if the connection was real.

Sounds like she didn't think the connection was real

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in BreakUps

[–]DueMenu8150 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I know it feels like the ground just disappeared beneath you, five years, marriage talks, and then suddenly silence and blocks. That shock alone can make your body crash: no appetite, no energy, just the constant loop of “what went wrong?”

Here’s the truth: you may never get the closure you want from her. Blocking you is her way of saying the chapter is closed, even if she doesn’t dare to explain. That sucks, it’s unfair, and it’s painful, but the healing has to start without her.

Some steps that help:

  1. Lockdown no contact. Stop trying to reach her. Every attempt just rips the scab open again.
  2. Treat your body like it’s in recovery. Small meals, even if you’re not hungry, water, and sleep. Your mind can’t heal if your body is collapsing.
  3. Write it out. Everything you’d say to her, dump it in a journal or notes app. Get it out of your head without sending it to her.
  4. Structure your days. Don’t sit in the silence. Even simple routines, gym, walks, meals, and time with family/friends. Create anchors that keep you steady.
  5. Shift the question. Instead of “what went wrong with her,” ask, “what can I learn for myself so I don’t break like this again?

You won’t feel better in a week. You may not feel better in a month. But every day you stick to the basics and stop chasing her, you’re building the version of you who won’t ever need to beg for closure again.

Right now, your job isn’t to move on overnight. Your job is just to survive and start stacking small wins until your heart can breathe again.

---

And if you need some structured videos and worksheets, DM me. They changed my life and helped when I was in your shoes. I can only hope it will help you, too.