
“When the wrong people leave your life, the right things start to happen.” ~Zig Ziglar
The end of a relationship triggers many grief emotions, but when a couple breaks up because one person decides that it’s over, there is a very distinct pain: the sting of rejection. It doesn’t matter whether things had been difficult for some time or if the split came out of the blue; either way, rejection feels cruel.
At the end of my marriage eight years ago, I had no idea that the breakup was coming. On top of the shock that the relationship was suddenly over, I carried the intense and overwhelming feeling of rejection; I was no longer valued, wanted, or needed.
Rejection can trigger feelings of shame, low self-esteem. and diminished confidence as well as helplessness and victimization. If you are left for another person (which was my experience) the intensity of rejection increases further. I experienced anger and resentment about betrayal; this makes healing feel much harder than in those cases where a decision to split is mutual.
When I began move through my initial grief, I found that the biggest shift in moving forward came through changing how I viewed rejection. I realized that by identifying with the feeling of rejection I was telling myself that something was wrong with me; that the marriage was over because I hadn’t come up to scratch and, therefore, needed to be let go.
Of course, this was not true but in the mind of the injured party, it was natural to feel this way. By shifting my perspective, I eventually began to realize that my husband’s decision to leave was not a reflection on me.
It is always hugely important to acknowledge and process feelings of grief; reframing is not about burying your emotions. However, as I’ve learned from my experience, rather than simply waiting for time to be your healer, you can move through pain far sooner and more effectively by viewing your situation in a different way.
Here are five ways I helped myself reframe the rejection.
1. It’s not necessarily about you.
It’s almost impossible not to take rejection personally. My ex-husband said he left because he wasn’t getting what he needed from our relationship; he needed to follow his “truth,” which no longer included me. His narrative of the breakup became about my inability to be what he needed.
This is where shame really kicks in. Rejection tells you that you weren’t enough to keep your partner from leaving and, in some cases, you’ve been replaced with someone who can make them happy.
But what if it’s not all you? As personal and hurtful as the rejection feels, sometimes it happens because the other person is unable to give enough or be enough of what the relationship needs. When someone is unable to love you fully, they will either reject you, or stay in the relationship and treat you badly or indifferently enough until you decide to end it.
We are all human and it’s very rare that one person is flawless within a relationship. I felt far less rejected when I realized that my ex-husband had his own considerable struggles and issues that led him to choose to leave; it wasn’t all about me.
2. Relationships are assignments.
There is a spiritual school of thought that views the people in our lives as lessons. The theory goes that we meet no one by accident; we are all in relationship to further our growth and deepen our connection to ourselves and the universe/each other. Partnerships with a significant other are huge vehicles for growth, but when the learning has gone as far as it can go with one person, it must end.
Sometimes people leave our lives naturally and comfortably, other times we face the pain of rejection. The lesson is not always obvious at first, especially through the pain of grief, but what is initially perceived as rejection can also be viewed as a release from a completed assignment and an opportunity to learn.
Consider that you still have much more to achieve with your life, and maybe your partner was not the person to show you the way. Perhaps being released from your relationship will allow you to find what you really need to become the person you are meant to be.
This reframe can be wonderfully comforting if you choose to find love again in the future. If you learn your difficult lessons from the old relationship, you will grow, and the person you share the next stage of your path with will bring more fulfilment and easier challenges.
3. Change the ending.
When someone chooses to leave you, they not only decide that the relationship is over, they also determine “the story” of why it ended. So, why did my marriage end? The event that ultimately broke us apart was his leaving to be with someone else. However, on another level, there was more to it than that.
I had changed within the marriage; I had been working through a deep personal issue a year or so previously, and had come out of the other side stronger, more content with life, and ready for a happier future with our family. I had grown, but my husband had not changed with me.
When I became aware of this, I started to view the ending as less about rejection and more about an incompatibility between who we both were. It was an empowering reframe because it allowed me to feel far less victimized. The way he ended the marriage was not excusable, but it held far less of an emotional grip over me.
Think about ways that you might have been rejected, not for anything you did “wrong,” but for something that altered the nature of the relationship.
- Did you refuse to have your boundaries crossed or to put up with certain behavior?
- Have you changed for the better in a way that your ex-partner could not handle?
- Were you simply yourself and refused to change to please them?
If you can view the ending in a way that empowers you, even a little bit, it can really ease your pain.
4. Remember you are still whole.
The feeling of rejection is greatly fuelled by the beautiful, romantic idea that two people “complete” each other. The conclusion is quite demoralizing; are we are no longer complete because someone doesn’t want us? What is our role in life now that we are not required to complete the other person?
Losing a partner is painful and the grief of loss is real, but the pain is heightened and prolonged unnecessarily when we believe that we have been rejected by “the other half of ourselves.” It can feel like life has no purpose or meaning anymore. When I began to accept that I was still whole and valuable, it took away the feeling of despair that I was somehow diminished and “less than” because my husband had decided to walk away.
5. Focus on gratitude.
I love using gratitude as a tool for helping to shift into a more positive state of mind. Admittedly, in the early days of grieving, it’s not easy to feel grateful for anything at all, so I found it easier to start with making a list each day of the small blessings in my life—the day-to-day things we usually take for granted. I really recommend this as a practice.
As your mindset starts to shift, you will come to realize that there are genuine reasons to be grateful that you were rejected. Mine included:
- Finding out about my husband’s affair and my divorce. Who knows how long I could have remained unaware, believing my marriage was something it wasn’t?
- The chance to learn to value myself more highly and to become aware of how resilient I am.
- The new life opportunities which came my way once I began to see the loss as an opportunity to have a better life; I know for certain that I would not have the career, and sense of purpose which I have now, without that crisis in my life.
- The chance to understand myself more fully and begin a new healthier and happier relationship.
A heart broken by rejection can be a perfect example of a blessing in disguise. The best way to move forward is to allow yourself to feel the pain, then go on to reframe the loss as an opportunity. Trust that the right things will start to come!
About Marissa Walter
Marissa Walter is a counsellor, coach and author of Break Up and Shine. Her 30 day online programme Stop Focusing On Your Ex helps transform the way you think and feel in order to move on from break-up and divorce. Visit her website Break Up and Shine for inspirational blog posts, free resources and details of 1:1 support for healing from heartbreak. You can also follow Marissa in her free Facebook group and on Instagram.










Though I run this site, it is not mine. It's ours. It's not about me. It's about us. Your stories and your wisdom are just as meaningful as mine.
Exactly where I stand today in this moment !
Your words and thoughts were and are mine too! It just took me a while to get where I am
after 42 yrs of a very unhealthy , sad, unhappy marriage that involved 2 children .
My oldest hit bottom many times as I watched and sought help during his childhood and much of his adult life. I needed financial support from his high earning father and my own family was not an option for emotional support!
He is 40 and sober today and ALIVE !
I filed for divorce 6 yrs ago as my own life/health was in jeopardy if I stayed any longer ! I’ve just now released myself from the last bit of self blame and cherish my freedom as I walk into my 7th decade in June 2018 …I am fabulous and fun , looking
for that special someone to adore who I am
and celebrate life with me before the last chapter is read! Suzie
must read for everyone
Thank you so much for sharing, Melissa.
About a month ago I was dumped by my gf who I was living with. I was so caught off guard, I was actually planning to propose to her that next week. She told me I had to find a place because she was staying in the apartment. I have felt nothing but guilt and responsibility for her not wanting to be with me anymore. She told me that she “Never regretted a day with me.” That statement made me so confused and even angrier/sadder than before.
From reading your perspective, I now realize that we both had our own personal struggles. She really did try to make the process as simple for both of us ass possible. She was going back to school and working full time, having personal family issues, and I realize that she didn’t want either of us to hurt.
I felt like I lost a huge part of my life, but your comment about me still be a whole me was so profound. I still value this person but I have trouble speaking to/ seeing pictures of her because of how quickly my world turned. Thanks again for your words, they have been truly powerful.
This advice is spot on! I had been with my husband since we were 16 (over 25 years), when he suddenly announced he wanted a divorce, and that’s it, it was over. I felt like I was wearing a REJECTED sign; the pain was like a kick to the gut over and over. But after the initial shock wore off (which took nearly a year; it takes time) I worked my way through a lot of the ideas that are in this article.
Awsome awsome words, so can relate to this. Thanks Marissa.
Thanks for sharing your painful experience and what you gleaned from it. The presumption that people should leave their partner when they’re not getting their needs met really irritates me. It treats relationships as transactions — you meet my needs, I’ll meet yours — and represents one of our worst culturally embraced ideas about “love.” It also neatly overlooks that we’re not children, and are fundamentally charged with our own essential care. I’ve come to believe that — as commonly conducted — intimate relationships are just too damaging for many of us. The path to a full and loving life may well lie in other experiences — nature, pets, creativity, friendships — that offer a more authentic love without the emotional violence often associated with human intimacy.
Thank you all for your kind comments and for sharing your insights from my article. It is always great to know that my story has resonated with other people and helped others with their own healing journey. Marissa x
Thank you so much for this article. It is exactly what I needed this week. Thank you!
This article is beautifully written – thank you for sharing. Dealing with rejection can be a tricky feat to experience, but learning how to move through those feelings and reframing the mind to eventually find peace is what builds inner strength and true character 💕
Your story sounds like mine except that I was married just shy of 30 years. I can relate to all of your points and agree with what you are sharing. It has taken me a year and a half to get where I today. The journey was certainly unexpected and incredibly difficult but as I was told often by great supportive friends, it will get better and it has. Thanks for the affirmation.
Thanks for commenting Cate, and I agree that we are ultimately responsible for getting our own needs met. I struggled with the concept of needs in a relationship for a long time, partly due to my ex-husbands unhealthy beliefs about needs and expectations which left me feeling like I wasn’t allowed to ask for anything from him, yet was expected to give him exactly what he needed. I wrote a blog post about it a few years back when I finally learned how it felt to give and receive in a healthy relationship!
As someone who was dumped after 25 years 6 years ago, I learned to think of the pain not as a wound, but as an amputation. It WILL heal and I will adapt, but I will always be missing that part of me. Even though I have entered another relationship, I recognize that that 25-year relationship was a significant part of my history, my life, that I have lost.
Thank you Sandi! Yes really I resonate with that “kick in the gut” feeling. I’m glad you have come through the other side 🙂
Thank you xx
Thank you and glad you found it useful x
Thank you for sharing and I’m so happy that your son came through the other side of his hardships. Wishing you all the best for this next part of your life x
Thank you for sharing Martin and I am glad that you found the article helpful, and wishing you the best moving forward. Valuing yourself really is one of the fundamental keys to moving on 🙂
Thank you so much for sharing your experience. I’m coming out of an almost 20 year relationship and the feeling that I’m starting over again at the age of 47 is overwhelming at times. Reading your post made me feel so hopeful about the future. Thank you!
I really can’t thank you enough for this. This has been a tough week and this article was exactly what I needed. Thank you!
Fantastic article! Thank you for sharing your journey. “It’s not rejection, it’s redirection!”-Tavis Smiley 😉
A beautifully written post. Thank you for sharing this, it has eased my mind over a breakup that I went through (and didn’t forsee) two years ago. It has also reminded me that each and every one of us is on a private journey that has nothing to do with any other person. Despite the tantalising romantic allure of a “forever” relationship, no such thing exists because: either one or both parties will die, or one or both parties will leave. The best thing we can do for ourselves is to enter a relationship with the knowledge that it will end one day, for whatever reason, and when that happens to acknowledge the beauty, truth, and growth that we have experienced as a result of that relationship. As Diana Devaul said in her excruciatingly sad post at https://dev.tinybuddha.com/blog/no-matter-what-life-takes-away-you-still-have-everything-you-need/ “Nothing is permanent. Not life, not grief, not anything”. Bless you Marissa
Brilliant. So well said. Thank you for writing and posting. Deep bow.
Helpful and inspirational, thank you.
Wow can really relate. I’ll be walking into my 7th decade May 2018 after a separation of all most two years! Last dec 3 would have been 52 years. He has cancer now & trying to be graciously kind because of our children & grandkids. But couldn’t stop the toxic coming out of both of us! He had an affair after being married just 6 years. With Someone we both new, forgave him but he didn’t nor I knew how tramitize it was for me. I’m asking WHY? He’s telling me to get over it! So I stayed had another baby, but never really happy. Just settling because I thought I had to. Family, religion & just settling. Made the best out of it because of my boys! And then 3 years after that was separated 2 months & fell in love with someone with just a touch of his hand. He knew I was in love with him, but never acted on it, husbands best friend.
Still after 42 years, I’m still in love with him & he doesn’t know. Really sad to love someone that long & he doesn’t know.
Hopefully I’ll be able just to tell him someday before I read my last chapter!
Thank you so much Marissa! It’s really a helpful article. I really appreciate it and I wish you all the best!