When you’re ending a relationship, it can help to get
breakup advice from people who’ve been where you are. You might talk to a
relative, friends, people you trust, or you might look for breakup advice online.
There are probably thousands of websites out there telling
you how to break up with someone, how to handle the separation and how to move
forward. But some of the advice you’ll find can actually make the bad things
you’re feeling even worse.
First, you’ll find sites that are designed to convince you
that you don’t really want to break up with your ex. There are number of books
available on the subject. Look at your local library or bookstore and you’ll
see probably a dozen books or more telling you how you can save the
relationship.
That’s all great, if you really do want to save a
relationship. There might be advice in those books and on those websites that
can help you heal as a couple. The thing to watch for is breakup advice that
makes you change your mind from wanting to move on to wanting to make it work,
all designed to sell you an eBook or a regular book on just how to do it.
Remember that no matter how tempting the pitch is; you went
looking for advice on how to move on. Not on how to go back into a situation
you’ve just gotten away from. Avoid reading sites and books like that unless
you’re really unsure you’ve made the right decision.
Then there are sites that will encourage you to move on too
quickly. Often, these are designed to get you to sign up for a dating service!
Think carefully. Do you really need breakup advice telling you to forget the
time you’ve had with your ex by quickly getting back into the dating scene?
The point is that much of the advice out there is designed
to sell you something that you probably don’t need. It’s a good idea to look
for advice online. Just be sure that you can recognize the obvious pitches and
sort the real advice from things just designed to sell you a product.
Most really good help online can be found at websites of
relationship experts and people with education in human relations. They might
have an eBook or book to sell, too. But they have experience-counseling people
and have credentials to show they know what they’re talking about.
Your closest friends can be a good source of advice, as long
as they are supportive of you and don’t have any kind of attitudes about your
ex-relationship. When you’re ending a relationship, it’s hard enough to deal
with without good friends telling you “I told you so” or about what a loser the
person was anyway.
Talk to friends who respect what you’re going through and
don’t just start putting down your ex. The best breakup advice will come from people
who only want to see you happy again.