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Music can heal an aching heart — What can I do to get over my break up?

The hardest part of a breakup is really grieving the loss of the relationship — or the loss of the dream of what it could have been. Now, I’m hearing Tiffany from the 80s singing, “Could have been so beautiful. Could have been so right.”

Music is powerful. It has a way of healing us.

Sad songs say so much

Have you ever felt so low and just wanted to have a huge pity party in your depression by listening to music that made you sad? Listening to sad music can be dangerous to your mental health, but research shows that it could also help you get over a broken heart.

Senee Seale The Princess Guide

Interestingly, Healthline.com reported that listening to sad music can actually help in getting over heartbreak from an ended relationship. “An earlier study, published in the Journal of Consumer Research, found that people tend to prefer sad music when they are experiencing a deep interpersonal loss, like the end of a relationship. The authors of that study suggested that sad music provides a substitute for the lost relationship. They compared it to the preference most people have for an empathic friend — someone who truly understands what you’re going through.”

I guess Elton John was right when he sang, “Sad songs say so much.” When I recorded the album for my book The Princess Guide to Healing a Broken Heart, I chose songs that went along with what I wrote about. Honestly, a couple of them made me cry even in the recording studio as I was singing them. They hit close to home, and I obviously wasn’t over it at the time. That just told me I had more work to do, and I did.

Take action

So, what can you do to allow music to change your mood? In 2013, USA Today published a list of 20 scientifically-proven benefits of music. Some of those included the following action steps:

  • Ease pain. [Listening to] “music can meaningfully reduce the perceived intensity of pain …”
  • Increase workout endurance. “When we’re focusing on a favorite album, we may not notice that we just ran an extra mile.”
  • Reduce stress. “Research has found that listening to music can relieve stress by triggering biochemical stress reducers.”
  • Relieve symptoms of depression. “Research suggests the kind of music matters: Classical and meditative sounds seem to be particularly uplifting, whereas heavy metal and techno can actually make depressive symptoms worse.”
  • Elevate mood. “A 2013 study found that music helped put people in a better mood and get in touch with their feelings.”
  • Help people perform better in high-pressure situations. “One study found that basketball players prone to performing poorly under pressure during games were significantly better during high-pressure free-throw shooting if they first listened to catchy, upbeat music and lyrics.”
  • Elevate mood while driving. The reporter suggests listening to your favorite songs the next time you find yourself in a traffic jam to help keep your mood in check. I’ve also had dance parties in the car when I was really in need of an attitude change and safely stopped at a red light.
Give it time

When I was training as a Qualified Mental Health Professional working with children and families, our trainer talked one day about the difference between grief and depression. He explained that depression is thought to be caused by a chemical imbalance in the brain, and it can be treated with medication. Grief, on the other hand, always involves a loss — it is the pain of not getting something you desperately wanted — and may or may not have depression symptoms. If depression is present, then medication can be prescribed. However, the treatment for grief is always talk therapy.

I’ve often said that we grieve many times in our lives — not only when someone dies, but also any time we experience a loss. Getting through the grieving process and coming to a place of acceptance is part of the healing process.

“With the loss of love, our lives are immediately transformed,” wrote Dr. John Gray in Mars and Venus Starting Over. “Grieving the loss of love means fully feeling and then releasing all the painful emotions that come up when we reflect on our loss … one common mistake is to move on too quickly, not giving ourselves enough time to grieve. Yet, another mistake is not giving ourselves permission to experience all our feelings.”

You’re probably familiar with the stages of grief: denial, blame, intense emotions (often displayed in anger or deep sadness), bargaining and acceptance. In my experience and observation, a person can go back and forth between these stages until they finally arrive at acceptance.

Our trainer asked our group what is the timeframe for a person to stop grieving? When will they be finished? There were as many answers as there were people in the room, but he echoed my statement — They’re finished whenever they’re finished.

As I explain in The Princess Guide to Healing a Broken Heart, you may think you worked through a step and have gone on to another one, only to realize that you still have issues in that area. It’s perfectly fine (and normal) to go back and deal with it. The same holds true for grieving. My trainer said you know when a client is improving because the intense pain lessens, and they cycle through the stages of grief less frequently.

Be gentle with yourself. Do the internal work by feeling all the emotions that come up and releasing them. Give it time. You will get through it, I promise. You’ll also come out better than ever, if you take the time you need to fully heal. Rushing the process only leads to baggage that you’ll have to deal with eventually.

Get a guide

Sometimes, we need help from others to guide us through a process. “Studies have shown that the small sliver of people (8%) who do actually stick with their goals and finally achieve them do one thing differently — They get help. It’s as simple as that. They find someone who can take them by the hand (someone who has already done what they’re trying to do), and they ask this person to show them the way,” wrote Author John Assarf in a newsletter.

When I say I can relate to what you may be going through, I really can. During the time of writing my first book on healing a broken heart, I was healing from my own broken heart. I have been through marriage issues, relationship breakups, unrequited love and friends and family problems. In short, I know what it’s like to be truly broken.

Earnest Hemingway wrote, “We are all broken … That’s how the light gets in.” I believe that statement to be true. I absolutely adore stained glass windows, but those beautiful pieces of art would never be made without first breaking whole glass. Don’t let the brokenness in your life fool you … God can do great things with broken people.

I’m here to help as a life guide or spiritual/Christian counselor if you need someone with the clinical, research and life experience of healing a broken heart to walk beside you during this process. In the meantime, know without a shadow of a doubt that things can only get better. Think positively about your life. Dream big dreams, and have a dance party by yourself. You’re worth it, you deserve it and you will get through it.

Do you have a question about life that you want Senée to answer? Leave it in the comments or email it to PrincessGuide@BecomingPublishing.com.

Senée Seale is a book author, mental health professional and life guide passionate about helping people create positive changes in their lives. Are you ready to start attracting positive things into your life through practicing daily affirmations? Get your free copy of The Princes Guide to Gratitude Affirmations. If you’d like to work directly with Senée, she’s accepting new clients.

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How to heal a Valentine’s Day broken heart

I was grocery shopping the other day, and I was slapped in the face with Valentine’s Day items when I walked in every store … OK, so I wasn’t literally hit with the items, but it sure felt like it emotionally. My first thought (as I quickly got away from all of it) was, “Can’t we just skip Valentines this year?” Have you ever felt like that?

Now, I’m not as bad as the group of friends in the movie Valentine’s Day who gathered for the anti-Valentines party getting all their aggression and hurt feelings out by pounding a heart-shaped pinata with a baseball bat. I actually like celebrating the holiday, but the only time I’ve actually gotten to celebrate was when I was married. Seriously, when I was in the dating scene, guys would literally disappear during Christmas and Valentines then magically reappear like nothing ever happened. Something happened alright — my worth was attacked! By their actions, I was told that I wasn’t worth buying flowers or dinner for.

The truth is this: at some point in your life you have to learn to love yourself and do the things for yourself that you wish others would do for you.

If you have a Valentine’s Day broken heart, or are just alone and trying to figure out what you could do differently to have healthier relationships, now is the perfect time to learn new behaviors and make positive changes. The Princess Guide to Healing a Broken Heart is a great tool to help you do just that. Whether you’ve been heart from romantic relationships, family relationships, friend relationships, etc., this book can help you transform and heal yourself.

I discovered some really insightful things when researching and writing this book, the first one is that being alone is not a death sentence, nor is it something of which to fear.

In a 2016 New York Times OpEd piece on why people marry the wrong person, Book Author Alain de Botton gave some profound insight into loneliness and how it can cause us to make wrong decisions. “We make mistakes, too, because we are so lonely,” she explained. “No one can be in an optimal frame of mind to choose a partner when remaining single feels unbearable. We have to be wholly at peace with the prospect of many years of solitude in order to be appropriately picky; otherwise, we risk loving no longer being single rather more than we love the partner who spared us that fate.”

Another insight I gained during my research was that you really have to learn how to love yourself. I know some people who it seems to come naturally for them. I credit that to good parenting, but not all of us are so lucky. We have to work daily on knowing and loving ourselves. If we aren’t our biggest cheerleader and promoter, who else is going to be?

Let’s face it, people are human beings and they don’t always treat us the way they should. We have no control over their actions, but we can love and support ourselves first, then allow our significant others to be the icing on top.

If you’re having trouble getting started on the self-love thing, here are some ideas from The Princess Guide to Healing a Broken Heart:

One way to change your focus is to use affirmations. Reading these every day will begin to reprogram your brain and replace the negative tapes with positive ones. Life Coach Che Garman offers these suggestions to focus on daily:

  • “I allow love to find me easily and effortlessly.
  • I am cherished and valued.
  • I am loving and compassionate to myself and others.
  • I am surrounded by people who love me.
  • I am totally lovable, just the way I am.
  • I am willing to love myself unconditionally.
  • I am worthy of love, just as everyone else is.
  • I love the negative people in my life, and let them go on their way.
  • I radiate love and happiness wherever I go.
  • I receive all the love I need to feel cherished and appreciated.
  • Love and peace surrounds my life at all times.
  • My love life just keeps getting better and better.
  • My thoughts are always loving and truthful.
  • My true love is on his way to me.”

While reading these statements may feel strange, and it may even feel “wrong” to say these things out loud, you need to speak them into the atmosphere so that your ears can hear them and your brain can process them. The Bible tells us to call those things that are not as though they are (Romans 4:17). While it may feel like a lie or fake at first, the more you practice saying these things out loud to yourself, the sooner your heart and mind will change.

My hope for you is that you feel the love you long for. I believe that if you begin giving it to yourself first, you will attract it from others and you will be able to fully receive it and reciprocate it.

Catch these first-run Write About It Wednesday blogs every Wednesday. If you want to know more about the healing and transformation process, you can get a free PDF sample chapter of “The Princess Guide to Healing a Broken Heart” by filling out the form in the sidebar on this page.