How to Heal from Heartbreak

If you’ve loved deeply, you’ve likely also known the ache of loss. Love and heartbreak are two sides of the same coin—one does not exist without the possibility of the other. There is a quiet, universal truth we all eventually come to face: nothing lasts forever. Impermanence is part of the human condition. And yet, those of us who have tasted real love know—it’s worth the risk—even the heartbreak. Love remains one of the most transformative, healing, and essential forces we get to experience as human beings.

But when your heart is broken—raw, aching, disoriented—what then? How do you begin to piece yourself back together?

In this guide, I share a compassionate and grounded approach to healing heartbreak. Drawing from the insights of leading relationship thinkers and therapists like John and Julie Gottman, Esther Perel, Jillian Turecki, Shan Boodram, and Mark Groves—as well as my own lived experience—I invite you into a process of reflection, integration, and repair. Not just to move on, but to move forward—wiser, softer, and more rooted in yourself.

women on a heartbreak retreat

Sisters on a heartbreak retreat with Haven

  • The experience of heartbreak is deeply personal. How it shows up in your body, your thoughts, your days—it’s shaped by your attachment style, your relationship to loss, your sense of self-worth, and your capacity to let go. In many ways, heartbreak doesn’t just grieve the other—it asks you to confront the parts of yourself that were tied to the relationship.

    Heartbreak can manifest as deep sorrow, emotional numbness, anxiety, depression, or a sense that time has frozen. You might feel stuck in cycles of denial, rage, or hopelessness. This emotional turbulence is not only normal—it’s human. And while it may feel never-ending in the moment, these feelings will evolve. With time, reflection, and support, the pain will soften. It won’t always feel this heavy. You won’t always feel this lost.

    Healing is not about forgetting the love. It’s about remembering yourself within it—and eventually, beyond it.

  • The truth is: it depends. And more specifically, it depends on you—on the nature of the relationship, how it ended, and how you metabolize grief.

    Heartbreak is not linear. It’s not a checklist to complete or a timeline to meet. It’s a descent. One that often asks you to sit in the discomfort, to move through the emotional terrain of denial, anger, longing, and loss. This is not something you need to do alone. Working with a therapist or heartbreak coach can offer an anchor—someone to witness your process, name what feels confusing, and remind you of your wholeness.

    For some, the mourning begins long before the relationship ends, and clarity arrives quickly. For others, especially those caught off guard or deeply attached, the grief might unfold over months, even years. There is no universal rule, no “normal” amount of time. So please, give yourself the grace to heal in your own way, at your own pace.

  • Personally, I’d recommend taking some time off to feel, cry, wallow, and just be in your emotions. Ensure your basic needs are taken care of, so order meal prep, do lots of self care, get 8 hours of sleep in, and try and go out in nature and be in the sun.

    Once you’ve moved through some of those emotions, I’d recommend working with a therapist or coach to have a sounding board, support, and someone there for you as you navigate deeper, more complex feelings and revelations.

    If you need additional support, some books I’d recommend include the following:

    -Liberated Love by Mark Groves and Kylie McBeath

    -It Begins With You by Jillian Turecki

    -When Things Fall Apart by Pema Chodron

Heartbreak Lessons, From a Dating, Intimacy, and Heartbreak Coach

These insights aren’t theoretical for me—they’re lived. They come from the trenches of my heartbreak, as well as over a decade of deep work in somatic coaching, relationship dynamics, and polarity teachings.

I’ve been engaged and had to grieve the unraveling of that vision. I’ve loved someone who was emotionally abusive. I’ve navigated the confusion of dating a narcissist. I’ve sat in the quiet ache of endings, again and again.

Heartbreak has been one of my greatest teachers. And through it all, here’s what I’ve learned:

Heartbreak, as painful as it is, often opens the door to profound self-inquiry. It invites you into the liminal space between what was and what’s next—a space that asks: Who am I now? Who do I want to become? What kind of love do I want to cultivate, first within myself, then with another?

It may be difficult to accept at first, but if someone chooses not to stay, they are not your person. And while that truth may sting, it also offers clarity: you are worthy of a love that chooses you back. Take all the energy you once poured into the relationship and redirect it into yourself. That is not selfishness—it is repair.

Be gentle with your grief. Let it be messy. Let it come in waves. Take the time you need. Step back from the noise. Cancel plans. Cry. Rest. Travel. Get curious about what makes you feel alive again—not to escape the pain, but to remember that life still holds beauty. Avoid the temptation to distract yourself too quickly, especially with dating or sex. If you tend to bypass uncomfortable emotions, resist the urge to outrun them.

Instead, come home to your body. Practices like yoga, meditation, and breathwork can anchor you in the present and help you reconnect to your emotional landscape. These tools don’t fix the heartbreak—but they help you feel it fully, and in feeling, we begin to heal.

Some days will be brutal. Others, surprising. You may wonder if you’ll ever love again. You will. But first, you meet yourself—perhaps more honestly than ever before. That, too, is love.

If your heart is craving more support, you’re not alone. You’re welcome to schedule a complimentary 15-minute coaching call with us—sometimes, a simple conversation can offer profound clarity. You can also join our newsletter, where we share thoughtful guidance, reflections, and resources to help you navigate heartbreak with grace.

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