
“Pain is inevitable. Suffering is optional.” ~Unknown
Maybe someone hurt you physically or emotionally. Maybe you’ve survived something else traumatic—a natural disaster, a fire, an armed robbery. Or maybe you’ve just come out of a trying situation, and though you know you’ll eventually recover, you still feel pain that seems unbearable.
Whatever the case may be, you’ve been scarred and you carry it with you through many of your days.
Most of us can relate on some level to that feeling. Even people who excel at taking personal responsibility have at least one story of having been hurt. Though some of us have endured more serious situations, you really can’t quantify or compare emotional pain.
To a teenager who just had her heart broken, the pain really seems like the end of the world. In fact, Livestrong estimates that every 100 minutes, a teenager takes their life—and that the number of suicides in high-income families is the same as in poor families.
Presumably, not all of those teens have suffered incomprehensible tragedies. What they have in common is pain, born from different adversities and circumstances.
When you’re hurting some people might tell you to “let it go,” as if that’s a valid solution. They may say “it’s all in your head” and assume that reasons away the pain. But none of that will help you heal and find happiness from moment to moment.
Like everyone, I’ve been hurt, in both profound and trivial ways. I’ve had to to acknowledge my feelings, process them, and then find ways to work through them so I could let go and move on. Here’s what helped me do just that.
1. Define your pain.
It’s not always easy to identify and understand what’s hurting you. Some people even stay in abusive relationships because it’s safer than acknowledging their many layers of pain: the low self-esteem that convinces them they deserve abuse, the shame over being treated with such cruelty, and the feeling of desperation that convinces them there’s no real way out.
The first step toward finding happiness after having been hurt is to understand why you were hurt, to get to the root of everything that makes the memories hard.
2. Feel and express that pain.
There’s no guarantee that you’ll be able to communicate how you feel to the person who hurt you, and if you can, there’s no guarantee they’ll respond how you want them to. Say what you need to say anyway. Write in your journal. Write a letter and burn it. Get it all out.
This will help you understand why you’re hurting and what you’ll do in the future to avoid similar pain, so you can feel empowered instead of victimized.
Research has actually proven that people who focus on lessons learned while journaling find the experience more helpful than people who don’t.
3. Try to stay in the present.
Reliving the past can be addictive. It gives you the opportunity to do it again and respond differently—to fight back instead of submitting, to speak your mind instead of silencing yourself. It also allows you to possibly understand better. What happened? Where did you go wrong? What should you have done?
Regardless of what you think you should have done, you can’t do it now. If you have post-traumatic stress disorder, you may need professional help to avoid revisiting the incident. If you don’t, you need sustained effort. Fight the urge to relive the pain over and over. You can’t go back and find happiness there. You can only experience that now.
4. Stop rehashing the story.
Sometimes we tell a sad story over and over again as a way to avoid moving on from the past.
It may seem like another way to understand what happened, or maybe it feels helpful to hear someone say you didn’t do anything wrong and you don’t deserve to hurt. And it’s okay if you need that for a while.
But if you do this for years it keeps you stuck living your life around a memory and giving it power to control you.
No amount of reassurance will change what happened. You can’t find happiness by holding onto a painful story and letting it control your life. You can only find happiness when you let it go and make room for something better.
If telling your story empowers you and helps other people, then by all means share! Only you know where you are mentally and emotionally and whether telling your story is hurting or helping you.
5. Forgive yourself.
Maybe you didn’t do anything wrong but you blame yourself. Or maybe you played a role in creating your current situation. Regardless of what happened, you need to realize that what you did is not who you are. And even if you feel immense regret, you deserve to start today without carrying that weight. You deserve a break.
You can either punish yourself and submit to misery, or forgive yourself and create the possibility of happiness. It comes down to whether you decide to dwell or move on. Which do you choose: anger with yourself and prolonged pain, or forgiveness and the potential for peace?
6. Stop playing the blame/victim game.
Maybe you were a victim. Maybe someone did horrible things to you, or you fell into an unfortunate set of circumstances through no fault of your own. It still doesn’t serve you to sit around feeling bad for yourself, blaming other people. In fact, it only holds you back. You can’t feel good if you use this moment to feel bad about another person’s actions.
The only way to experience happiness is to take responsibility for creating it, whether other people made it easy for you or not. You’re not responsible for what happened to you in the past but you’re responsible for your attitude now. Why let someone who hurt you in the past have power over your present?
7. Don’t let the pain become your identity.
If everything you do and all your relationships center around something that hurt you, it will be harder to move on. You may even come to appreciate what that identity gives you: attention, the illusion of understanding, or the warmth of compassion, for example.
You have to consider the possibility there’s a greater sense of happiness in completely releasing your story. That you’d feel better than you can even imagine if you’d stop letting your pain define you. You can have a sad story in your past without building your present around it.
8. Reconnect with who you were before the pain.
It’s not easy to release a pain identity, particularly if you’ve carried it around for a long time. It may help to remember who you were before that experience—or to consider who you might have become if it hadn’t happened.You can still be that person, someone who doesn’t feel bitter or angry so frequently.
If you want to feel peaceful and happy, start by identifying what that looks like—what you think about, what you do, how you interact with people. Odds are this process will remind you both how you want to be and how you don’t want to be.
9. Focus on things that bring you joy in the moment.
You don’t have to focus on completely letting go of your pain forever; you just have to make room for joy right now. Start simple. What’s something you can enjoy in this moment, regardless of what pain you’ve experienced? Would sitting in the sun bring you joy? Would calling your sister bring you joy?
Don’t think about the totality of the rest of your days. That’s a massive burden to carry—haven’t you hurt enough? Just focus on now, and allow yourself a little peace. You’ll be surprised how easily “nows” can add up when you focus on them as they come.
10. Share that joy with other people.
We often isolate ourselves when we’re hurting because it feels safer than showing people our vulnerability. What we fail to realize is that we don’t have to feel vulnerable all the time. We can choose certain people for support, and then allow ourselves time with others without involving our painful stories.
You can share a meal, a movie, a moment and give yourself a break from your anger or sadness. You don’t have to carry it through every moment of your day. Don’t worry—if you feel you need to remember it, you’ll still be able to recall it later. But as you allow yourself pockets of peace, shared with people you love, you may find you need that story a lot less.
***
To be clear, you have a right to feel whatever you feel. And you don’t have to rush through your sadness or anger. We all need time to process our feelings. But there comes a time when we need to consciously choose to heal, let go, and move on. It’s a process, and it won’t be easy. But you deserve it.
Everyone deserves to feel happy. Everyone deserves a little peace. One more thing we all have in common: we can only provide those things for ourselves.
Photo here.
**This post has been expanded to clarify a few crucial points.
About Lori Deschene
Lori Deschene is the founder of Tiny Buddha. She started the site after struggling with depression, bulimia, c-PTSD, and toxic shame so she could recycle her former pain into something useful and inspire others to do the same. You can find her books, including Tiny Buddha’s Gratitude Journal and Tiny Buddha’s Worry Journal, here and learn more about her eCourse, Recreate Your Life Story, if you’re ready to transform your life and become the person you want to be.
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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.
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Thank you for this! I find the most important of these tips for me to remember are “Stay in the present” and “Stop telling the story.” If I can do these things even briefly, for a moment or two, and if I can even do them at the same time (!) I immediately feel relief from the pain and my experience opens up rather than shutting down.
-Melissa
Hi Melissa. I know exactly what you mean. I’ve had this knack of repeating stories all my life. People have pointed it out, and I’ll think to myself, “I must believe it serves me to do this, but in all reality it doesn’t.” It’s funny how you can feel in your head like you’re minimizing your pain when really you’re just prolonging it.
Thanks for reading. I hope you had a wonderful Tuesday =)
Dear lori
Can you please give ur mail I’d I need ur help to rescue my pain…. Please please u can mail me at safalika6@gmail.com and I shall share my story pls pls
Hi there,
I’m so sorry to hear you’re going through a hard time right now. I’ve actually become a little overwhelmed with email requests for advice. Would you mind sharing a little of your story here, so that perhaps I can offer thoughts that might help others readers as well? Also, this allows some of the community members to offer you their help and support.
You are in my thoughts!
Lori
This is a strange complaint/constructive criticism:
As much as I want to read all of these posts, the fact that the font is in gray and hard to read (for me) discourages me. I feel as if I’m missing out on a lot by not reading.
I understand the gray is part of the color scheme of the site or this section of the site, but please, please reconsider. 🙁
I know it’s weird to complain about that, but I may never enact change by never taking action.
Hello guest,
Thank you for your note. I’ve received a couple emails along the same lines, and it’s something I intend to address.
I’d hate for you to miss out on a post you’d like to read because the color is difficult on your eyes. Hopefully that won’t be a problem for too much longer.
Thanks again and be well~
Lori
This is an excellent article. I agree with most everything you say, except that I don’t wholly agree with stop telling the story. On the one hand, it is very true that the more you are in that space, the more you are stuck in the past, over the long-haul.
However, the other way to get stuck in grief is to repress it. I think in the initial stages of really GRIEVING (whether it is at the time of the event or later on when you finally realize it represented a loss), you should tell the story as much as you need to, in order to work it through and get beyond. It’s part of acknowledging the pain or the wrong, and flushing through it. When permission to grieve gives way to time to move on–yes, that is when you want to stop telling the story, unless telling the story is essential to helping someone else heal.
This is an excellent article. I agree with most everything you say, except that I don’t wholly agree with stop telling the story. On the one hand, it is very true that the more you are in that space, the more you are stuck in the past–long-haul. However, the other way to get stuck in grief is to repress it. I think in the initial stages of really GRIEVING (whether it is at the time of the event or later on when you finally realize it represented a loss), you should tell the story as much as you need to, in order to work it through and get beyond. It’s part of acknowledging the pain or the wrong, and flushing through it. When permission to grieve gives way to time to move on–yes, that is when you want to stop telling the story, unless telling the story is essential to helping someone else heal.
Hi there,
Thank you for adding this note. You bring up an excellent point, and I agree wholeheartedly. I was speaking from my own personal experience of having held onto stories for far longer than necessary. I remember not only re-telling stories repeatedly, but telling them to anyone who would listen.
I think it’s helpful to work through stories in a therapeutic setting and with specified supports for as long as one needs to; and if you can help someone else with your story, by all means share it.
I just caution against living within a story because it leaves no room to move on and grow beyond that identity.
Thank you again. This is an important distinction, and I appreciate that you took the time to explain it.
Lori
Lori, I just noticed that you already pretty much concluded the same. And I agree with your more detailed explanation of the original remark.
It is true, room to move on is important.
I would say also that an entirely different setting might be very helpful.
When I came back from a vacation/work trip, I realized that I had effortlessly not even thought about my story for the entire 10 days of my absence from home. As soon as I got back, it hit me again though. Afterwards, I sort of forced myself into the state of mind from my trip, meaning not thinking about it at all, as it was so much more pleasant!
Yup its true ya bt it mights be hurt
I think I need to stop telling the story now and see if that helps.. Its been a few years since it all happened and as bad as it was, the truth is I’m pretty happy now in my life. So why the addiction to the emotional trauma? The memories of it still really sting and there are people associated with the people who hurt me that are a trigger when I have to see them at work sometimes. Anyway I know Im light years from where I was, but Im not satisfied at where I am. I want to have no feelings at all about it.
My question is how to get past the story of the hurt that has been built up over a lifetime ? To put it short I was the son of a man of power and had done some amazing things in his life that affected thousands of people’s life’s. He was bigger than life and the most respected man I have ever met. Trump don’t have crap on what my dad overcame or the life’s he touched. I was his only son after he lost both of his other sons by my age of 9. I was the son that learned everything and did everything I was asked to do and there was but one way to do things my dad asked and that was to be the best of the best are my dad had no use for me. That was not all bad I did learn how to do everything from fly planes to pour concrete and be the best man on a shovel. If I fish I’m the best. If I build a house or build anything I’m the best. If I deal with a millionaire I’m the best. If I deal with a poor man I’m the best. If my dad put me on a 55 million $ job to run I was the best he could find. If his dirty work needed to be done I was the best he could find after all I was brought up and was expected to be the best of anything my dad asked of me of I was not needed in his life. We became friends and was best friends. After he died in 2012 my sister came to power over me and my life of work for my dad. To end this story she fired me and stole over 5 million from me that I spent my life working for. My story is 50 years old and my story has about killed me. Funny part is I never made over 35000 a year working for my dad and I made millions for my family that benefits from the work I have done. Because my sister finished school she got the power over a son that was put to work sweeping concrete for 10 hours a day every weekend on a Saturday and Sunday. I just wrote because it helps me but this getting past my sister and what she done to me I just can’t so I write about it some and I suppress my anger. That’s all I have to say. Good reading what everyone has written and I thank each one.
you know she hurt you right though she is your sister
so you must feel horiible though i get it i get your pain
i may not have felt it or anything similar but i uderstand
so my advise tell her in the face of who she hurt you anyway you can
then enjoy your life to the fullest if someone hurt you your best revenage is to stay happy
love
i am trying to help
I fully agree with you.
Not at all talking about your negative story – especially in the beginning phases, but it might be a different phase for everyone – could be suppression and have an averse effect.
In fact, I told my story so often (to the same person), I got tired of it myself!
its important to tell your story…. most therapy seem to be founded on the therapeutic value of just doing that.
As you re tell the sordid story it looses is strong hold untill indeed just like you say …. got tired of it myself!
I too am a big beneficiary of therapy and indeed telling and re telling the story of massive abuses that started me from toddler to past teenage seem to be all i was into until i substantially healed.
When healed you no longer care about the story and you just want to move on.
Those who say do not tell the story, i think even the author, have no idea what they are saying and are just blowing hot air.
I totally agree.
Telling the story is important… to a point. Orgs like AA encourage one
to stay stuck at that point, endlessly reliving the old hurt. In the
end it’s infantilising and limiting and has sent more than one person
back to the bottle. I know people who have attended AA and seen for
themselves that this endless recitation of one’s hurts is exactly the
problem, not the solution. At some point, if we’re emotionally and
mentally healthy, we move on, and don’t need to do that any longer.
In all fairness to AA. People who actually WORK the 12 steps, leave the story behind, and go on to live happy joyous lives. In fact that is the whole point. It is called a 12 step program for a reason. If someone is reliving their past pain over and over in meetings, they are likely not working ALL the steps.
I had gone through a hurtful experience and re-told the story over and over and over again. In the moment I felt like it was therapeutic to tell the story because it was helping me heal. I was wrong. I was simply dwelling and it was doing nothing for me. I’m not saying to ignore how you feel and don’t bring it up ever, just also don’t let it be apart of your everyday either. Focus more on joy and slowly but surely the pain will relieve itself.
can someone tell me what to do im married for almost 12yrs now im 30 my husband hurt me emotionally and physically when we fight i stay with him till now coz i love my kids i dont know what to do he always hurting me again and again everytime we fight he didnt respect me anymore even my kids watching he hurting me infront of them im so helpless i dont have work im just housewife taking care of my childrens i want to leave but i love my kidos can u tell me what to do ??? pls
how do you explain Justin Timberlake and Britney affair? Britney thought that it was woman freedom to sleep with morons first when both of them were virgins…. that destroyed something that can never ever be replaced. Justin handled it much better even though Britney remained his responsibility despite sleeping with morons after morons… and Timberlake had to listen to sluts like Cameroon Diaz to grow up? do you realize how alone Timberlake lived in all the glitters and show?
that’s real hurt.. Timberlake virgin emotions were wasted and scattered in cold air never to be replaced… what if similar thing happens to normal people without as much support and without as many channels to express those pain?
Also pain can be a beautiful thing if you channel it properly. I’m not saying necessarily life should be lived as a tortured artist… but really, an outlet, not as a distraction but as a channel, can not only help you identify how the situation has shaped you but help you to find the true beauty and honesty that can be forged as a result of it.
I’m a writer so maybe I’m looking at this from that perspective. When I’m in pain, I rarely write about my own pain. But I find it very easy to suddenly understand the pain my characters may be feeling – usually about something totally unrelated. They gain depth and character. They borrow from me. They become human. And I find that my characters are more likely to listen to me in that humiliating moment of great sorrow. And I am more likely to listen to them.
Anger, I find, doesn’t tell me much about myself. Anger is like bargaining with the universe. “If i just do this…”, “if he/she just had done this…”, “if so-and-so hadn’t been so….”. Anger makes you focus on stuff you can’t change. SADNESS, on the other hand, makes you focus on the only thing you can change. YOU. Sadness is a mirror. It forces you to face who you truly are.
WORK through it. DO YOUR WORK. Whatever that might be. Pour your pain into creation. Use pain, a type of death, to create life. It will be a beautiful moment. Death comes again when the creation is finished but there is a certain finality about it then. Things come full circle and you won’t be the same person after it all.
It’s hard to explain. But in every crisis, there is a golden and precious opportunity to save yourself from who you once were.
Oddly and I realise this is a few years later but this comment has really helped me understand my response to discovering my story of pain.
I’ve spend days wallowing in anger with a desire to lash out and hurt those I feel responsible, but this has been constrained by my inability to do anything, which has just made everything worse.
I’ve been using anger to suppress and avoid the sadness but EllaYu is correct and it is only the sadness which will help me move on.
nope. pain is not a beautiful thing.
your words are very healing. I hope others can read your words. brilliant insights. thank you from bottom of my heart
Brother I,have a best seller for you if you are a writer and can write off a persons pain. My life story is so full of pain and interesting that I been told many times I should write a book. Problem is I have a 10 th at best education and my spelling lacks a bunch. What I truly have been through and it’s not all bad and in many ways it’s amazing that I still living. It has all the makings of a best seller. I’m laughing to myself because I came to this site to deal with being hurt and I find myself wanting to tell my story but it’s 50 years long.
It’s important to stop telling the story because once you do you start attracting newer better “right fit” people in your life.
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This is an excellent article. I agree with most everything you say, except that I don't wholly agree with stop telling the story. On the one hand, it is very true that the more you are in that space, the more you are stuck in the past, over the long-haul.
However, the other way to get stuck in grief is to repress it. I think in the initial stages of really GRIEVING (whether it is at the time of the event or later on when you finally realize it represented a loss), you should tell the story as much as you need to, in order to work it through and get beyond. It's part of acknowledging the pain or the wrong, and flushing through it. When permission to grieve gives way to time to move on–yes, that is when you want to stop telling the story, unless telling the story is essential to helping someone else heal.
This is an excellent article. I agree with most everything you say, except that I don't wholly agree with stop telling the story. On the one hand, it is very true that the more you are in that space, the more you are stuck in the past–long-haul. However, the other way to get stuck in grief is to repress it. I think in the initial stages of really GRIEVING (whether it is at the time of the event or later on when you finally realize it represented a loss), you should tell the story as much as you need to, in order to work it through and get beyond. It's part of acknowledging the pain or the wrong, and flushing through it. When permission to grieve gives way to time to move on–yes, that is when you want to stop telling the story, unless telling the story is essential to helping someone else heal.
Hi there,
Thank you for adding this note. You bring up an excellent point, and I agree wholeheartedly. I was speaking from my own personal experience of having held onto stories for far longer than necessary. I remember not only re-telling stories repeatedly, but telling them to anyone who would listen.
I think it's helpful to work through stories in a therapeutic setting and with specified supports for as long as one needs to; and if you can help someone else with your story, by all means share it.
I just caution against living within a story because it leaves no room to move on and grow beyond that identity.
Thank you again. This is an important distinction, and I appreciate that you took the time to explain it.
Lori
[…] 10 Happiness Tips for People Who Have Been Hurt […]
I believe #8 should read “Reconnect with who you were before the pain.” The word “who” seems to be missing 🙂
It’s excellent that you added sharing as the last tip as it is an incredible path to joy. No matter what we share, there’s always a bit of happiness that ignites when we do.
Thank you Long! I fixed the error….
Beautiful. I love the phrase “pockets of peace”.
Thanks for this great article Lori. My boyfriend and I recently broke up, and this will be something that I really needed. I really liked #3, I need to remind myself to fight the urge to relive the pain, since it really does no good. But I know I can get through this, and come out a better person in the end.
Thanks again!
You’re most welcome. I’m happy to help. I know how hard break-ups can be. Hope you’re having a nice Sunday!
It is important to relieve pain when you need to. It is the same as when you feel like shitting, yet you try to hold it in, it turns into constipation and hurts your body in the long run.
hi Lori.. just wanted to tell u I love your articles.. I haven’t read all but a few.. and I read this one again today..
you inspire a lot of people to bring about positivity and change in their lives..please keep up the good work..
Thank you Meenal. It’s nice to know my writing makes a difference =)
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[…] 4, 2010 · Leave a Comment A friend posted this on Facebook the other day and it really struck me. I suppose I already know all this but to see […]
Hi there,
I tried reading through this whole list because I’ve stayed up all night as a result of feeling deeply depressed and being unable to sleep because I felt so down. I’ve cried so many tears tonight and sought this resource out as a way of trying to figure out how to learn to be happy. But I keep on being stuck on #8 — I can’t remember a time when I was happy. The last time it felt like the world wasn’t out to get me was when I was four. I’m in my early thirties now, and I don’t even really know how it would be to be completely happy or to live a life without this unbearable pain. Do you think this may be something I’ll need to address with professional help?
Hi there,
I definitely think professional help would be a good idea. We all need help from time to time, and just asking for it is a huge step toward happiness.
It might take a lot more for you to work through years of pain than you can do on your own, reading, talking or otherwise. It IS possible, but it may take some time.
The best advice I can give you is to work toward happiness in small, manageable pieces for now. There is no “happy ending” for any of us. There’s just a bunch of days and moments, some that will feel good, and others that won’t. Work to increase the ratio. You might not be able to feel happy all day, every day right now–but no one can. So don’t worry about that. Just take it moment to moment.
I hope that you’re able to get help and that you find peace. I have been there, and I still struggle sometimes with things that hurt me in the past. It’s an ongoing journey. Know that you are not alone.
Lori
Thank you Lori. I really do appreciate this response and will most definitely follow your advice, from getting that professional help and “work[ing] toward happiness in small, manageable pieces” in the meantime. In fact, I think that should be just about doable for me while I go through the process of seeking out that help and seeing how it fits into my schedule. And thanks for reminding me to “take it moment to moment” and that “no one can” “be able to feel happy all day, every day”. Those are also little, useful words of wisdom.
BTW, I’ve bookmarked your “Stop Comparing Yourself to Others” article and have found it incredibly useful to me, so thank you for that article too.
I use a technique called the Byron Katie method, discussed on my site. But, as for the past- when I was really hurt in the past, it was a direct result of my interpretation of the events. The thoughts I had about the situation were torturous and having changed my perception to focus on the gifts I’d been given, I felt appreciation. And, the person I still love, who still loves me, has shown me that what I was most upset about was minute in comparison to what we share. So, I think I’ll have to agree with the person below about not re-telling the story, since the methods that can give appreciation and new hope often, if not always, depend on re-telling the story. I “love the live in the present” tip, by the way…That is so key for enduring happiness 🙂
[…] feelings about the relationship held me back. I was afraid of being vulnerable. I was afraid of being hurt. But mostly I was afraid of hurting someone else again and having to live with […]
[…] not to say you can’t go through it. Life’s hard sometimes, and you’re allowed to hurt. The question is: how long do you want to feel angry, bitter or […]
[…] Posts: 10 Happiness Tips for People Who Have Been Hurt SHARETHIS.addEntry({ title: "Tiny Wisdom: On Hurting", url: […]
[…] Let Go of Pain […]
The advice presented here is very “professional”, but sometimes you can’t just do certain things. My only advice for hurt people would be to try and “use” other people so they come back. That means going out with friends, meeting new people… It actually means doing something with your time and not taking pity everytime you get the chance.
Aaron DelSignore
Hi Breslow,
Thanks for sharing your thoughts. Your suggestion makes a lot of sense. If we keep ourselves busy and lean on the people around us when we need support, it will be a lot easier to let go of pain.
As for this advice seeming professional, I can understand why. I am not a psychologist, but I spent years in therapy when I was younger learning how to release a painful past. While a lot of this may seem difficult to do, I can honestly say it’s all helped me tremendously.
However, we are all different. We all have different experiences, beliefs and self-imposed limitations. What works for me may not work for everyone. For that reason, I really appreciation the different ideas people have left in the comments, including yours. Thanks again!
Lori
[…] Don’t focus on blame: Blame is an issue for the past-focus on what’s possible for the future. […]
Thank you. My husband and I are separated, he supposedly to “find himself”, but that isn’t what is happening and it’s been so very hurtful. This will help me. Thanks again.
[…] do we suffer when we lose those we love? I think the true answer is because we believe we can’t be happy without them. Knowing how much you loved your husband, I can only imagine how strongly you must […]
I think you have to realize that you’re going to face pain in your life.
[…] 10 Happiness Tips for People Who Have Been Hurt by Lori Deschene (tinybuddha.com) […]
[…] 10 Happiness Tips for People Who Have Been Hurt by Lori Deschene (tinybuddha.com) […]
[…] Just wanted to share a post from Tiny Buddha I thought people might find helpful: http://dev.tinybuddha.com/blog/10-happiness-tips-for-people-who-have-been-hurt/ […]
Excellent, Lori! I AM IN AWE of your work with Tiny Buddha! I have been checking it out since last night, and I can´t get enough. I even quoted you in one of my tweets.. THANK YOU & please KEEP UP THE GREAT WORK!
Hi Monica,
Thank you so much! It’s been a wonderful journey so far, and I’m thrilled the site has been helpful to people. Thank you for reading–it’s a pleasure to meet you!
Lori
Self esteem is such a fragile thing and can be affected by the type of people that you allow in your circle.The sad thing is most don’t even realize the impact, if negative is the out come until it’s been stripped away. Some people don’t even stand a chance if coming from a broken home because it is stripped away because the parents lack it, the cycle repeats.
[…] 10 Happiness Tips for You can only find happiness when you let it go … Don’t let the pain become your identity. If everything you do, and all your … Would calling your sister bring you joy? Don’t … […]
During my divorce I had a HARD time finding happiness… so to distract myself I made this happiness circle and designed little characters to tell me the things I was having a hard time remembering during tough times. Being productive, in itself, helped tremendously.
Excellent article. When my uncle passed away, I really struggled to get out of the grieving stage.
Great tips provided.
very help full yo remain cool.
Stress Relief
Thanks for the inspirational article. Sure will use some of the tips. I think the worst is that you tell the story over and over again. It is procrastination, searching for comfort zone and just taking no action. I’m myself a diy solar panels for home use enthusiast.
The feeling of
disappointment during the divorced was natural. Though you are not in the sense
in making it to an end but you have to do it. To get divorced is one of the
usual ways if the partners can no longer find their relationship happy or
contented. There are certain ways that will help a divorced people forget what
was has done. And there are also exercises that will surely help in making a
healthy lifestyle despite of divorced. There are some countries that don’t
implement a divorced law; but there are also countries which they legally
implemented a divorced law.
tips for divorced people
I love this article.It is truly inspiring. I have struggled with depression for a very long time now and this article has helped me. There are some personal issues that i try to deal with on my own and i have always tried to find my own solutions. Your article has helped my alot.thanks.
You are most welcome, Jackie. I have gone through some dark depressions in my life, so I really do understand and empathize.
Much love,
Lori
These are some really good key point’s. They have helped me with my current situation, it’s very good and sourceful. You knew exactly what to say, and you said it right. Thing’s like this brightens up my day, knowing I’m not alone. Thank you so much. 🙂
You are most welcome, and you are not alone. =)
hi lori i was just abt to commit suicide n then ur article struck me …i didnt even know dat i would read it in so much of frustration.I just dont understand y we r unable to leave a person even though they hurt us soo much ….y god gave us so much of patience….the point i got in ur article is dont let others take power on you even in ur present…exactly i have to take a change in my life now
…..tq lori i am very glad reading ur article ….as my name is buddha
I am so glad you found this at the time you needed it most! My heart breaks thinking of the pain you must be in. If you feel like taking your life again, would you consider calling a hotline? 1-800-273-TALK.
This came at a very good time… Thankyou for sharing your insights. I am right in the middle of the greatest rejection I have ever experienced, by a trusted, childhood friend. I’m torturing myself daily and trying to mend it, change it. It is akin to the pain and trauma of a divorce or death. Some days there is “pockets of joy” and others, overwhelming depression and loss. When all you ever did and became involved a particular friend and then they reject you, wanting to end the friendship, it is a massive attack to your identity and self-esteem. Thanks for sharing you helpful tips- I’ll try them!
I have been spending far too much time lately going over the last year and it was a difficult one. 2 of my friends passed away and my mother passed away and all my siblings decided to stop talking to me. Some major financial hits. I have told the story to some people but I do not have a need to tell people about it. I am just trying to figure out how to not live this everyday. I am trying to have a little joy when I can but the night time is the worst, cannot stop the re runs. sometimes I do not even want to go to sleep, I avoid it. I will get over this and I do know everything takes time but I am seriously tired of reliving all these hurts and not having my normal positive, adventurous personality. Any insights on how to get my personality back would be great. thanks for letting me vent.
Hi Matilda,
I’m so sorry to hear about all the loss you’ve experienced this past year. That sounds like a lot all at once. I know what you mean about dwelling at night–that’s when I’ve found myself most vulnerable to rehashing the past, as well. Have you ever tried meditating before sleep? There was a period of time when I listened to a healing MP3 every night before bed, and that helped a great deal. It helped me clear my thoughts so that I could relax, instead of drifting off to sleep in a state of exhausted stress.
Much love,
Lori
I know about meditation but forgot I could use it to get clearer perspective. Thank you, I will try that.
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—–Original message—–
Hi Matilda
I will happily send you healing light and positive vibes and thoughts from South Africa. Been through something similar and the positive and adventurous part does comes back:)