How do I cope after a breakup?
Answered by Dr. Nitnem Singh Sodhi · Mental Health Counsellor, Neuropsychologist & Psychotherapist · Updated 2026-06-13
Short answer
Heartbreak is a real neurobiological event that mimics withdrawal — expect an acute phase (2 to 6 weeks), a fluctuating recovery phase (2 to 6 months) and integration. Protect sleep, keep routine, block reminders in the acute phase, and lean on people you trust.
The acute phase (first 2 to 6 weeks)
Neuroimaging shows a breakup activates the same brain regions as physical pain and substance withdrawal — this is why the intensity feels disproportionate. Do not push yourself to be 'over it'. In this phase, focus only on stabilising the system: sleep, food, one walk daily, and blocking the ex from your feeds. Do not have the 'closure' conversation now; it rarely gives closure and usually restarts the loop.
The recovery phase (2 to 6 months)
Waves become less frequent and shorter. Reintroduce the parts of your life that shrank during the relationship — old friends, old interests, work you had let slide. Resist the urge to fix the pain with a rebound; a rebound is a painkiller, not a treatment. Journalling one paragraph a day about what you learned about yourself compresses the timeline meaningfully.
When to get help
If low mood is persistent beyond six weeks with no windows of relief, or there are thoughts of self-harm, or the breakup was preceded by abuse, do not white-knuckle it — this is exactly what therapy is for. Post-breakup work is one of the most rewarding pieces of therapy and often produces a version of you the old relationship could not.
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