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    7 Types of Breakups Ranked by Recovery Time

    Which element of a breakup dictates recovery time more: the type of breakup, or the person you broke up with? My theory is the type of breakup you experience determines how long it takes to get over it more than the actual person.

    Here are 7 different types of breakups ranked by shortest recovery time to longest recovery time:

    7. The Mutual Breakup

    This is as peaceful a breakup as you can have, like when the entire family agrees it's time to pull the plug on grandpa's respirator: he is freed of his misery, and the family feels a sense of relief. I've never had a mutual breakup. I can't catch that lightning in a bottle. But it can't be that tough to recover from a mutual breakup and get back out in the dating scene again.

    6. The Circumstantial Breakup

    A cousin of the mutual breakup, the circumstantial breakup occurs when the environment around you won't permit the relationship to continue: my parents hate you, you're in Cali and I'm in NY (or even, you're one town over), I need to be single for a while, etc. Recovery time is shortened because the other person offers an excuse that takes the focus off your weaknesses or unattractive qualities that could have caused a breakup.

    5. The Ultimatum Breakup

    The most common ultimatum leading to a breakup is: "ask me to marry you within the next year of I'm out of here." Other conflicts could cause ultimatums as well: change your religion, get rid of that stupid old car, etc. Ultimatum breakups can be tough to get over because it's annoying that a little compromise could have prevented it. But once it's over, that pressure from the stalemate you reached in the relationship is gone, so it's quite a relief.

    4. The Something Someone Said Breakup

    My friend broke up with his girlfriend he was dating for years, and he mentioned a conversation that occurred shortly before they broke up. They were discussing wedding rings, and she asked how much he'd spend. He simply hasn't studied the "market" so he threw a number out there: "I don't know, $5,000." She scoffed and said: "You should spend no less than $20,000."

    He told me after she said that, he couldn't think of her the same way anymore. In fact, it put a figurative "X" over her image in his eyes. They eventually broke up, and this conversation was the springboard. This type of breakup is painful because you wish you could take something you said or did back.

    3. The I've Been Cheating

    Whether you find out from them or some other way, it's the ultimate betrayal when they are cheating on you. You can get over it because you dismiss this person as a cheating jerk, but you still feel stupid and you might spend several months envisioning the cheating or trying to regain faith in the opposite gender.

    2. The First Love Breakup

    The First Love breakup is one of the toughest to overcome. Some say you never get over it. This breakup teaches us that the world is a bigger place than we thought. There are more people to meet, there are bills to pay, there are places to go. Things just can't stay the same as they once were.

    Mine hit me when I got to college and my girlfirend stayed behind in high school. Eventually, we had to move on. The first love breakup is hurts so much because you've never experienced this feeling of loss and disappointment before. And, it's part of growing up and growing up is usually a painful process.

    1. The Blind Side

    My friend recently blind sided his ex. After she cried for an hour, he decided he had put in enough time and he left. This is traumatic because it comes out of nowhere. The blind sider may have been thinking about it for months, and they conceal their intentions, then drop the bomb while everything seems to be going well. In fact, the couple may have spent time together the night before, but the blind sider did so out of obligation.

    Blind Sides chip away at your ability to trust. If someone can break up with you when things seem to be going so well, you'll have a tough time avoiding paranoia and trusting your new partners.

    What other types of breakups would you add? What type takes the longest for you to get over and why? Do you agree that the type of breakup dictates recovery time more than the actual person you lost in the breakup?

    Follow me on Twitter: twitter.com/richravens


    Posted by Rich


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    Reprinted with Permission of Hearst Communications, Inc.

     

    521 comments

    • Virginia  •  2 years 1 month ago
      i remember my first love did #1.. so it was really bad cuz it was #1 and #2 combined :/
    • mG  •  2 years 0 months ago
      My most recent one was a mix of numbers 1 and 2.... :'( Man, that took me AGES to get over.
    • ErinN  •  2 years 3 months ago
      There's the "coward" breakup. This is the one where one of the parties to the relationship decides to end it, but doesn't have the guts (read: character) to just end it. He/she will cold-shoulder the other person, withdraw any and all affectionate gestures, make excuses not to be with the other person, and find fault with just about everything. Once the other person finally confronts him/her about the change in behavior, he/she will break up. Then he/she can feel somehow justified in doing so - "Hey, he/she started it; I didn't."
    • skknght  •  2 years 3 months ago
      you forgot death/suicide
    • JohnF  •  2 years 3 months ago
      Go back over a proof read. Many mistakes
    • ♀ǐcƏ_ƇơĿƉ♀  •  2 years 3 months ago
      I was blind sided by my first love. It was the worst experience of my life. It still hurts.
    • Leah  •  2 years 3 months ago
      You nailed it when you said the mutual break up was the easiest to overcome. I dated a guy for a summer after high school and when we started at different colleges he suggested we break up. I told him it was a great idea, and within 10 minutes we were laughing about it. He's a great guy and it might have worked if we went to the same school, and I didn't regret dating him at all.

      On the other hand sometimes who you date matters more than type of break up you have. I recently dated a guy I was good friends with for at least 3 years. We dated for a few months and then he suddenly stopped talking to me. If it had been someone who I wasn't initially friends with, I wouldn't care. Not only did it piss me off, it hurt, knowing I wouldn't have him as a friend anymore.
    • Stacey  •  2 years 3 months ago
      And on the comment that we should rather have a guy just leave and no answer... Hell no that isn't better. I would much rather hear "I just want to sleep around" than wonder if it was something wrong with ME. What I did wrong. Or just the not knowing in general would drive me insanse. Atleast with a reason there is closure. I can't even imagine a guy picking up everything and leaving without a word. How do you learn from a relationship when you don't know how the hell it ended?
    • freedom f  •  2 years 3 months ago
      I do not know if a time can be put on it either.......

      I think the worse is when a Guy proposes and the girl is not ready and she says no buy cheating on him after she said yes to the proposal.......

      I know several of my friends that had girls do this to them........WHAT A COP OUT.....

      NOTE LADIES............WHEN GUYS FALL IN LOVE THEY FALL HARDDDDDD......

      PERSONALLY I THINK GUYS THAT ARE REALLY IN LOVE TAKE IT WAY HARDER THAN ANY GIRL I EVER MET.....
    • Laura  •  2 years 3 months ago
      The worst is the disappearing act. One day everything is fine, you're making plans, and the next he doesn't call, won't return your calls, just disappears. There's no resolution, you have no idea what went wrong.
    • Jen  •  2 years 3 months ago
      I have a tricky one... breaking up with an abusive lover.

      Its liberating, freeing, and exciting. You return to being you again, kind of like coming back to life. I found it incredibly easy to get over any loving emotions I had for this person, because by the time I came around to realize what was going on - they had all dissipated.

      However, it took a long time for me to not ask my current boyfriend permission to go out with friends or go to a party. It took a long time to realize that no one was watching my every move and listening to every word like a hawk. Getting over the paranoia of being tracked takes an awful long time to get over, in some ways you may never really get over it.

      The guy threatened suicide at first when I left him... it was a relationship/break up that took him years to overcome.
    • Annaindi  •  2 years 3 months ago
      Does anyone proof read these things before they are posted? Read it again and count the errors. When you present your information in a flawed format,credibility becomes an issue.
    • 1000 cuts  •  2 years 3 months ago
      I always called it the "sentence" as in 30-60-90 day sentence in which your are sentenced to the hole-in-your-middle ache, remorse, etc.... And I don't give a sh-t what else anyone says about this...IMO the only real analgesic is another date/sex/hair-of-the-dog relationship to ease the way through the time. It's what works.
    • LadyJane  •  2 years 3 months ago
      I have a break-up to contribute: The one-sided. One party is happy, satisfied w/the other. The other party just doesn't seem to share any of the emotions and has no real explanation(or says there is no reason) as to why they feel the way they do. Quite confusing/frustrating because your left wondering what it was you did or didn't do to not receive reciprocity.
      -Sigh-
    • Keri  •  2 years 3 months ago
      Ive only experienced one really difficult break up and that would be my very first love, who i had twins with, lost one of our babies together, i mean we really went through some difficult stuff in the 4 years we were together and we got to the point where it was break up get back together on and off for the last year of our relationship but we always ended back up together, i was engaged to this man and loved him with all i had and the last time we broke up, he waited 2 weeks before dating someone he had known before we started dating and now a year later she is pregnant and they are engaged. That has been hard to get over, its made it more difficult for me to trust my heart with anyone else, i know its just a stepping stone but there have been days where its felt more like a boulder.
    • KylieG  •  2 years 3 months ago
      i think you should add something about a complicated breakup
    • brokenwing  •  2 years 3 months ago
      How about the "five years is long enough to find a freakin' job, so now I have to go" break up.

      Yep. Thanks for chippin' in, there, buddy.

      NEXT!!!!!
    • tony  •  2 years 3 months ago
      that was good i liked it
    • February  •  2 years 3 months ago
      I've met a few of those types of guys.Though after high school those types quit cuz I finally found Mr. Perfect in my life. YAY!!!
    • PatrickW  •  2 years 3 months ago
      orchidd44....unfortunately men have a name for that kind of break up, some call it "ghosting", or what my buddy calls it "the fade out" a slow progression of spardoic returned phone calls and late nite hook-ups, to a slow methodic process of eventually cutting off all communication with the women without ever having to have a conversation about it the fact that what was ever going on is now completely over!

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