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Opening to Love After Heartbreak

July 14, 2010   |   15 Comments

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Since The Wisdom of a Broken Heart came out, I’ve had the honor of speaking with many people who are meeting this incredibly difficult life passage with courage and tenderness. We talk about the endless waves of grief, fear, and rage and how one could possibly weather them. We talk about the valuable, hard-won heart opening that can arise. And invariably, we touch on the possibility of loving again. Many believe they will never be able to do so and, if the possibility arose, would never, ever be able to trust it. When you know love can be lost at any time, how on earth could you try it again?! I’ve heard this question time and again. And time and again, I’ve sat down at my desk to see if I have anything useful to say because I really, really want to help. I’ve probably made a dozen false starts, trying to come at the question from all sorts of angles. Frankly, I did not come up with one thing worth saying.

Today I told myself I was going to sit in front of the computer until I could figure out what to say—because I know that it is possible to open to love again, even if your heart has been broken under the most egregious circumstances (which usually involve some kind of betrayal). It happens everyday. It happened to me. I’ve studied Buddhist teachings on compassion and wisdom and have every confidence they can teach you how. So why haven’t I been able to put something together?

Here’s why. All this time, I have been trying to figure out some kind of advice for how to leave your broken heart behind in order to enter a new relationship with confidence.

For better or worse, those two things—a broken heart and having confidence in love—are actually interdependent.

When most of say we’re looking for love, we really mean we’re looking for safety. When your heart has been broken, you realize that love can never be made safe and, in fact, efforts to make it so are related more to self-protection than opening yourself to the unpredictable, impossible-to-mandate waves of passion, confusion, joy, and disappointment that accompany love. To love, you have to be receptive, vulnerable. In fact, it is through vulnerability alone that we come by true love. So in one sense, when your heart is broken, you are ahead of the game. It makes you permanently vulnerable and thus is actually teaching you how to love. You learn how deep your longing for love is, and how much you have to give. You realize that love is by far the most important thing in your life. Your heart is not just broken, it is broken open and so you feel everything—your own joys and sorrows, but also other’s, unquestioningly. These attributes make you uniquely, outrageously suited to love—if you can learn to stabilize your heart in this state of openness. The traditional practice of loving kindness teaches you exactly how to do this. Please try it and see how it works for you. It is the balm that soothes all wounds.

Plus, there is one thing that makes it absolutely certain that you will be able to open to love again. That thing is love itself. When it comes to you, from you, through you, it is unmistakable. It chooses you, you don’t choose it and, like it or not, you open, unquestioningly. Of course, there is no telling how it will all turn out (there never, ever is), but when love is present, it quells outer, inner, and secret obstacles and you are reminded that your heart is absolutely indestructible. Over and over, it can refill with love on the spot. It never forgets how to do this. Love is the rising tide that lifts all boats, those of despair and those of shame, of rage, of terror, and of longing—to cast them once again upon the waves, heading who knows where, you and your beloved along for the ride. This is how it works. I have no idea why..

So definitely do your work: Explore the nature of your wounds. Develop methods of extreme self-care. Extend the hand of kindness to yourself as you work though these overwhelming emotions. Please do this for yourself. And as you do, don’t worry about how you’re ever going to open to love again. Love itself will do the work for you.

In the meantime, here’s what you can do to help: Relax. Relaxing here means stepping off the self-improvement treadmill and, instead of trying to change yourself, allowing your feelings to be just as they are without attaching a narrative to them. Make room for them and what you now consider as obstacles will reveal themselves simply as facets of wisdom. The practice of meditation is exactly this act.

I created a special version of The Practice of Tranquility (the practice suggested in my book), for those times when you feel that your heartbreak will never end and you are intolerably fragile..

And here is a good rule of thumb. When in doubt, sorrow, or despair: do less. Over and over, accept yourself on the spot. From this gesture of gentleness, great space opens and your deepest wisdom arises to guide you. This is guaranteed.

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15 Comments

  • Posted by:  Maria

    What a wonderful writing! And the guided tranquility meditation feels like a divine gift.
    Thank you from the bottom of my heart,
    Maria

  • Posted by:  Susan

    Maria, I’m so glad that the meditation speaks to you! Thanks for letting me know, and you’re welcome from the bottom of my heart…

  • Posted by:  Nana

    Dear suzanne,
    Hi..suzanne, i have read your preface,but i still want to know more, please tell me simplify what actualy is it for?

    Regards,
    nana

  • Posted by:  Teresa

    This is just awesome. I went through a very hard heart break which took years to get over. I’m seeing a friend, someone I care deeply about and would like to be with, go through this now. You words soothe the soul. Thank you!

  • Posted by:  Geral Fig

    I am going through heartbreak at the moment, reading this calmed me! thank you

  • Posted by:  Ariane

    Thank you, thank you thank you Susan. I felt like you were speaking directly to me through your words. As I am going through a personal heartbreak as well. Being constantly on the “self-improvement treadmill”, it is such a relief to know that I can step off and give myself time to heal and regenerate love. This was beautiful Susan, thank you from the bottom of my heart :).

    • Posted by:  Susan

      I wish you well, Ariane!

  • Posted by:  Caroline

    Thank you–I’ve been reading a lot of what you’ve written about heartbreak, and it is really helping to give me a sense of calm and acceptance of whatever happens. It seems like the links to the guided meditations are broken–can you fix them? I’d really like to try them and see if they can be tools for me when I’m feeling really down.

  • Posted by:  Jason

    I have been heartbroken. Wide open. My pride has died. My ego cut away. I have been so open to everything. Even my own betrayer. My love for her has intensified. My wife, boys and home were ripped from me. I have them back now, yet it is so different. So fragil. My emotions were wild, uncontrollable. Unbearable. Still. I work every day on myself to fight and keep my family. Yet it is still up for grabs. It sucks feeling like you are in limbo. It sucks not trusting. It sucks that I still love her and I am not sure of her love. I know I can love again. I am doing it now.

    • Posted by:  susan

      It is all so intense, Jason. I wish you the best in working with it all. It sounds like you are committed to do so. With love, Susan

  • Posted by:  fhlopez108@gmail.com

    Hi Susan,
    I came to the OHP through your book Wisdom of the Broken Heart and have been meditating, and I’ve just remembered, again, that I need to drop the story and feel the feelings… the intensity of the feelings have times of fading and now just prior to the retreat they have come back with so much force, I’ve been frightened…. just when I thought they had begun to heal – the wound is gaping open again….somehow the story has resurfaced loudly… It feels like obsessive thinking… so I’m watching them and letting them go, with love… and I’ve been trying to be gentle with myself – and actually going on this virtual retreat is my way of going further down that road.

    I was looking for your resources as posted in your article above, but it appears the links don’t work anymore. I know you are on retreat too now – so I am very patient.

    For right now I am so glad to think again about remembering how I can love by offering love and right now I am offering love to myself and for those I encounter..

    Thanks so much for your generosity in so many ways.

    Felice

    • Posted by:  susan

      Hi Felice. I know it feels terrible, but what you describe sounds so right, so human. Working with heartbreak is like surfing the most unpredictable waves. Just when you think the seas are calm, something rises up. But it will become calm again…

      I’m going to correct the links in the post, so please try again.

      With love, Susan

  • Posted by:  marilyn

    Thank you for your readings. I got a clearer understanding regarding my issue. And really it is a beautiful feeling to love.

    • Posted by:  susan

      I’m so glad to hear this, Marilyn.

  • Posted by:  Vivi

    I have read your book (so helpful) as well as posts about loving kindness for a broken heart. Would you be so kind as to fix the links to the guided loving kindness meditation that is specific to heartbreak? Links from a variety of places all lead to “page not found.” I could really use this right now! Only the traditional one is available. Thank you so much!

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