Home Upload Photo Upload Videos Write a Blog Analytics Messaging Streaming Create Adverts Creators Program
Bebuzee Afghanistan Bebuzee Albania Bebuzee Algeria Bebuzee Andorra Bebuzee Angola Bebuzee Antigua and Barbuda Bebuzee Argentina Bebuzee Armenia Bebuzee Australia Bebuzee Austria Bebuzee Azerbaijan Bebuzee Bahamas Bebuzee Bahrain Bebuzee Bangladesh Bebuzee Barbados Bebuzee Belarus Bebuzee Belgium Bebuzee Belize Bebuzee Benin Bebuzee Bhutan Bebuzee Bolivia Bebuzee Bosnia and Herzegovina Bebuzee Botswana Bebuzee Brazil Bebuzee Brunei Bebuzee Bulgaria Bebuzee Burkina Faso Bebuzee Burundi Bebuzee Cabo Verde Bebuzee Cambodia Bebuzee Cameroon Bebuzee Canada Bebuzee Central African Republic Bebuzee Chad Bebuzee Chile Bebuzee China Bebuzee Colombia Bebuzee Comoros Bebuzee Costa Rica Bebuzee Côte d'Ivoire Bebuzee Croatia Bebuzee Cuba Bebuzee Cyprus Bebuzee Czech Republic Bebuzee Democratic Republic of the Congo Bebuzee Denmark Bebuzee Djibouti Bebuzee Dominica Bebuzee Dominican Republic Bebuzee Ecuador Bebuzee Egypt Bebuzee El Salvador Bebuzee Equatorial Guinea Bebuzee Eritrea Bebuzee Estonia Bebuzee Eswatini Bebuzee Ethiopia Bebuzee Fiji Bebuzee Finland Bebuzee France Bebuzee Gabon Bebuzee Gambia Bebuzee Georgia Bebuzee Germany Bebuzee Ghana Bebuzee Greece Bebuzee Grenada Bebuzee Guatemala Bebuzee Guinea Bebuzee Guinea-Bissau Bebuzee Guyana Bebuzee Haiti Bebuzee Honduras Bebuzee Hong Kong Bebuzee Hungary Bebuzee Iceland Bebuzee India Bebuzee Indonesia Bebuzee Iran Bebuzee Iraq Bebuzee Ireland Bebuzee Israel Bebuzee Italy Bebuzee Jamaica Bebuzee Japan Bebuzee Jordan Bebuzee Kazakhstan Bebuzee Kenya Bebuzee Kiribati Bebuzee Kuwait Bebuzee Kyrgyzstan Bebuzee Laos Bebuzee Latvia Bebuzee Lebanon Bebuzee Lesotho Bebuzee Liberia Bebuzee Libya Bebuzee Liechtenstein Bebuzee Lithuania Bebuzee Luxembourg Bebuzee Madagascar Bebuzee Malawi Bebuzee Malaysia Bebuzee Maldives Bebuzee Mali Bebuzee Malta Bebuzee Marshall Islands Bebuzee Mauritania Bebuzee Mauritius Bebuzee Mexico Bebuzee Micronesia Bebuzee Moldova Bebuzee Monaco Bebuzee Mongolia Bebuzee Montenegro Bebuzee Morocco Bebuzee Mozambique Bebuzee Myanmar Bebuzee Namibia Bebuzee Nauru Bebuzee Nepal Bebuzee Netherlands Bebuzee New Zealand Bebuzee Nicaragua Bebuzee Niger Bebuzee Nigeria Bebuzee North Korea Bebuzee North Macedonia Bebuzee Norway Bebuzee Oman Bebuzee Pakistan Bebuzee Palau Bebuzee Panama Bebuzee Papua New Guinea Bebuzee Paraguay Bebuzee Peru Bebuzee Philippines Bebuzee Poland Bebuzee Portugal Bebuzee Qatar Bebuzee Republic of the Congo Bebuzee Romania Bebuzee Russia Bebuzee Rwanda Bebuzee Saint Kitts and Nevis Bebuzee Saint Lucia Bebuzee Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Bebuzee Samoa Bebuzee San Marino Bebuzee São Tomé and Príncipe Bebuzee Saudi Arabia Bebuzee Senegal Bebuzee Serbia Bebuzee Seychelles Bebuzee Sierra Leone Bebuzee Singapore Bebuzee Slovakia Bebuzee Slovenia Bebuzee Solomon Islands Bebuzee Somalia Bebuzee South Africa Bebuzee South Korea Bebuzee South Sudan Bebuzee Spain Bebuzee Sri Lanka Bebuzee Sudan Bebuzee Suriname Bebuzee Sweden Bebuzee Switzerland Bebuzee Syria Bebuzee Taiwan Bebuzee Tajikistan Bebuzee Tanzania Bebuzee Thailand Bebuzee Timor-Leste Bebuzee Togo Bebuzee Tonga Bebuzee Trinidad and Tobago Bebuzee Tunisia Bebuzee Turkey Bebuzee Turkmenistan Bebuzee Tuvalu Bebuzee Uganda Bebuzee Ukraine Bebuzee United Arab Emirates Bebuzee United Kingdom Bebuzee Uruguay Bebuzee Uzbekistan Bebuzee Vanuatu Bebuzee Venezuela Bebuzee Vietnam Bebuzee World Wide Bebuzee Yemen Bebuzee Zambia Bebuzee Zimbabwe
Blog Image

How to End a Relationship Without Being a Total Jerk

If you’ve landed on this page, there’s a good chance you’re thinking about breaking up with someone. Unfortunately, we’re not exactly taught how to end a relationship, let alone how to end a relationship tactfully. So if you're feeling a bit lost without a roadmap, know that you aren’t alone. The reality is that not every relationship ends with a blow-out fight, a cheating scandal, or a glaring sign that this pairing has run its course. Instead, sometimes relationships fizzle out in more subtle or one-sided ways, which can make ending things a lot more confusing. How can you do what’s best for you if it means most likely hurting someone that you probably still care for in some way?

SELF tapped a few relationship experts to get their advice on navigating this difficult but necessary part of dating. (Worth noting: If you’re trying to end an abusive relationship specifically, it’s good to seek out tips on how to break up with an abusive partner safely. While some of the tips below may still be helpful for some aspects of that situation, resources such as The National Domestic Violence Hotline can provide support tailored to your experience.)

How to know if it’s time to break up

The first step in ending a relationship as respectfully as possible is making sure that this is truly what you want. That may sound obvious, but it’s not always so clear.

“People usually do not feel 100% confident about ending a relationship,” Casey Tanner, M.A., LCPC, certified sex therapist and founder of The Expansive Group, tells SELF. “More often, people have parts of themselves that want to leave and other parts that want to stay.”

If you find yourself in a similar situation, it can be really hard to know where to go from here. To avoid an impulsive breakup, Tanner recommends thinking about how consistent and persistent your desire to end the relationship has been. If it’s only been a week or two, leave room for the possibility that you’re just going through a rough patch and may be able to get back on track with your partner if that’s actually what will make you happiest in the long run.

Tanner also recommends reflecting on what would need to change in order for this relationship to move forward, and whether you have given it a fair chance to evolve. For instance, have you addressed your concerns with your partner? Has your partner shown that they can adapt in previous conversations about your relationship? If the reason you’re considering leaving isn’t an immediate dealbreaker (like learning that your partner will never want kids when you do or falling out of romantic love) it might be worth it to put in some work before deciding to call it quits.

Shadeen Francis, LMFT, a couples therapist who specializes in emotional intelligence, likens a good breakup to a smooth plane landing. “A pilot lets you know you’re approaching a landing significantly before they start bringing down the plane,” she tells SELF. Similarly, it shouldn’t come as a complete surprise to your partner that you’re ending things. Whenever possible, it’s helpful to communicate what’s not working for you before you make the decision to end things. Not only will this help you to avoid blindsiding your partner, but it will also give you the time and space to make sure this is the right decision for you.

One major exception to all of this is if you just know, deep in your gut, that you won’t be happy in this relationship even if you, your partner, or your circumstance changes in certain ways. It’s perfectly valid to leave a relationship if that’s what’s best for you even without major or immediate dealbreakers, and even if you haven't given the relationship time to change. But it’s often still possible to figure out how to end a relationship in a way you can be proud of under those circumstances.

Finding the “best” time to end things

While there may never be a great time to break up with someone, there are certainly plenty of bad times. Like someone’s birthday. Or right before they head into work for a big presentation. Basically, you want to be mindful of what else is going on in your partner’s life and not add to an already stressful time (if at all possible), notes Megan Fleming, Ph.D., a licensed psychologist and sex and marriage therapist. “If your partner is an accountant and it’s the middle of tax season—not a good time,” Dr. Fleming says. Similarly, you probably wouldn’t want to end a relationship when someone is grieving someone who recently died, they just lost their job, or something else stressful or tragic is going on in their life.

Of course, it’s not always possible to find a “good” time, and it’s not a good idea to compromise your own needs by staying in a relationship you don’t want to be in for the sake of your partner, says Shanet Dennis, LMFT, a marriage and family therapist in New York. She offers a few tips for handling a breakup delicately even if you can’t avoid bad timing. First, think about the environment: Pick a private time and place so that you can avoid an audience. Then, acknowledge that you know it’s not a great time. You can say something like, “I know you’re under a lot of stress right now, but I can’t put off this conversation.”

It’s also important to make sure you feel ready to have the conversation. Take some time to write down your thoughts, get organized, and maybe even practice the conversation a few times. “You could play it through with a friend or do it in the mirror, but just get comfortable with the words, because it’s likely to be an emotional conversation,” Dr. Fleming says.

How to have the breakup conversation

A respectful breakup will be a two-way conversation, so be prepared for this to take a while. “It’s creating space for both of you to really say goodbye,” Dr. Fleming says.

In a perfect world, you’d be coming into your side of the conversation without a ton of regret. This goes back to making sure you’ve done what you can, within reason, to make the relationship work while still being true to your own needs, which may have included previous hard conversations about your relationship or couples therapy. While it can sometimes feel like that was for nothing if you’re ultimately ending the relationship anyway, all that work goes a long way in helping you to have a productive, respectful conversation about why you can’t move forward in the relationship.

Before starting the conversation, consider exactly why you feel the relationship should end, but be careful not to put all of the blame on your partner. “If you understand your reasoning for not wanting to be in a relationship or in that particular relationship, be really clear on it because that’s what eliminates some of the pain,” Dennis says. She recommends focusing on yourself when explaining why. So instead of saying, “You never have enough time for me,” put the focus on your feelings and say, “I've realized this relationship isn’t fulfilling all of my needs.” While you can’t avoid all hurt feelings, putting the focus on what you’re missing from the relationship keeps the blame game to a minimum. “It just lands a little differently,” Dennis says. “You’re saying the same thing, but from the ‘I’ perspective it doesn’t feel like an attack.”

It’s important to give your partner the space they need to talk through their feelings too. Understand that each of you is coming to the conversation with different perspectives and different needs. Validation is important in a breakup conversation, though it’s key to remember that validation does not equal agreement, Dr. Fleming says. For instance, you can say “I hear you" or “I understand why you’re hurting,” without implying that you necessarily agree with their viewpoints. “The important piece about this is reflective listening,” Dr. Fleming says. You’re validating your partner’s feelings (within reason), empathizing, and giving them the space to be heard.

As much as you want to empathize and be respectful about your partner’s perspective, Dennis cautions against focusing too much on putting yourself in their shoes. “Breakups can be unpredictable and the initiator is taking a big step towards choosing self,” she says. Your intention in ending the relationship should be avoiding intentional harm, not trying too hard to understand your partner’s perspective.

Beyond creating space for a respectful conversation, Tanner recommends avoiding giving false hope that you can get back together in the future. “If you’re sure about your decision to break up with this person, stay strong in that decision and don’t communicate about the possibility of the relationship reopening,” says Tanner. 

Making the post-breakup period less awful

Once the conversation is over, try to respect the level of privacy your partner wants, within reason. If they’d like to wait a few days or weeks before telling friends and family that your relationship is over, try to honor that request. Similarly, it’s a good idea to follow their lead when it comes to post-breakup contact. If they want a clear and immediate break on all fronts, try to respect that. On the other hand, if they want to continue to communicate in a way that you don’t feel comfortable with, be clear about that. Read More...

Previous Post

How Soon Is Too Soon To Propose? 18 Signs You're Ready + Red Flags To Watch For

Next Post

A Sex Therapist Gives Expert Advice on How to Be a Better Lover

Comments