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    Home » Valentine’s Day after heartbreak: Why grief resurfaces unexpectedly

    Valentine’s Day after heartbreak: Why grief resurfaces unexpectedly

    Reproduced only for reference to articles mentioning our name. All rights remain with the original publisher.

    Single after a breakup? Valentine's Day can magnify grief, longing, and self-doubt, and a psychotherapist explains why that ache is normal and how to move through it
    Business StandardBusiness Standard Cognitive Health February 12, 20263 Mins Read4 Views
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    Valentine’s Day can feel very different when you are single after a breakup. It’s not just about not having plans. It’s about being reminded of someone you once had, the routines you shared, and the future you imagined together. The day can bring back feelings you thought you had handled. You may find yourself thinking, “I was doing fine… why does this hurt again?”
    Psychotherapist Dr Chandni Tugnait, Founder and Director of Gateway of Healing, says, “People often say, ‘I thought I was doing okay, but this day hit me harder than expected.’ That reaction is not a weakness. It is grief surfacing when it finally has space.”
    And Valentine’s Day, with its emotional symbolism, gives grief exactly that space.

    Why Valentine’s Day can feel overwhelming after a breakup

    According to Dr Tugnait, heartbreak doesn’t move in one direction. You can feel productive, social, and optimistic for weeks, and then feel unexpectedly undone by a single moment or a date on the calendar.
     
    Valentine’s Day carries heavy emotional meaning. It stirs questions around love, belonging, and being chosen.
    “What makes solo Valentine’s Day particularly difficult is that it removes distractions. There is no shared plan to focus on, no performance to put up. The silence can feel loud,” says Dr Tugnait.
    Without the usual noise of life, emotions you have been carrying quietly can suddenly demand attention. And that doesn’t mean you are regressing. It means you are human.

    Why being alone is not the same as feeling abandoned

    Dr Tugnait says many people realise that what hurts most isn’t solitude itself, but the meaning they attach to it. Thoughts like “Everyone else has moved on” or “Something must be wrong with me” can feel painfully real in the moment.
     
    But as Dr Tugnait explains, “These thoughts feel real, but they are stories shaped by pain, not facts.”
     
    This is where self-awareness becomes part of healing, she asserts. Being alone is a physical state. Feeling abandoned is an emotional interpretation.

    How to shift from waiting to choosing yourself

    Another crucial part of healing after heartbreak is reclaiming agency.
     
    Dr Tugnait says many people spend months waiting for closure, explanations, apologies, or messages that never arrive. Valentine’s Day can intensify that waiting. You check your phone more. You imagine different outcomes. You hope, even when you don’t want to.
     
    But for some, the day becomes a subtle shift, and instead of waiting, they choose something grounding, like going for a walk, or writing, or cooking a meal, or just sitting quietly with music. As Dr Tugnait notes, “These small choices help shift the focus from being chosen to choosing oneself.”

    Why each solo Valentine’s Day feels different

    The first solo Valentine’s Day after heartbreak often feels heavy. The second may feel quieter. The third may pass with only a brief pang.
     
    “This doesn’t mean the relationship mattered less. It means the emotional charge is slowly loosening its grip,” Dr Tugnait explains.
     
    Healing doesn’t erase meaning. It softens intensity.

    What love begins to mean after heartbreak

    According to Dr Tugnait, heartbreak reshapes how people understand love. It becomes less about intensity and more about safety. Less about being desired and more about being at ease.
     
    “Love doesn’t disappear after heartbreak. It changes form. And if Valentine’s Day feels heavier than you expected, it doesn’t mean you are failing at healing. It means you are listening to something inside you that finally has room to speak, and that is a crucial step in the healing journey,” she says.

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      Emotional healing Emotional Resilience emotional wellbeing Gen Z relationships Heartbreak recovery Human Behavior Mental Health Awareness Valentine’s Day blues
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      Dr. Chandni Tugnait is the founder of Gateway of Healing, a TEDx speaker, Relationship Expert – Tinder India, NeuroEnergetic Transformation Coach, Psychotherapist, Life Coach, Business Coach, NLP Expert, and Healer. Over the past 15 years, she has transformed lives of more than 50,000 individuals through her work. Featured in over 500 leading media publications, Dr. Chandni is recognized for her expertise in mental health, personal growth, and relationships. Her mission is to empower people to achieve success and well-being through the alignment of energy, mindset and action.
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