Rebound Romance
Monday, 01 February 2010 00:00
Learn from the past
This is when a coach or a counselor will be invaluable. You want to clean up the emotional litter you just left, make your apologies, forgive yourself for whatever didn’t work, and not use your new relationship as a distraction from the pain of the last one. People rush into new relationships to try and forget the anguish they’ve experienced. What often happens is like a double whammy: the unresolved problems of the past and the very real struggles of the current relationship converge into a larger challenge than you bargained for. Instead of getting away from your unhappiness, you may have unwittingly created a wider canyon of grief.
Move out of feeling desperateMany people leap feet first into new relationships, which are totally unsuited for them, because they are blinded by the stark reality of being alone. However, desperation will fade if you feed yourself the emotional sustenance necessary to become strong enough to stand on your own. You need the bricks of a profession, or, at the very least, a career path. You need the safety net of financial security, loving friends, passionate interests, and sound health routines. If your emotions are still shaky, take yourself to a coach or therapist to build yourself up from the inside out. Desperation is like a bully—it will chase you and chase you until you stand up to it.
Your learning curveWhenever something doesn’t work out that you have invested a lot of time, energy, projection, and emotion into, the least you deserve is to take a look at what went wrong. What can you learn from this past relationship before you get in another one? For instance, do you think it failed because he cheated on you? Dig a little deeper. Do you have a history of attracting people who will betray you? If so, dating a cheater is no accident on your part. Ask yourself when and how you betray yourself? And what is your inner voice saying that makes you think you don’t deserve loyalty? If you can see, accept, and learn from your participation in the demise of the relationship, you will have less need for a rebound partnership.
Moving onYou aren’t ready for a new relationship until you have let go of the past one. Healing is a process...not just a thought. It takes time, nurturing, growth, insight, rest, and a break from getting romantically involved with anyone. Only you can know when you are over your past love, but if you still look for him in a crowd, keep his number in your speed dial, look him up on Facebook, and ask people about him, you need a little more investment of love into yourself.
Falling in love too fast, making rash decisions, and living in a space of total denial about your new relationship are all signs that you are about to create a bigger mess than the one you just left. Give yourself the gift of a counselor—and time— which can help you get your bearings. You deserve to understand where you’ve been, where you are now, and where you want to go. This is your time to embrace a new life—and even…your forgotten dreams. It’s hard to do that when you’re in the middle of …a rebound romance.





