Jay Shetty Podcast5 LOVE EXPERTS: Still Obsessed With Your Ex? THIS Will Finally Set You Free
Jay Shetty on breakup grief explained: stop self-blame, release control, heal forward intentionally.
In this episode of Jay Shetty Podcast, featuring Jay Shetty and Stephan Speaks, 5 LOVE EXPERTS: Still Obsessed With Your Ex? THIS Will Finally Set You Free explores breakup grief explained: stop self-blame, release control, heal forward intentionally Breakups often mirror grief because you lose not only a person but also daily intimacy, a future narrative, and a version of yourself tied to the relationship.
At a glance
WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT
Breakup grief explained: stop self-blame, release control, heal forward intentionally
- Breakups often mirror grief because you lose not only a person but also daily intimacy, a future narrative, and a version of yourself tied to the relationship.
- Seeking “closure” from an ex can keep you stuck; healing requires validating the loss while changing the story you tell yourself from unlovable/bad to incompatible/learning.
- Heartbreak can mimic withdrawal and physical pain, which fuels obsessive checking, “right person wrong time” fantasies, and urges to win someone back.
- Healthy letting-go centers on reality acceptance, boundaries (including a detox/no-contact period), and focusing growth on yourself rather than as a strategy to get them back.
- Many relationship conflicts and power struggles are surface expressions of deeper needs—trust, value, and fear of abandonment vs fear of losing self—so understanding what you’re “fighting for” creates connection and clarity.
IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING
5 ideasTreat a breakup as real grief, not “just dating drama.”
The pain includes losing daily companionship and the future you imagined, so minimizing it delays recovery; allowing sadness, anger, and bargaining to be felt helps you metabolize the loss.
Compatibility requires mutual choosing—if they don’t choose you, you’re incompatible.
This reframes the breakup away from “convincing them to see the light” and toward accepting a decisive data point: a relationship missing mutual desire fails a core test.
The story you tell yourself determines whether you heal or spiral.
Narratives like “I’m unlovable” or “I’ll never find anyone” intensify shame; replacing them with truthful frames (“this didn’t work,” “I’m learning,” “we weren’t aligned”) protects future relationships from being punished for past wounds.
Don’t romanticize “right person, wrong time”—it keeps you attached to a ghost.
The episode argues that “right” includes personality, readiness, and life compatibility; imagining parallel-universe outcomes sustains rumination and prevents present-day action.
Wanting them back can be withdrawal, not evidence of destiny.
Heartbreak activates brain pathways similar to addiction and physical pain, which explains cravings, obsessive social checking, and selective memory for “good moments”; you may be missing a feeling more than the person.
WORDS WORTH SAVING
5 quotesBecause you're not only losing that person, you're losing the perception of the life you believed you were going to have.
— Jay Shetty
It's this slow, aching loss that doesn't have a funeral.
— Jay Shetty
Don't, don't, like, put someone in jail for a crime they didn't commit.
— Lori Gottlieb
You miss a ghost.
— Jay Shetty
You are keeping them alive, which is keeping you trapped in something that's dead.
— Mel Robbins
QUESTIONS ANSWERED IN THIS EPISODE
5 questionsLori Gottlieb says closure rarely comes from the other person—what does “creating closure” look like in a concrete weekly practice?
Breakups often mirror grief because you lose not only a person but also daily intimacy, a future narrative, and a version of yourself tied to the relationship.
Matthew Hussey’s “menu of pain” reframes unchosen suffering—how can someone identify the specific “benefits” they’re meant to gain from this breakup without bypassing grief?
Seeking “closure” from an ex can keep you stuck; healing requires validating the loss while changing the story you tell yourself from unlovable/bad to incompatible/learning.
Jay argues against “right person, wrong time,” while Stephan suggests letting go can allow reconnection later—how do you distinguish a healthy pause from a fantasy that keeps you stuck?
Heartbreak can mimic withdrawal and physical pain, which fuels obsessive checking, “right person wrong time” fantasies, and urges to win someone back.
Stephan recommends writing a letter for hard conversations—what should the structure include (needs, boundaries, timeline, consequences) to avoid it becoming another argument?
Healthy letting-go centers on reality acceptance, boundaries (including a detox/no-contact period), and focusing growth on yourself rather than as a strategy to get them back.
Mel Robbins suggests a 30-day detox—what counts as breaking the detox (mutual friends, playlists, location stalking), and what replacement habits prevent relapse?
Many relationship conflicts and power struggles are surface expressions of deeper needs—trust, value, and fear of abandonment vs fear of losing self—so understanding what you’re “fighting for” creates connection and clarity.
Chapter Breakdown
Breakup as a life “pivot”: why this episode exists
Jay frames heartbreak as something that can spill into every area of life—work, family, friendships, and self-worth. He sets the intention: to help you turn a breakup into a turning point you’ll eventually feel grateful for.
Breakups as grief without a funeral: losing the past, present, and future
Jay and Lori Gottlieb explain why breakups can feel like one of the hardest losses: you’re grieving not only a person, but an imagined life. Lori maps breakup emotions to the grief model and normalizes the messiness and non-linearity of healing.
The closure trap and the stories we tell ourselves
Lori highlights how people spiral trying to get explanations and closure from someone who may never provide it. She stresses the importance of noticing your internal narrative—self-blame, demonizing the ex, or hopelessness—and replacing it with a truer frame: incompatibility is enough.
Don’t punish the next person: carry hope and caution forward
Lori warns against importing old wounds into new relationships. The work is to identify what hurt, what you learned, and how to re-enter love with both optimism and discernment rather than suspicion or control.
Self-blame after heartbreak: compassion, survival, and growth gears
Matthew Hussey speaks to the “I’m not good enough” spiral and emphasizes self-compassion in the darkest phase. He reframes unchosen pain as a source of unique strengths—“gears” you wouldn’t access otherwise—and focuses on making it through one day at a time.
Choosing the pain: shifting from victim to beneficiary (the ‘rat wheel’ analogy)
Matthew explains how agency changes the impact of suffering: the same hardship feels different when you “choose” it as meaningful. He also dismantles the romantic “right person, wrong time” narrative that keeps people attached to fantasy versions of an ex.
When it’s time to let go: effort, willingness, and real communication
Stephan Speaks defines a key threshold: if someone refuses to do the work or communicate, you can’t sustain a relationship alone. He distinguishes arguing from communicating and suggests a letter as a structured way to clarify issues and expectations.
Should you try to win them back? Fix the root—or don’t return
Jay and Stephan explore when (and whether) reconciliation makes sense. The focus should be on becoming healthier for yourself, not “upgrading” to earn someone back; and returning without solving core issues simply recreates the cycle.
Breakup cravings, social media stalking, and the mental ‘traps’ that keep you hooked
Jay compares breakups to detox and physical pain, explaining why cravings can feel overpowering. Stephan offers practical cognitive interrupts: remember what didn’t work, separate missing the person from missing the feeling, and watch for ego-driven reactions to being rejected.
Healing is bigger than the breakup: trauma, patterns, and accountability
Stephan argues the real work is healing the accumulated backlog—childhood wounds, past relationship injuries, and repeated patterns that shape who you choose. He recommends an accountability partner (friend, coach, therapist) to keep you grounded and consistent.
Conflict isn’t about dishes: turning fights into understanding (Esther Perel)
Esther Perel reframes everyday conflicts as symbolic battles for deeper needs. She teaches that couples rarely fight about the topic itself; they fight for recognition, trust, value, power/control—often rooted in fear and attachment dynamics.
Power struggles are often fear struggles: abandonment vs. suffocation
Esther challenges the idea that relationship tension is mainly about power. She explains a common polarity: one partner fears abandonment and over-accommodates; the other fears losing self and seeks control—both are attempts to manage vulnerability.
Feeling unlovable and reclaiming your power: ‘Let them’ + the 30-day detox (Mel Robbins)
Mel Robbins addresses the raw reality of breakup shame and the belief you’re unlovable. Her practical prescription is a strict no-contact “detox” to stop keeping the relationship alive, paired with a mindset shift: stop placing power in someone you can’t control.
Moving forward: acceptance, non-linear healing, and future-oriented hope
Jay closes by normalizing setbacks—two steps forward, three back—and reframes progress as learning to carry the pain more easily. The endpoint is stronger self-trust and clearer discernment about who is for a season versus a lifetime.
EVERY SPOKEN WORD
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