Ending relationships can feel like losing emotional gravity. There can be a sense of disorientation or detachment pangs due to the fact that this person had become part of your nervous system, routine, and perhaps sense of self.
Bonding doesn’t happen lightly. We tend to love with our whole being. So when the bond is lost, it can feel like an emotional amputation—or to an extreme, like a piece of your identity walked out the door.
Our brains are wired for connection, and if someone becomes an emotional anchor, their absence can then bring anxiety. This is an experience of withdrawing from the emotional safety this person represented.
A reflection…
What Did You Feel in Their Presence?
When you were with them, you felt… (list every emotion that comes to mind: safe, chosen, seen, calm, loved).
Then pause.
These weren’t just feelings they gave you—these were feelings you experienced inside yourself. That means they’re still possible, even now. They are part of you, not just a memory of the togetherness.
What Did You Give? (What parts of yourself did you offer in this relationship?)
(Presence, patience, vulnerability, time, creativity, loyalty…)
Healing can begin when you also remember what you gave.
What Do You Miss That You Can Rebuild Yourself?
What do you want to feel again—even without them?
Perhaps feeling emotionally safe, or feeing important? What else?
Instead of seeing those feelings as permanently gone, start asking:
Where else in your life might you feel that again?
Sometimes the answer is, “I don’t know yet.” And that’s okay.
Simply holding the question is part of the healing.
Feeling anxious means you learned to care deeply, to watch for disconnection, to hold on when you love someone. This was probably a necessary and intelligent adaptation to uncertainty growing up.
The goal isn’t to stop bonding or to love less—it’s to bond, without losing yourself. Perhaps necessary when you were young, but as an adult, is not relevant in the same way.
To love without excessive depending means remembering that even when the bond has been broken, you have not been.