
On Attachment #227: The Most Common Forms of Self-Sabotage After a Break-Up
Jan 27, 2026
They unpack five common ways people unknowingly self-sabotage after a break-up, like obsessive replaying and craving closure. The conversation covers romanticising the past, comparing healing timelines, and staying emotionally entangled. Practical redirects and gentle boundaries for rumination and reliance on others are highlighted.
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Ruminating Keeps You Tethered
- Obsessive replaying of the relationship is a form of anxious hyper-focus that avoids pain.
- Stephanie Rigg says this mental puzzle-solving keeps you tethered rather than helping you heal.
Interrupt Rumination With Replacement Acts
- Notice rumination and gently steer your attention away when it arises.
- Stephanie Rigg recommends creating a replacement behavior to support your nervous system processing.
Closure Is Often Self-Created
- Believing you need closure from your ex is often a story that keeps you stuck.
- Stephanie Rigg notes the person who left may not have answers, so acceptance can be real closure.
