ALIMONIA LIFE

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Rebound Relationships

Breakup distress follows a trajectory

People thrive by maintaining satisfying close relationships. For most adults, romantic relationships provide an important source of support, companionship, and intimacy. To lose a relationship is to lose an everyday counterpoint, someone with the potential to make life easier and the future brighter.

Breakups tend to happen when people judge their relationships as not being the close, supportive, loving relationship they desire, as not offering a brighter future. Realizing a relationship is not working can be devastating. As much as this discovery is painful, the disruption that accompanies breaking up is equally distressful.

In general, the intensity of relationship-dissolution distress spikes around the breakup or divorce, and then it starts to subside. If people are angrier, anxiously preoccupied with their partner, or don’t accept the breakup, their sadness takes longer to fade; the longer they hold onto feelings of love, the slower their sadness subsides.

At some point, people begin to consider pursuing new partners. Maybe they have divorced for months, even if the breakup has just occurred. They may have already mourned its loss and are ready for something new.

Life requires little readjustment: finding a new partner seems a natural next step. Others, however, are in the thick of grieving. They ruminate about their relationship, are deeply sad and distressed, and want to get back with their ex-partner. Should they stay single or seek a new relationship?

Rebound relationships can help attain positive outcomes

As ill-advised as they generally are, rebound relationships may actually play an important role in helping people feel better about themselves, rebuild and resolve lingering feelings towards an ended relationship.

New partners can fill the void

In the aftermath of a distressing breakup, some people seek out casual sex. A risky coping strategy, casual sex can be a way for some people to manage their distress and distract themselves from a lingering attachment to an ex. The more angry and distressed people are about their breakup, the more they might try to manage those negative emotions through casual sex.

Other people aren’t in it for sex specifically. They want new relationships, and these relationships can be surprisingly healthy, even if they occur soon after a breakup.

There’s no “right” time to enter a new relationship

Media and some basic knowledge tends to make us believe that jumping into a new relationship post-breakup is hazardous for mental well-being. The common rule: People should spend a substantial amount of time being single before they enter a new relationship (how long, exactly?). As widespread as these beliefs might be, they are not always the best option.

People who enter rebound relationships and are single for a shorter period of time report greater well-being, and their new “in a relationship” status predicts fewer residual feelings of attachment to their prior partner. They can do better not worse than people who bide their time, waiting to feel ready.

 

Rebound relationships help rebuild

Relationship endings are not only emotionally challenging, but they are also cognitively stressful. Breakups require significant mental work. Having once defined themselves in a relationship (us), ex-partners must now redefine who they each are. They must break their cognitive interdependence. This process generally includes losing aspects of themselves that they had acquired from their partner, a process that can leave people feeling small, confused, and lacking clarity of self-concept. A common example is the question: who am I without her/him?

New relationships can help. Sure, you can rebuild yourself on your own: You might dye your hair, take up kayaking, or take that long-overdue trip to Europe. But what might really help you rebuild your self-concept is a new partner, and all the many relationship-based ways this partner can help you expand your self-concept. Close relationships are a keen way we can grow, an inherently rewarding experience.

Rebound relationships can accelerate the self-rebuilding process by helping us grow in new ways, sooner than we might have otherwise. Also, it’s a healthy process where we gain new skills, hobbies, habits, and experiences.

 Joseph Abdalla