• About
  • Our Team
  • Child & Teen
    • Resources
    • Blog
    • Book Blog
  • Fee
  • Contact
Menu

Quality Therapy in Los Feliz, Silver Lake, Hollywood, Los Angeles

1934 Hillhurst Avenue
Los Angeles, CA, 90027
(323) 244-2066
Warm, effective therapy for anxiety, depression, relationship issues, LGBTQ, etc.

Quality Therapy in Los Feliz, Silver Lake, Hollywood, Los Angeles

  • About
  • Our Team
  • Child & Teen
  • Resources
    • Resources
    • Blog
    • Book Blog
  • Fee
  • Contact
unnamed.jpg

Blog

Silver Lake Psychotherapy Blog. Exploring depression, anxiety, bipolar, love, sexuality, and other psychological issues that might affect todays east side los angeleno.

How to Get Over Someone, According to Psychologists and Relationship Experts

October 2, 2023 Guest User

Channing Smith

How to Get Over Someone, According to Psychologists and Relationship Experts
By Jenny McCoy for Glamour

Wondering how to get over someone is a universal experience—so then why does it feel so isolating? On a scale of 1 to torturous, getting your heart broken is a solid “absolutely awful.” Most of us have been there at some point, left questioning how to move on or how to best end a relationship. While there’s no surefire way to avoid a broken heart (unless you’re an unfeeling robot, of course), there is a way through it—even if, at the moment, you truly believe you’ll never be happy again. 

Understanding how your mind works—and how to work it better—can be helpful after breaking up. “It’s important to understand that we humans come hardwired with the ability to experience pleasure from our intimate connections and pain form heartbreak,” says Nan Wise, PhD, a sex therapist, neuroscientist, relationship expert, and the author of Why Good Sex Matters: Understanding the Neuroscience of Pleasure for a Smarter, Happier, and More Purpose-Filled Life. “The oldest part of our brain, which we share with all mammals and many other animals, has a circuit of brain regions—the panic/grief/sadness system—that gets activated when we experience the loss of an important relationship.” 

According to Dr. Wise, this means your body can very much feel the physical and emotional aftereffects of a breakup because our brains instinctually view relationships, and the resources they provide, as essential for survival. “When activated, this panic/grief/sadness system creates painful withdrawal-like symptoms: an ache in the heart, overwhelming sadness and despair, ruminations, regrets, and diminished enthusiasm for life,” explains Dr. Wise. “It is important to remember that heartbreak and subsequent grief are not pathological, but a normal part of being an emotional creature. It is just the dark side to our life-affirming ability to form loving, intimate connections.”

Read the full article here.

← Want to Believe in Yourself? ‘Mattering’ Is Key.How To Be Alone →

323-244-2066   therapy@silverlakepsych.com