Healing After a Broken Engagement + Sharing My Viral Story

Healing after a broken engagement
^^ Home with my beloved pup Paris, over Thanksgiving weekend when I was supposed to be on my honeymoon. Feeling like I was living a double life, present in one spot but my mind in another.

I never intended to publicly share my story about my broken engagement, a wedding called off three weeks before the wedding, it was something I wanted to forget about and move on. But what if finally sharing it could heal? That’s all I want. That is the entire point of this post that a has since gone viral since it has been published (and now updated). And with my husband’s blessing and the encouragement of my friends, here we go as I share tips on healing after a broken engagement. 

WHAT DO YOU DO WHEN YOUR ENGAGEMENT IS CALLED OFF? HOW DO YOU HEAL, FORGIVE, HANDLE THE BROKEN HEART AND HOW DO YOU MOVE ON?
DO I THINK ABOUT IT TODAY MARRIED?

 

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"In this book, Diana uses her own story of pain to build a bond with her audience concerning a topic that has been minimized and misunderstood by much of the counseling community. I commend her for her transparency and honesty. She steps out of the shadows and extends a hand of friendship to women who will find someone who truly understands their pain. I hope this book will be the beginning of a healing journey from shame and rejection to an awakening of hope and confidence for many women."

My Broken Engagement:

The night he called off the wedding


It was October 30, I remember because the next night was Halloween. He came over and I had just come out of the shower, semi-wet hair, thick glasses on, and ready to finalize wedding plans which was three weeks away.

I walked down the stairs to meet him in the living room, and there he was. Then he said it. He couldn’t do it any longer.

After on and off again for two years and his cries to come begging and saying he was ready to get married. Even while engaged, there were a few moments when he would freakout, and he voiced hesitations without reason. And there we were again in that moment, me and him, him once again leaving me, like clock work, three weeks before the wedding.

Obviously deposits were nonrefundable. Time and emotions were nonrefundable – nothing was refundable at this point. After questioning why he came back at all claiming it was God who told him to marry me, he coldly stated he changed his mind and he believed marriage was a choice and responded with, “I unchoose you.”

At that very moment, I felt like my entire being died – if hearts could shatter into a million pieces, mine certainly did just that. I may have begged him to stay, to change his mind, I know I wanted to, but I don’t know if I actually did because I felt like it was a blur, like I almost blacked out. Those hurtful words were my reality as it set in and those words cut my heart into pieces.  I knew what he said was permanent, and unchangeable, and I could and would never shake them from my mind. I wish I never heard it but at the same time, it was what I needed to hear to realize I had no choice in this decision and I had to move on.

“Unchoosing” me would haunt me for the rest of my life even if we did work out – so it was done.

That night, it was so fuzzy. I was trying to navigate my feelings of panic, anger, pain, yet trying to be coherent realizing these very last moments would be the last I’d ever spend with him. It was bittersweet, I wanted to savor it but I had such a broken heart and I also wanted to be strong and not be dramatic knowing that this is how he would remember these last moments with me.

Very few words were exchanged from how he’d probably regret his decision for the rest of his life, to me asking him, why, to eventually him telling me, “I love you” as he walked out the door out of my life. I uttered, “I love you too,” and so very badly wish I hadn’t.  I wish I said, “No, you don’t, this isn’t love,” but I didn’t, because I did love him and in those fleeting moments, sometimes you can’t help but speak your truth. Broken as I was, I hated him and loved him at the same time.

I fell into my best friend’s arms sobbing that night. She had come through the door at the tail end. I don’t know how I slept that night, but I did. Then another best friend came as I was passed along to the next to make sure I wasn’t alone. I couldn’t be alone.

I was lifeless for months after. A complete zombie trying to survive. I felt numb. I never wanted to be with anyone more in my entire life than him – for so many years, through all the on and off again drama. I cried so hard one night I gave myself a bloody nose. I screamed out loud from the pain in my heart that I was afraid my neighbors would call the cops thinking I was getting murdered. I dropped to almost 100 lbs. I’m 5’8″.

Every day felt like I was living a double life. Though I was physically at work when I should have been in Palm Springs for the wedding. I was at my friend’s apartment when I should have been walking down the aisle. It was hard going home for Thanksgiving when I planned to be in Fiji and so on – but once the calendar passed the planned days together – the day we’d return from the planned honeymoon (which he never booked), my life felt like it was mine again. But it took a village to get me there, to help me heal and forgive.

Need a support group?

Find the private link in the back of the book. 400+ members sharing stories and offering support.

In Repair: A Guide to Healing from a Broken Engagement 

Available on Amazon.com 

Listen on audible, download on Kindle, or order or a paperback copy now.

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⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ #1 book for helping with broken engagements! Buying this book is a MUST!!! Within days of a broken engagement, I desperately searched for something to help me get through this excruciating heartbreak. This book was my salvation! Diana Elizabeth had virtually the same experience that I am going through now. I immediately read the entire book and while I am still in the healing process, I often find myself going back to the book (especially the emergency chapters) when I feel my emotions getting the best of me. Diana Elizabeth and her book is that friend who you can turn to because she has been exactly where you are. She is the encouragement that your spirit needs to keep your head up high. Her insertion of scripture and prayer in each chapter reminds me that HE is here and I am not alone.

THE NORMAL FEELINGS AFTER A broken engagement


A broken engagement is unlike any other breakup on any level – you really did love that person, you said yes you would marry them. You had dreams and had visions that lasted to the end of your days – there was a promise made they would be secure, a wedding was scheduled. There was a dress (or suit) to wear, songs to be played and a honeymoon to discover.  An engagement to you meant a commitment to marry, you already felt like you were married and just waiting for the official day. You put your mind and your heart in that space, you were there, it was done. But suddenly, you find that dream disappeared, that person is now a stranger.

I never saw the Sex and the City movie, friends referred to it when I went though the dark time and when I did watch the movie later, I cried. When there is a scene of abandonment, it will make my eyes swell – because I know that feeling, so know that I know how you feel at this very moment.

Although I have fully moved on from the heartache, I still remembered it. To this day, I still can, but not to the same powerful extent as that actual moment, so I hope you find peace knowing that. Feeling it doesn’t mean I still care about it, but it’s trauma and trauma is a big deal. What I can tell you is, you will not continue to hurt like you do this very moment forever, I promise. You will be able to feel empathy for those going through it as I do and you are the reason I share my story in hopes to tell you as a friend, you will be OK. Your heart will heal, and you will move forward and you will absolutely, positively be happy again. Let me help you process these feelings and remind you there is hope.

When your wedding is called off, every day leading to those important days are confusing. You feel like you’re in a daze, denial. It doesn’t seem real, it’s humiliating, you feel abandoned. 

You might be experiencing the following thoughts or feelings and I want to give a little encouragement about them.

  • You feel disappointed in yourself

    as if you made the wrong decision, and you should have seen it coming but you didn’t. The pain will literally bring you down to your knees. But you didn’t know a broken engagement was coming or else you would have never said yes. Don’t blame yourself or be embarrassed. This has nothing to do with you.

  • You feel like you are living a double life,

    the wrong life. You would be or should be doing ____ but you’re not, you’re doing something you shouldn’t be doing solo. But life goes on, and the path you are going down will be beautiful you can’t even imagine but have faith. If I survived and found my happy ending, you will too.

  • I had to get real.

    The burning words, “I unchoose you,” meant he had time to decide and move on sooner than I did. When I heard those words I thought, well then, I unchoose you back. And I had to teach my heart that love is a choice and that I had to detach my heart from that person. If someone has walked away from you then s/he has already moved on, and that is the reality to know that deposits, money, they would sacrifice all of that to not be with you – harsh. Fine, then if it’s time for you to be strong and move forward without them.

  • The mornings were the worst.

    As John Mayer sings in Dreaming with a Broken Heart, “When you’re dreaming with a broken heart / The waking up is the hardest part / You roll outta bed and down on your knees / And for the moment you can hardly breathe…” I truly felt like I dreamt with a broken heart, I had changed my social media status to that exact line. I applauded myself when I got into bed that I had survived another day, and waking up in the morning was discouraging realizing I had to triumph through another full day – until one day, it didn’t feel like survival any longer and with each morning came new curiosities and hope. One day you will wake up excited for the possibilities.

  • The nights were lonesome.

    At night silence sets in and thoughts can wander. However I would be on the phone or be with people until I was tired. Then I would journal. I would pray and I would read God’s word and his promises. And I would also pray for my ex and then give thanks for a day closer to healing. Always close the night with a thankful heart. Your heart may feel broken, but don’t go to bed angry, find your silver lining and say a prayer for yourself to heal. If you feel like you need a friend, I wrote a book that is available on Audible (so it can be as if I’m speaking to you), or download it immediately on Kindle now. Find it here on Amazon. You can leave the book on your nightstand and reach for it when those nights are hard. I’ll meet you in the pages.

  • I chose to be inspired by other married couples. 

    I always noticed when a man had a wedding ring – especially when I’d be sitting on a plane watching people find their seat. It was stem out of curiosity. I would see it and think, He made a commitment, he didn’t chicken out and change his mind. There are men who can commit. He decided he couldn’t live a day without his wife and married her, I want to find a man who will love me like that!  I also became a wedding photographer six months later. I loved weddings and my heart found hope through witnessing couples on their day say forever – it encouraged me that one day, I would find it and my clients helped me heal by sharing their special day and moments with me.

Please remember it is far better that a man knows that he cannot marry you on this side of the wedding than after and he leaves.

While you can rightfully feel angry and sad, there is so much to be thankful for when a man can acknowledge that he cannot on this side of a wedding date, rather than change his mind later. You do not want to drag a man down the aisle. If you can find the silver lining in that, it may help with perspective – in time.

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Also remember people are watching and your story, healing of hope, can bring comfort to others one day. I had four women reach out to me who went through breakups and wanted to know how I got through it. Coffee meetings, phone calls, prayers, it was an honor to share how I healed and how God helped me through it. And here I am today connecting with you in this post hoping that this post can bring you comfort and I am sending you a virtual hug. I hate that you are going through this heartbreak but I promise, you will survive and you will find your happy ending.

If you are struggling on how to answer questions about what happened, here’s a post I wrote about that. You can say as little or as much as you want, we are all different in how we express ourselves and ask for help.

Check this how to heal from a broken engagement book on Amazon, here, and join a Facebook group of over 400 members giving each other advice and strong community for healing (QR link at the end of book).

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ An absolute must for anyone going through a broken engagement. At a time in my life when I felt so alone in my pain, her book could not have come at a better time. As I was reading, I felt I had a best friend who understood me and who knew how to help me with the emotions I was going through. Diana is eloquent and empowering. She writes in a way to where you feel at ease through your struggles. Her story will give you hope through the pain and grief. This is the only book I could find which specifically targeted and understood each of the emotions of grief in a broken engagement and it helps give you the tools to work through each of them. I can say it has helped me heal tremendously and I have!
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Amy

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HOW TO HEAL after A broken engagement


  1. Book a massage(s).

    Touch is healing. I almost cried when a massage started, my throat had a frog in it and tears nearly filled my eyes. A massage felt like a hug. I just needed to feel embraced, loved and the power of touch is truly healing. Get as many massages as you need.

  2. Have a photoshoot.

    I had booked a makeup artist who was also a talented photographer and since we had the deposit already paid he suggested we finished with a photoshoot instead. He wanted to lift my spirits and it really did. It made me feel beautiful and I had a new Facebook profile photo that made me feel gorgeous. Thank you Michael Franco. (Old photos, tiny brows haha)

  3. Write it out.

    I had a diary that I started to write in again – actually I wrote in it a lot during that relationship (so much drama and pain), and I continued to write, my writing turned from bashing the relationship to praising God and asking him to forgive and heal my heart and free me from the emotions I was feeling.

  4. Seek counseling.

    I wanted to heal the correct way, not the fastest way, so I sought biblical counseling to make sure I forgave correctly. Forgiveness is an ongoing process, but doing so releases so much anger and sadness. Put yourself first and seek counseling so you can be a better person and heal right for your future husband/wife and self. Don’t forget to forgive yourself.

  5. Seek God. 

    Know what you believe in – do you believe God is in control? That He loves you and cares for you? Then trust that he allowed this to happen for a reason you will never know, or perhaps one day know. If you have faith then show the world, show all all of mankind the strength of your faith and get up and worship the Lord. If David can praise God after the death of his baby, you can get up and worship the Lord.

  6. Join a support group. 

    It was hard to find a support group when I went through my broken engagement, or anyone who could relate. You are here and so have tens of thousands over the years – you are NOT alone. Join our private Facebook group (over 400) in it who regularly engage, share trials and their triumphs. The link is in the back of the broken engagement book under “references”

  7. Get up and show up.

    Two days later I had to co-host a baby shower. I did it. I got up and after I cried upon arrival, then I took a shower at my friends place and got dressed and put on a smile and celebrated her. I removed myself and put my situation outside of myself and put my friend first. It won’t take away the sadness but it will take your mind off your problems for a few minutes.

  8. Think with your brain and not your heart.

    Without getting into too many unnecessary personal details, find your strength – especially if legal documents are being mailed, threats are being made that may need to be used in court. Don’t immediately respond – take a day or two. Seek wisdom and counsel, and stand your ground. Be in control, pause before answering if at all, and think wisely with your head and not your emotions. If finances are involved, seek counsel and do not act compulsively.

  9. Be kind to yourself.

    So one person decided he didn’t want to marry you. I know you thought he was our everything, but his actions prove he is not. Let him go. Not all is loss, it’s just one man’s opinion that you aren’t a fit for him. Well if he decided you weren’t a fit for him, then he isn’t a fit for you! You will find there will be more suitors and may you find a man who cannot live a day without you – that’s the man you want to be with. Look at yourself in the mirror and know you are a treasure and have a lot to offer and don’t let any unkind thoughts enter your mind. You are a precious child of God. There is nothing wrong with you. One day you will meet someone who won’t want you to change one bit. (More on this later in the post, I have a very serious talk with you about reassuring you that there is NOTHING wrong with you).

  10. Go shopping.

    Screw saving for that wedding. It’s done. Go shopping and buy the date clothes, the sunglasses, the jewelry – you spend it on yourself and worry about the rest later. Go on the vacation with your friends, you treat yourself! But don’t cut your hair, trust me – if you need change, get hair extensions instead. *wink*

  11. Write a letter to your future husband.

    I wrote a letter to my future husband when I was 21 and waiting to meet him. I almost gave that letter to the wrong person! I thankfully secured it and kept it. But I wrote an updated letter at age 27. If you haven’t written one yet, why not? Tell him how you are feeling and how excited you are to meet him and all the things you know about him. It will give you hope and remind yourself what you are looking for – the right person deserves that letter!

  12. Immerse yourself into a hobby. 

    I turned my hobby of photography into a businesses. I poured my time and passion into this hobby which eventually became my full-time job. I wouldn’t be where I am without the heartbreak.  You can use this energy of pain and put it toward a passion that will heal and inspire you! You can even serve others who are in need, a food bank, shelter, love on others, it will in return heal your heart.

  13. Don’t avoid those “special” places.

    Your table, that restaurant, that concert, those spots with memories – do not avoid them. GO again go back and do so immediately with your friends and make new memories. This way you can quickly move past that painful memory. Order that special appetizer, sing to that artist. Claim those spots as your own and eventually new memories will override the former ones. You will forget that you and so-and-so even had a favorite table or item on the menu.

Remember – The night that he broke up with you was the best night of your future husband’s life.

This blog post may not be enough which is why I have a published book on Amazon with over 44 reviews, and a growing group in Facebook groups offering support and counseling to one another. Buy this book now –  In Repair: A Guide to Healing from a Broken Engagement.


Don’t blame yourself for the broken engagement


I also want to encourage you to always love well. Love fiercely and if you did that, then you have no regret. It is so painful to go through a broken engagement and feel abandoned, and if anything I’m glad that I chose to love fully, unconditionally and I did my part. I didn’t create heartbreak, abandon someone or mislead another person – I stayed truthful, committed and THAT is and will always be my character.

It doesn’t mean enduring abuse or staying with someone who doesn’t love you as you deserve, or who doesn’t respect you – it’s about loving fully, knowing you gave it a go, and then realizing that if you do need to walk away, you can move ahead and learn to love what’s good for you.

And sometimes, when the fog clears we can look back and see that maybe that person, and that relationship wasn’t as perfect. Maybe there were flags, but maybe, someone higher up saw that you deserved better, you deserve to be loved as a child of God and treated better than you were being treated and He intervened.

Maybe, there is someone out there who is a better match. I bet there is.

keep going broken relationship advice quote how to heal

If you are wondering how to answer questions about the breakup, I know the confusion and pain – read this blog post about how I think is best to approach answering these questions or telling your guests.

Don’t try to overthink oR analyze what happened

What I want you to remember as your heart heals – There is nothing is wrong with you and there is nothing you should have changed or something you should not or could have done to avoid this happening.

I had to add this in because I know you are thinking what if you just didn’t fight, or didn’t say that, or only did more of this – maybe this could have all been prevented. I thought the same. I also thought this when I got in a car crash when I was 16, if only I had stopped to tie my shoe that wasn’t untied. Or if I went to the bathroom before I got in the car.

The reality is some things are out of our control. If you had to carefully watch what you said or how you expressed yourself, whether it was good or bad, or disagreed, or anything at all, it wouldn’t have mattered. It still would have been wrong or come to this point either now, or later. Because you see, this had nothing to do with YOU.

You should be free to be you, good bad, ups downs and trials should be worked on together. The thing is, whatever the problem may have been, that person left and that’s not your life partner. That’s not your team player you are looking for – marriage isn’t about perfect days it’s about all of the days, good, bad and living life together one day at a time as YOU are. Don’t hitch your wagon to one with a broken wheel, or doesn’t know where its steering.

healing quote from broken engagement called off wedding quote relationship book in repair trusting God

Dating again after a broken engagement

I didn’t date again for about six months until I was set up. I wouldn’t suggest dating right away. If your heart isn’t healed, it isn’t. What’s the point? You’ll only cause more heartache and you won’t be moving forward. Don’t put a bandaid over it – you need to make sure you heal properly. There is no rush to move on or be in a relationship – life is not a contest.

I once cried after a date that went slightly wrong because I was still heartbroken. I wrote about it in an emergency chapter in my book (available on Amazon) because I’m sure some of you might go through similar feelings after a first date. It took time to not cry after a date because I still desired to be with my ex, it’s always a desire to be in the last relationship you were in because you romanticize it – even if the relationship had its flaws. We often romanticize what it was during the good times, or what we wish it could have been.

My heart wasn’t healed yet, and I was tired so and so many dates just brought me pain. I also cried after a very short-lived relationship only because I was disappointed and didn’t want to date yet again (I never cried over him or missed that guy).

Dating again was difficult in the beginning. When you were so close to getting married, you looked forward to the lifestyle of settling down, and nights on the couch watching movies and making dinner. I get it – now you have to get out there again.

But you MUST get out there again. And remember, dating is fun! It really is, once you find the right person it’ll be so fun.

how soon to date again after broken engagement

I would suggest allowing yourself time to heal, but go on dates. Yes it can be annoying because you want to get to that comfortable settle down level because you were so close, but I promise when it’s the right person, it’s fun, it’s like being with your best friend. You will find someone who will make you laugh and fall in love again. So get out there when you feel ready but give yourself grace if you come back with a broken heart, totally normal. One day, you will come back from a first date and be excited!

When I met my Husband

I am so grateful for what happened. At the time it felt like my world was crashing down but over the months, I healed.  However even today I would never brush off that experience as something that I could easily overcome or like any breakup because it wasn’t. To this very day I would tell you it was traumatic for me, it was raw and real for me – but I am still grateful it happened.

I grew from this experience. I went to biblical counseling — and my counselor blessed me with writing the foreword to my book 10 years later! I had to continually work on moving forward. Forgiveness took time, for things that were done over time and I had to forgive when it wasn’t asked (I never spoke to him again, he never said he was sorry, you can read the entire story in a chapter in my book). That was difficult, you expect kindness or communication when you spend that much time with someone or thought they once loved you – but you don’t always get what you think you deserve.

I wouldn’t be where I am today if it weren’t for that broken engagement, the harsh words of being told you’ve been unchosen, or the drama that continued even after all was said and done. Mourning isn’t something to be embarrassed about.  Through loss and changes is how we change as people and the direction of our lives change, for the better.

Life is perfect, today with my friends and my husband I am the best version of me. I wouldn’t have become a photographer, or a blogger, I would not be living out my passions that have been encouraged by the people surround me, nor have experiences of traveling the world, or being here at this very moment connecting with you over this small sliver in my life that changed the course of my life – to where I am now.

I am so in love with the life I almost didn’t have.

For years I hated the broken engagement was part of my testimony, a permanent part of my written story of my life. I hated that, I really struggled. But my situation brought hope to others over the years and if you get to know me, I believe I exist to encourage and now, I published a book trying to help others navigate through the emotions of a broken engagement that has reached hundreds on Amazon. If you need a friend to walk you through this, I’ll meet you in the pages of my book and hundreds more will meet you in our private Facebook group.

dating again after broken engagement

Finding our happy ending or knowing “why” will take time. I met Mr. Wonderful a year and a half later (and married 6 months after our first date – read how we met here). I remember watching him from the cabin in Sedona as our wedding photographer took his portraits before our first look. That moment will forever be in my mind, my heart burst out of my chest and my eyes filled with tears and I said to myself – This is the man, that’s him! This is who God had for you. This is your husband who can’t live a day without you who has showed up because he wants to be with you forever! God knew this day was coming!  That wedding day was what was waiting for me on the other side of that broken heart.

My businesses took off and I prospered in so many ways with riches in friendship and creativity and freedom! It all worked out in the most perfect way – my husband is truly who I was meant to be with and searching for my entire life. Had I known he was waiting for me, along with this career, these friends, this church, and the life experiences I’ve had, I would hug myself and said there, there, right around the corner a better life and love awaits. Just be patient. And that’s what I’m saying to you – there, there, right around the corner a better life and love awaits. Just be patient. I have also seen many broken hearts “graduate” from our Facebook support group and get married and are now expecting! 

How to heal after a broken engagement or called off wedding / Healing after a broken engagement

Like my friend Kim told me, “That night that he broke up with you, was the best night of your future husband’s life.” Mine too.

And I truly believe that one day, you will believe it was yours too. Keep your head up and one day, write me back and tell me it all worked out like just like I said it would.

Those who sow with tears will reap with songs of joy. – Psalm 126:5

If you have made it this far, I am giving you a huge hug because I know you are searching for more, answers, help, a community. 

Buy this book that is recommended by church counselors about How To Heal from a Broken Engagement on Amazon or listen to the audiobook. If you need more advice and words, this is it.

Begin your healing journey today

A broken engagement is complex. You were at the ultimate high point of love—planning your dream wedding and future—and, suddenly, the dreams disappeared. It is unlike those people who had a marriage dissolve—who wore the dress, said the I do’s, cut the cake and lived a married life for a few years. They got to experience marriage. They got to have the wedding, the first home, the relationship (whether perfect or not), while an engaged person dreamt of it, romanticized it, and set their future on that picture-perfect life. When that expectation of a perfect future suddenly dissolves, picking up the pieces turns into a nightmare.

I understand you. Let’s talk about it, and let’s talk about how you will pick yourself right back up, piece by piece, and push forward, little by little. You will, and I will help you. And so will God, whether you know Him right now, or not.

I’ll meet you in the pages and new friends will meet you in the private support group.

Empowering Broken Heart playlist on Spotify

 

This post has been updated from its original publish date of March 6, 2018.

Buy the book In Repair: A Guide to Healing from a Broken Engagement on Amazon.

Diana Elizabeth is an author, photographer, and obsessive thrift shopper. You can typically find her in the garden wrist deep in dirt, at a local estate sale or planning her next creative themed party. She continues to blog weekly.

294 Comments

  • dee

    Dear Diana, Thank you so much for sharing your experience with the world. I could relate to a lot of what you wrote. My wedding was cancelled this past June, 2 weeks before the date and my 9 year relationship just ended this month. To make things worse, he didn’t formally end anything, he just ghosted me, it has been 11 days since I’ve heard from him, but even one day is too many. I knew there were things we were working through, mostly regarding his family and their requirements of me… I just always thought that after 9 years, we could work it out, I guess he didn’t feel the same. I always thought he was kind, caring, good-hearted, respectful, it’s hard to accept that that same person would cut off contact with me instead of having a conversation about us going separate ways. I thought that after 9 years, I at least deserved that. I feel so broken. I cry all the time. I feel like a zombie. It’s hard to do anything. I know God has his plans for me, I trust that. I trust that this was God’s way of protecting me- I just can’t help but mourn the loss of my partner, my friend. As stupid as it sounds, I miss him and everything we had. I’m seeing a counsellor, I just hate going through this. My heart hurts. Your story gives me hope. Thank you again for sharing a piece of yourself with us.

    • Diana Elizabeth

      Hi Dee, You have been on my mind all week and I’ve been wanting to sit down and properly write you back. Thank you for being here and sharing your story and your heart. I cannot imagine what you are going through with no closure, and no communication after all these years. I am so sorry. I understand exactly what you mean with a person changing their character after a breakup. It is OK to feel sad, to feel broken and feel it fully in order to process it and heal. I know you miss him, if you didn’t care then I would be concerned that you were marrying for the wrong reasons but you loved fully, you stepped out in faith, and you gave it your all. And that my dear, you should have no regrets doing. Do not be afraid to do it again one day, in time. I love that you trust God and you know He has a plan for you. This quote was given to me during my broken engagement and it gave me so much peace and I pray that it does the same for you. “There is nothing – no circumstance, no trouble, no testing – that can ever touch me until, first of all, it has gone past God and past Christ through me. If it has come that far, it has come with great purpose, which I may not understand at the moment. But as I refuse to become panicky, as I lift my eyes up to Him and accept it as coming from the throne of God for some great purpose of blessing to my own heart, no sorrow will ever disturb me, no circumstance will cause me to fret, for I shall rest in the joy of what my Lord is – that is rest of victory!” -Alan Redpath. I am praying the Lord draws you closer to Him during this time and surrounds you with support. I’m here if you have any questions. xx

  • Ali

    I was supposed to get married June 22, 2019. A few weeks before the wedding, I was experiencing crippling anxiety about a huge wedding and being in front of so many people. I was finishing nursing school at the time, he was finishing law school, studying, moving into a new home, fixing it up, etc. so many new changes! I talked to my fiancé about how I was having anxiety and even at one point he told me “You don’t have anxiety. Stop saying that.” But I do, it’s bad. Anyways, for a solid week we went back and forth about postponing our wedding until after we took exams to help ease the anxiety or even have a smaller wedding/go to the courthouse. He told me he didn’t know how his family would react but that everything should be okay. He is the one who sent the text to our wedding planner. Not me. That night, he went over to his parents to tell them we decided to postpone the wedding. His parents agreed that was a smart decision and his mom ever mentioned us running off and getting married. Everything was fine. A few days later, we were laying in bed about to go to sleep and I was scrolling Facebook. I noticed that his cousin cropped me from a picture that was taken at my Bridal shower and made it her profile picture. I mentioned it to my fiancé and he said he can’t control what his family does and that was it. The next day, I noticed that the border of the picture was her camera roll, and she had screenshotted tons of my pictures from social media. (And I have no clue why??!) anyways, later that day… things were fine, I asked him what time he would be home and he replied. However, his aunt sent a picture in his family group chat that I was included in and it said “I owe myself the biggest apology for putting up with what I didn’t deserve.” And everyone was commenting on how they loved that quote! I was confused. A few minutes later, I was deleted from the group chat. I texted him and asked why and his reply “Says my grandma did. It’s over, you need to get your stuff and go home.” Turns out, his aunt came over and was telling him how I didn’t love him or want to marry him or I would be running down the aisle to him. That nothing should play a factor in that. I was going to make a terrible wife etc. He believed her. That evening, I moved everything out of the house. The next morning, I showed up around 8:30 to talk to him. He called his aunt and she didn’t know I was sitting beside of him. She again told him how I don’t love him, I’m just using him for his happiness, I would make a terrible wife, I’m self centered, only care about myself, etc. he never once took up for me. He just let me set there and listen to it. He called his mom and tried to get her to come talk to us and she wouldn’t. I’ve tried contacting his mom twice and she won’t respond. She told my fiancé she has nothing to say to me. When this first happened, he told me his mom has to approve and if she doesn’t then neither does he. He kept me strung along for 2 months after that. Calling me, telling me he loves me, having me come over, but hiding me and saying he wasn’t in a good place for a relationship but he still wanted to talk and hang out. He didn’t come to my graduation, he said he had to study. He went to the beach and the day he got home, he FaceTimed me and acted so excited to see me. He told me I look so pretty and asked if I was coming to see him. I did. Everything was perfectly fine. We had a great evening laughing and talking. He acted like everything was great. That night, I left and went home. I didn’t hear from him at all until 6 PM the next day. He called me and told me things weren’t going to work out because he found text messages on his moms phone of his family talking about how terrible of a person he is (assuming because he is still talking/hanging out with me) he said he doesn’t want his family to think terrible things of him because what they think matters. I haven’t talked to him since. It’s been 3 days. I’m confused, heartbroken, devastated, betrayed. He tells me he loves and cares about me but How can you love and care about someone but not fight for them? How can his family and what they think have that much of an impact? He is a grown man. What hurts the most, is his family completely shunning me like I was never apart of their family for years. Didn’t even give me a chance to talk. All over having anxiety. I should be so mad about this but I love him so much.

    • Diana Elizabeth

      Hi Ali, thank you so much for being here and sharing your story. I’m sorry about what you are going through – this is quite complex and very difficult with his family. With his puzzling behavior I can’t imagine how puzzling you must feel. I don’t think people understand anxiety if they do not struggle with it, so it’s hard to receive empathy which is so unfortunate. I am praying for you and hope that you can communicate to a conclusion that works for the both of you that brings you peace. You both deserve to make a choice that’s right for the two of you, without family’s opinion. If he is constantly looking for their approval, you may find it being a difficult marriage that doesn’t just consist of the two of you, but ALL of you and that’s not a marriage you want to be in.

  • Angie

    I called off the engagement with my ex. It had become emotionally draining and verbally abusive. I knew in my heart that he was not the one, but I continued the journey of ignoring the red flags. Finally it was that small voice that grew so loud that I had to call it off. 3 weeks before the wedding day. Almost 200 hundred attendees. Everything paid for, no reimbursements. But at that point I had decided that my peace of mind was priceless. I did not care what other people thought. I knew I had to exit this engagement quickly to save my self from being miserable with the wrong person. It has been empowering to walk away, but now that I am feeling the after math and the waves of emotions. I have refused to speak with him. It’s been a month. So in the mean time, I keep the faith, relook at old hobbies and basically take care of myself. No doubt this was a blessing that this happen. One person told me. “You dodge a bullet”

    • Diana Elizabeth

      Hi Angie, I am proud of you to make that really difficult decision. The rest of your life is precious and you do not deserve that for the rest of your life. But, it doesn’t make it any easier when you probably still loved him and felt like you had obligations with wedding planning. I hope every day you are feeling stronger and even more relieved in the decision you made. I am so glad you found clarity before you walked down the aisle and while emotions come and go, maybe write a note down to yourself to remind yourself it was the right decision to read in the future if you ever feel a relapse. You have a bright future ahead! xx

    • ANGIE

      Hello Diana just wanted to give you an update of how I’m doing. It’s been about 4 months since I called of the wedding. I’m still hurting but not like in the beginning. A few weeks ago I decided to send my ex a note from my heart explaining why I made the decision. The note reflected both good and bad times in our relationship. His response back was horrible. It was clear that he did not care that he hurt me and caused this breakup. In fact this past weekend he posted a picture of himself with another woman at of all places a wedding event. I was numb. I had taken a break from social media but decided after months to look at his page. (should not have done this). I’m now off of social media again. I have never been a fan of it. It’s clear that I’m still hurting and dealing with waves of emotions but I’m moving forward. I have grown closer to GOD and now in a ministry that supports other women who are also broken. What I’m learning is the more I share my story with others and listen to other women stories the more I heal. Diane I still believe that GOD will send me a husband of his design. Just trying to keep strong in faith during the wait. Your post and comments from others continue to help me through this season.
      One question I meant to ask you was, what did you do with your wedding dress? My dress is in a preserve box awaiting my pick up from the boutique store. The store owner who was my designer, told me whenever I’m ready. They will hold it for me. I almost cried. Every day I wrestle with the thought.

    • Diana Elizabeth

      Hi Angie,

      Thank you for your update. I am sorry that his response wasn’t what you hoped. I find that the only response we ever want is one that comes on its own, and sometimes it never comes. We rarely get the response we wish to have when we reach out, it’s really difficult and makes it hard on our hearts when that happens. But, may it just reaffirm our decision to continue moving forward! God doesn’t waste pain.

      I didn’t have my dress, I had given my ex everything out the door when he left, but he tried to return things of mine months after (long, non important story). So he probably sold it. I did however have to sell my ring which is a hard realization of letting something symbolic go. But then, was it ever symbolic if there was no commitment behind it? I say, have a friend pick up your dress and you can either sell it online (have a friend do it for you) or have a friend keep it in their storage or closet for you when you are ready to see it and get rid of it. If it triggers memories now, have a friend handle it for you so you do not have to see it. But also remember, this is just a wedding dress. It is just an item. You will have another one, a better one, with a better man at a better time. Take your time to process there is no rush or timeline on healing. xx

    • ANGie

      Thank you Diane for your response.

    • angela darby

      Hello Diana, wanted to give you an update. I am doing well much stronger than before. It’s now been almost 8 months and just when I think I have fully moved on with my thoughts about my ex, they have suddenly reappeared a lot in the last coupled days and I don’t know why. I woke up in the middle of the night and felt the need to unblock his number, I wrestled with this thought, unblocked his number and then reblocked it again. Why now the thoughts of him returning. I am so done with this. Wanted to know if thoughts of your ex still happen on occasion. When did you finally have true peace in your mind?

    • Diana Elizabeth

      Oh sweet Angela, I am so sorry. It’s just a wave. Have you heard of John Mayer’s song “emoji of a wave”? that’s what I think. I know 8 months of moving on is so great then it hits you. It’s trauma, it’s hard, it’s not easy. It’s life changing. It will happen and be easy on yourself. Pray through it, feel it and let it go. If you find yourself being triggered it could be from songs, movies, etc. you never know. It’s normal to feel a wave but I am glad you didn’t call him. You can also call your phone carrier and possibly block at a higher level you can’t mess with unless you call back. Feeling this is normal, even when moved on I will get a wave of thoughts sometimes when I’m most happy and I think my life could be different than the wonderful one I’m living. I know one day those thoughts will pop up and you’ll smile knowing you wouldn’t have it any other way. Xx please consider joining our Facebook group if you need support, I added the link to the post.

    • angela darby

      Diane thanks again for your response and you’re right it’s just a wave. This will pass. I will go ahead and check out your Facebook page thank you.

  • Kelsey

    Thank you so much for this. I had this happen to me very recently and reading this really gave me hope. I love that I will be able to bring this up in hard times, and know that it will be okay.

    • Diana Elizabeth

      Hi Kelsey, Thank you for being here and I am so glad this post gave you hope. You will be OK in time, I know it’s hard to imagine time pass for us to heal, but it’s just what you need. Sending you a big hug. xx

  • Helene

    Thank you so much! I didn’t see the end of our engagement coming, we just agreed to have kids… It’s difficult to explain to people, how somebody who seemed so in love, can break of an engagement. And it’s really nice to know that I’m not crazy, not the only one who felt this kind of pain and get a bit of guidence. (PS. Found your Spotify Playlist the first day of the broken engagement (didn’t know it was yours). I love it and it carried me though the day). Once again thanks for sharing.

    • Diana Elizabeth

      Hi Helene, thanks for being here and sharing your story. I’m so sorry about what you are going through – it is hard to explain and it’s hard to understand when we love fully. But of course you are not crazy and not alone. I receive many messages weekly and this post is one of the most popular which means many broken hearts land on this post. I am glad you found this post and I hope you are pushing forward. I am sending you a huge hug. I didn’t know Spotify playlists were searchable ;) So I kind of love that you found me twice, and I pray you find healing sweet friend. Stay strong and know that a better life and love awaits. I look forward to when you come back and share the good news with all of us.

  • Sara van tilburG

    Hi Diana, thank you for this amazing article which resonates with me on so many different levels. I have read it multiple times. My fiancée left eight months ago now with no warning or any conversation he just packed a bag and was gone. I thought I was healing but the feelings have all come back, after failed attempts at dating (maybe I’m not ready). My question to you is how to have faith that I won’t end up alone forever, I used to believe in fairytale love and sharing my life with one person who understood me. But now I find myself fearing I won’t find that one person I’m 29 and every one around me is getting married and having babies. I don’t know how to have faith again.
    Thanks for your time x

    • Diana Elizabeth

      Hi Sara, Thank you so much for being here and sharing your story. I am so sorry your engagement came abruptly to an end. It is so disappointing to think you were about to be married to someone who couldn’t communicate like an adult after the time invested. It is OK to have feelings return – sometimes dating does that. I know it did for me and I took a break from dating for that reason. Or, I would focus on what exactly I was feeling and sometimes it would be more of a disappointment of being tired of dating opposed to actually returned feelings about the ex fiancé. I understand the pressure of age, I was there. As a woman who is 37 now, I can tell you a few things – getting married by a certain age doesn’t mean anything, it doesn’t grant security or happiness. I have seen young marriages end before I even got married at 30. One of my best friends got married to the love of her life at 37 (and she’s drop dead gorgeous and had her pick and chose to never, ever settle. It is also his first marriage). My husband was 35 when we were married. I heard a pastor say, It is better to be single than in an unhappy marriage. That is something he tells his daughters. That resonated with me when I was single after the breakup and I remembered that. I wouldn’t worry because worrying will instead cause you to potentially take the wrong person and force them into a box that they don’t fit in. Pressure can make you settle and the rest of your life isn’t worth settling just so you can tick off a box in the timeline of your life. Stay focused on yourself, your goals, celebrate others, and be open. When you are single you radiate a glow. So make sure you go out and make yourself available to meet others (you said you are attempting at dating, failed attempt are fine. You are looking for ONE not many). Go to the grocery store in the evenings (I swear there are so many singles at Whole Foods or Safeway at night). Smile at others, and stay positive – have faith because you are a child of God wonderfully made with so much to offer. Do not settle, and don’t look at the calendar. xx

  • Maureen Johns

    Hi Diana,
    Thank you so much for sharing. Your words and advice were very helpful. My story is very similar. The engagement was called off last October and my life turned upside down. I was alone again..no future as i knew it..no clue where my life was going. My best friend was now cold and no more. All the family i was to join was no more. I saw a completely different side of him once he decided he was not in a place to be married. After it was over, he categorized every fault he ever saw in me. It was like pouring salt in the already open wounds. The pain was like no other. I was so sad emotionally and physically sick for a few months. The worst was calls from vendors, questions from people about the wedding. I just was brought to tears. I tried to start new hobbies, spend time with friends, pray, read.. all of the things i should over the next few months. It helped a bit. Now the “non” wedding date is approaching and i am falling apart again . Its like i am back where i started. I have a teen daughter i have to stay strong and healthy for. I already feel as if my choice has been a poor example for her. My faith has always been strong and now even that is not what it was. I just want to forget and move past but i cant seem to figure it out. I have tried to “date” but i have way too much more healing and am just emotionally unavailable. I know time heals . I just wish i could be a bit stronger and cope a bit better. I do have hope for my future but am just so very hurt and sad still.

    • Diana Elizabeth

      Hi Maureen, Thank you so much for sharing your story with me and I am so sorry about what happened. I identify strongly with your experience post breakup. After the breakup there’s no need to kick a person when they are already down, and I can imagine that’s how you feel. I am so sorry. I also want to tell you it’s normal to feel like you are progressing only to feel like you are restarting on your healing process. Your date is coming up and that is a big deal. Once the day passes, the important scheduled dates, (it may take time) you will begin to live through those days with wonder, awe and excitement. If you don’t feel like you are moving forward after (forgiving him and yourself) please seek counseling, Your church might offer free biblical counseling services. Just because a relationship didn’t pan out the way you thought or wanted does not mean you have failed or been a poor example to your daughter. Do not think that one bit. If anything be grateful that you are not in a relationship with someone who would still put you down post break up and you do not need to date if you don’t feel ready. I took many months before I felt ready and even so, I wasn’t in a rush to move on or find a husband. As the saying goes, “Dance with God and he will let the perfect man cut in.” It is OK to feel hurt and sad, I pray that God draws you near to him during this difficult time and I pray that you know and feel his presence.

  • Andrea

    Hi Diana,

    Thank you for your post. I read this post in the days surrounding my broken engagement in November. In July of last year, he asked me to move to Honduras to serve God beside him. I quit my job, sold my car, ended my lease, said good bye to my family, said good bye to my church and moved to Honduras 4 months before our wedding. We had guests internationally who bought flights. One week before what we planned for our wedding, he sexually assaulted me despite me trying to say no. He ended the engagement and told the pastors, his sisters, his church and even my parents that I was a liar and someone who hated the church, therefore I needed to be removed as a poisonous person. The entire church in Honduras sided with him and I was removed from our Bible study group and the pastors would not speak to me when I tried to contact them. I flew back to the United States on the week of our honeymoon and read your article. It has been several months and I am still struggling with the broken engagement. Since then I have gotten a new apartment, gotten a new job, started a Masters program in Counseling with the end goal of helping other women, and am attending a new church. However, these memories still haunt me and it is difficult to sleep at night: the grief is still incredibly heavy. Admittedly, I would come back to your article once in a while to remember your story. What advice would give me to forgive and heal?

    • Diana Elizabeth

      Hi Andrea,

      Thank you for coming back and sharing your story. I am so sorry about what happened. What a journey and to be crushed like that. God knows the truth, and that is what really matters. You saw his true colors, what a disappointment, I am sorry. God spared you (though I am certain it may be difficult to see, I am sure). I am glad to hear you have a new life – amazing! I would say that God has brought you through this terrible pain and trauma so you can help others. Your story has you in a new career path with the ability to encourage others and do God’s work the the has for you. You are probably doing your spiritual gift and that is our purpose here – to do God’s will and use our spiritual gifts. If it were not for what happened to you, you may not be as bold, strong, or have this passion inside you now to pursue what the Lord has for you. Will seeing that help you forgive your ex for what he has done? Although incredibly terrible, and there are no excuses for his actions, something obviously is wrong with him and for that, poor him, but he is a part of what put you on a different track – a better one. I often continue to ask myself “why” repeatedly after every answer to dig deep. “Why have I not forgiven him?” because it hurts and he should not have done it. “Why does that bother me?” because he should never hurt others. But I have hurt others. I have sinned. and it leads me to realize I need to forgive because Christ forgave me. It is OK to still feel hurt, forgiving someone doesn’t mean it doesn’t hurt anymore. So perhaps you have forgiven? In counseling I was asked to write every controlling action that he did to me that hurt, and say out loud, “(His name) I forgive you for ______” and go down the list, I bawled. Then I was told to rip up the paper and throw it away in the trash because if I truly forgave, then that was it. It was empowering. You are also so much better off where you are today, and that is something to be incredibly thankful for. xx

  • Sarah

    Hi Diana,
    I have a question about what you did with any gifts & cards? This person used to write me love poems, with pictures of our faces on them. I want to rip it up and throw away all his gifts or donate them to charity. For now, they’re sitting in a bag in my closet.

    • Diana Elizabeth

      Hi Sarah, I tossed it all. Cards and notes I had sent with him the night he called it off (and I’m sure he tossed everything on my behalf). Gifts, I gave away to friends, donated, or I sold on eBay. I did keep a watch but it was a nice watch and I don’t care haha. I maybe didn’t wear it for a while after. That’s the ONLY thing I still have and it has no sentimental value to me. I say rip them up, burn them, do whatever makes you FEEL good. If that’s what you WANT to do, DO IT! I don’t even have a single photo of us. Once you let that heavy baggage go, I know you will feel lighter. We keep gifts and things around our home that spark joy, have sentimental value or purpose. Move it out of your precious space and mind. xo

    • Sarah

      I love that idea. To be honest, the cards are the most difficult part because of the words he wrote. Would mailing them back to him be a bad idea? I’ll dispose of the other gifts, but I can’t throw away/burn the cards. However, I know it’ll be no problem for him.

    • Diana Elizabeth

      I wouldn’t mail him back the cards. It may come off petty or that you are trying to prove a point to have him re-read it, and chances are, he won’t. And I don’t suggest reread them either to protect your heart. You can give them to a friend to dispose of for you at the right time. I have once kept my friend’s first wedding album until she was ready to let it go (years after her second marriage), I asked her a few years later and she said to toss them on her behalf. If there is anything that is monetary value that truly belongs to him, those are the only things to return. It sounds like you aren’t ready to let go of those cards, so you can give it time but giving it to him or throwing them away makes no difference (it is still out of your home which is where it should be). Something I would consider is being a woman of strength and class as you move forward.

  • Hayley

    Thank you for sharing. It helps just to know that I am not alone. My fiancé broke off our engagement 2 and half weeks ago, 10 months before the wedding. He was my besftfriend for 2 years, and we’d been dating for 3 1/2, engaged for 6 months. To get married in the Catholic Church, we were required to go to marriage classes before the wedding. I thought they were going great. The wedding planning was going great, we agreed on everything. He said he was excited, and even expressed how happy he was that his sister was going to be a bridesmaid and that it meant so much to him. We had talked all about our future. The kids we would have, the house we would live in, all of it. I was so ready for that life.

    Then 2 and half weeks ago my heart shattered. He left. He said he doesn’t know when it happened or why, he just wasn’t in love with me anymore. This makes no sense to me. How do you just fall out of love?

    I tried to talk to him the first week. I’d call or text and he didn’t answer, or he did and it was with the most detached air to his messages. Like he didn’t have a care in the world. This is another part that torments me. I am going through hell, but he is fine?
    He has been going out to the bars with his friends every night since we broke up (I saw on social media before I blocked him). Meanwhile I don’t have a lot of friends. The few I have are busy. I’m in counseling but I feel as though I am drowning. I alternate between being sad and sobbing and literally screaming in the night from the pain, to the next moment just so angry. Angry that he would do this. Angry that he would do something we couldn’t come back from.

    Several times a day I think I can’t do this anymore. I have trouble finding a point to keep going. The fact that I’m still here tells me I must still have hope of being happy once again someday, but it’s a very small glimmer.

    • Maria

      Oh Hailey my called the wedding off last Friday and we were supposed get married last Saturday. Our relationship wasn’t perfect but we loved each other worked on the issues we have. But it took Thursday 4th we had a bbq celebration for our wedding his family flew in and I got drunk blackout and apparently I lashed out on him and his mother I took ownership of my actions but he didn’t want to get married. I feel so much guilt I lost the love of my life

    • Diana Elizabeth

      Hi Hayley,

      Thank you for sharing your story and struggles. I am so sorry this has happened. I understand how heartbreaking and confusing it can be. I want you to know I listened and I understand. If I can give you advice on how I powered through those drowning feelings, I had to look at it this way – he had more time to move on than I did because he came to that conclusion. That kind of angered me and so I realized I needed to move on too. My mother was concerned and asked what I was going to do (I think she was afraid I’d do something drastic) and I said, “Just because one guy decided he didn’t want to marry me isn’t going to ruin my life.” It definitely hurt, but I wasn’t going to let one person ruin the rest of my life – a happy future that waited. I think that’s great you are in counseling. I felt like it got worse before it got better, so power through it, work through it so you can forgive and heal. Do it because YOU deserve it. Your happy future deserves it, and your true future husband and family are waiting for you in the future. It might not feel like you are moving forward but take it day by day. xx

    • Alina

      My fiancé told me exactly one month ago that he didn’t have the same feelings anymore and wanted to call off our wedding. We had been having ups and downs but I never thought he would just leave me, I thought we could work through anything. We were supposed to be married in the Catholic Church, we went through all the pre marital classes and he even converted to my religion. I am utterly heartbroken. We have been together 6 years, we have 6 dogs together. I feel like a part of me is missing. I am in a lease with him for another 6 months. He has been cold and hardly any interest in checking up on me. He has basically left me to cancel and deal with it all. I am struggling every day and I pray constantly for guidance from God because I still love him. I pray for strength and purpose in my pit of despair and I can’t thank you enough for making this blog and post that has helped me to know I am not alone.

    • Diana Elizabeth

      Hi Alina, Praying for you. Please join our FB community if you haven’t already. xx

  • Nikita Venter

    Hi there, this blog post really made me feel better, even though it was just for a few minutes, but those few minutes made me realize that this isn’t the end to my story. My fiance broke off the engagement last night, with no real reason, he said “he needs time alone, and something changed in himself and he needs to figure out what it is”. I felt that that wasn’t a real excuse for breaking off an engagement, he promised me this amazing life, and now I feel I’ve lost everything. Even though I know that time heals all wounds, and that this too shall past, I just can’t get past what I’m feeling now. He didn’t give me closure, and I feel like I’ve lost the love of my life. He was the one who was eager to get married and start a family, so I don’t understand why he wanted to end it all. Did I do something wrong? Like you said in your post is does not help to question yourself and feel bad, because the fault may not lie by me. I just wish there was a handbook on how to deal with heartbreak :(

    • Diana Elizabeth

      Hi Nikita, oh love, I am so sorry this is so fresh and I am glad you found my post the day after this happened. I hope it brought you some comfort. No reason will seem good enough, it just doesn’t make sense. I am sorry you are going through this confusion. I know that even though we know we will make it though, it doesn’t necessarily make the hurt go away. You just go day by day, work through the emotions, feel them and trust that God has a beautiful plan for you. I hope you don’t question or overthink anything what you have done, it has nothing to do with you. One guy made a bad decision but thank goodness it’s on this side of the marriage instead of after (trying to look at the bright side). I wish there was a handbook on heartbreak too – I think the only thing we know is that it will not kill you, and that should give hope to the future. I’m praying for your heart. xo

  • Nikki

    Thank you so much for this post and for sharing a memory of being vulnerable. I needed to read this. My fiance called off our engagement a week after I had moved in with him after over a year of long distance. I was awestruck and heartbroken, and I also found myself living in my car and scrambling to find a new job. I am currently still recovering from the total collapse that was the future I anticipated, but posts like yours have been so healing and helpful during this challenging time of my life journey. I am praying that God will show me the way through this time in my life, and I would love if you could keep me in your thoughts and prayers. Again, thank you for the inspiration and the guidance to healing.

    • Diana Elizabeth

      Hi Nikki, Thank you for coming on here and sharing your story. I am glad you came across this post. I am so sorry about what happened to you, that is absolutely heartbreaking. Living in your car, finding a job, that is tough but my goodness girl, this is a story that you can share when you MAKE IT THROUGH and you will. You are in my prayers, Lord I pray for Nikki and help give her the strength to get through this heartbreaking time, may she feel like she is in the palm of your hand. We pray for a good job, a new start, and confidence that she knows she is a child of the King, Lord and that you draw her closer to you as she learns to forgive and discover the path you have for her, Amen. Also, I wanted to share this quote with you a friend gave me that helped me during that time. “There is nothing – no circumstance, no trouble, no testing – that can ever touch me until, first of all, it has gone past God and past Christ through me. If it has come that far, it has come with great purpose, which I may not understand at the moment. But as I refuse to become panicky, as I lift my eyes up to Him and accept it as coming from the throne of God for some great purpose of blessing to my own heart, no sorrow will ever disturb me, no circumstance will cause me to fret, for I shall rest in the joy of what my Lord is – that is rest of victory!” -Alan Redpath. God bless you Nikki.

  • James

    Dear Author,
    I am thankful you allowed commentary on your blog. My situation mimes the variables you propose in your blog. My ex fiance. She took everything. She valued herself and materials over all things. One day she said while we sat next to eachother in bed “this is not working”. After hearing those words I came to a solution to leave in two weeks. My personality or lab dog like traits allowed me to believe this was acceptable. My life ever since has been hell. I did not mention that I sacrificed everything to purchase a house with her, slaving for renters and property gains under her name. As I write this. I realize I am a fool and a materialistic clown. I have worked 12 hours a day, 7 days a week for 3 years after she kicked me out to purchased a foreclosure. I find myself not only slaving for the government but to make up for loses after what she took from me. The saddest part. I can only remember how she felt. I force myself to remember how bad she treated me. I force it. Otherwise. I continuously recall her soft skin. Her loving touch. Perhaps I am cursed. Perhaps this is not the life I was meant to be a part of. The wrong time. Good night.

    • Diana Elizabeth

      Hi James,
      Thank you for sharing your story and your heart with me. I understand the problem of remembering the good times and not the reality. That is exactly why you stayed in it for so long, you chose to focus on the other things. Sometimes, it can blind us from reality. Something that was said to me that really changed my thought process was said to me by my uncle, “You have to learn to love what’s good for you.” Then that made me turn it around. I do not know how fresh your breakup was, so take time to heal. Take time to unlearn things and time to recognize perhaps it wasn’t as good as you thought – and that you not only deserve better, you deserve to be loved for who you are and all the hard work you put into a relationship. You are not cursed my friend, this is just a hardship in time and it will pass. I read a blog post the other day (https://www.fridayfwd.com/this-will-pass/) and hope it brings encouragement to you. As a survivor of a wedding called off, I tell you that it will get better. It feels terrible now but in time, you will find freedom in your days, your life and a hope for a beautiful future that awaits. Just take it one day at a time. I’m here if you have any questions or need encouragement. “Everything will be okay in the end. If it’s not okay, it’s not the end.”

  • DOREEN AKANKWASA

    Dear Diana. Thanks for your post. I can only imagine what you went through. I am going through a very hard time too over the same. I would like you to help me, kindly would you help me through my healing process. Since February till now I am soaked in tears, I need somone to talk to.

    • Diana Elizabeth

      Hi Doreen, I’m so glad you found my post and hope it encourages you. I don’t have any counseling experience but I recommend finding one though a church or a professional counseling that can help. It takes time. Also your friends and family are a great resource to walk through this with you as you heal, let them be there for you. I promise one day you will move past this and find the happily ever after ending you deserve. You are in my prayers.

  • Hope

    Thank you so much.

  • Parul Oberai

    Hi Diana. Thanks for your post. It really helped me a bit to heal through something similar that happen to me few days back. I am still recovering from it. Would like to speak with you if you are comfortable doing so. Let me know.

    • Diana Elizabeth

      Hi Parul, I hope you are recovering well. You are in my prayers!

  • Sarah

    Thank you Diana, I cried so much reading your reply. May God bless you and your husband a lot. Just one day I know it will be ok eventhough I can’t see it now. I have written my letter to my future husband, and I can’t wait to give it to him. Just one question I had how did you convince yourseld to start dating again? I know that might be a while away for me but I feel encouraged by your testimony, Love Sarah

    • Diana Elizabeth

      Hi Sarah. I knew I wasn’t ready to date because my heart was still heavy. I was still consumed with what happened and I wasn’t in a hurry to date again. I really wasn’t. I wanted to be healed before I moved on and really be free from what happened. So I went through months of counseling and just waited. I had a friend who wanted to set me up with someone and she told me about him in February, she said, “When you area ready.” and I just knew I wasn’t yet. I remember telling her when I was ready (that relationship didn’t last long at all) but I just knew when I was ready to open up my heart again – I was excited and happy even just being alone and where I was. I didn’t feel like there was a hole in my heart anymore. And that’s when I realized I was ready to get out there again. There is no rush and you may not find your future husband for five years or who knows, so don’t feel like you have to rush. God controls it all. xx

  • Sarah

    Dear Diana, My Fiancee has just broken up with me. 1 week before the wedding. The tidal wave of emotions has been so hard to deal with. I feel sad that we wont go forward together and that he already had ended it in his mind, that he seems ungulity. But reading your post has spoken to me. God wants me to know through you that he does love me eventhough its hard to see it now. The wedding was meant to be this Saturday and I still feel shock and saddness in the mornings realising. Im going to write a letter to my future husband. I hope he is out there and I can meet him soon. My friends have been amazing and so have my family. I do still feel pain and it is hard, and will be for a while.

    • Diana Elizabeth

      Hi Sarah, I am so sorry, 1 week before. Oh my heart just broke for you. God absolutely loves you, even though your heart is breaking. He has a better plan and this experience will bring so much glory to Him – how you walk through this trial, how you worship and praise Him and your story of healing will bring hope to others one day. And, as you dance with God, he will let the perfect man cut in – in his time. No rush. I found that through my experience strengthened my walk with the Lord – as well as my friendships. I will be praying for you sweet girl, please remember God doesn’t make mistakes and so this is part of His plan and God is good all the time. xx

  • Abby

    I have been looking everywhere for some sort of hope and encouragement that everything will work out. My fiancé called the wedding off 2 weeks ago and said that he no longer thinks we’re a good match. He had no reason for calling it off and says that he still loves me. I know that it is not love because if it was he would never hurt me like this. He says he is just not ready. We have been together for 6 years and I feel like a whole part of me is missing. How can he actually not want me in his life anymore when I was ready to spend the rest of mine with him? It came as a huge shock to me and I did not see this coming at all. The worst part is I feel that I will never not love him. On top of that, I have 3 board exams in the next 2 weeks to get my dental hygiene license. This could not be at a worse time and I feel so lost. Your story is amazing and I am so happy you found your perfect person. I just hope someday I can find mine too…

    • Diana Elizabeth

      Hi Abby, I am sorry you are going through this and thank you so much for sharing your story. I know the pain but I want to encourage you that it’s best this happened on this side of the marriage than after. I am sorry about your board exams, so so sorry love. I’ll be lifting you up in prayer and hope that you can find the strength to focus on each question and try your absolute best. There is never a good timing for a broken heart. I had my birthday two weeks after, then the holidays came. I know you will find your happy ending in time – and this just wasn’t it, he wasn’t it. I am praying for your heart and situation Abby. If you have any questions I am here.

  • Cc

    Thank you for writing about this and sharing about your experiences. It brought encouragement to me. My ex broke up our engagement last January. We have been together for 8 years. He was my first love and I never really expected our relationship to end. We quarrelled a lot especially during the wedding planning but I felt like we could have still worked on our problems. After the break up I have been on an emotional roller-coaster. Some days are better than the others, but most days I feel like I am just going through the motions. I feel lost. I don’t know what to do. I don’t think I can ever love again. I try to do devotion and I convince myself that God has a better plan for me.. But some days it’s just too painful.

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