How Builders Deal with Breakups

How Builders Deal with Breakups

I went through two breakups in less than a year.

Both of them were me realizing something simple: it wasn’t working.

And I’ll be honest with you…

At first?

I felt relief. Freedom. Lightness.

Like I dropped a weight I didn’t even realize I’d been carrying for months.

But then…

A couple days later…

I got hit with a ton of bricks.

The Wave

Sadness. Guilt. Doubt.

That quiet voice in your head: “Did I make a mistake?”

That’s the part nobody talks about.

Because people think if breakups are “right,” they should feel clean.

Like flipping a switch.

They don’t. They almost never do.

You can make the right decision…and still feel like shit.

Don’t Avoid It

Most people do one of two things:

  • Distract themselves immediately
  • Or run back to what they just left

Builders do neither.

We sit in it. We feel it. We don’t panic.

Because we understand something important:

Pain is part of the process—not proof you were wrong.

The Difference Between Loss and Misalignment

Here’s where most men get tripped up.

They feel the pain…

…and assume:

“I must’ve lost something good.”

But that’s not always true.

Sometimes you didn’t lose the right person.

You lost:

  • Misalignment
  • Friction
  • Something that never fully clicked

And what you’re feeling now is:

The loss of the idea…not the reality.

And the idea is always cleaner than the truth ever was.

Trust Your Signals

Before the breakup, there were signs:

  • You didn’t look forward to seeing her
  • The excitement wasn’t there
  • The lifestyle didn’t match
  • Something felt…off
  • Fights, conflict, and drama

Your body knew before your mind admitted it.

That’s why the desire dropped. That’s why you pulled back.

That wasn’t dysfunction.

That was awareness trying to break through.

The Trap

Right after a breakup, your brain will try to rewrite history.

It’ll say:

  • “It wasn’t that bad…”
  • “Maybe I overreacted…”
  • “Maybe I should reach out…”

But here’s the truth: You didn’t make that decision on a bad day. You made it after a pattern.

And Builders don’t ignore patterns.

Patterns are data. And data doesn’t lie.

Trust yourself.

Clean Endings Over Messy Attachments

Dragging it out doesn’t make it easier.

It makes it worse.

  • More confusion
  • More false hope
  • More emotional damage
  • More wasted time

A Builder chooses clear and early over slow and drawn-out.

Even when it’s uncomfortable. Even when it’s hard. Even when it’s easier to stay.

You Can Care…and Still Walk Away

This is the part that messes with people.

You can:

  • Respect her
  • Care about her
  • Appreciate the time

…and still say:

This just isn’t working.

That’s not cold.

That’s clarity.

The Aftermath

After it’s over, you’ll feel relief. Freedom. Weightlessness.

But then you’ll get hit.

Because your emotions lag behind your decisions.

Sadness.

But you have confirmation.

Because if it was truly right?

You wouldn’t feel relief.

Trust that.

What to Do Next

Don’t spiral. Don’t chase distractions.

Return to:

  • Your routine
  • Your purpose
  • Your standards

Rebuild your energy where it matters:

  • Physique
  • Business
  • Family

Because that’s what moves life forward. And forward motion is the cure.

The Upgrade

Every relationship teaches you something.

These two taught me:

  • What I don’t want
  • What doesn’t work
  • What I actually need
  • What to do moving forward

That’s not a loss.

That’s a lesson. That’s refinement.

You’re not starting over.

You’re starting sharper.

Final Thought

Breakups aren’t failures.

They’re progress.

They’re teaching you what works and what doesn’t.

With every breakup, you’re learning about yourself.

With every breakup, you’re getting closer to a woman that actually fits your life—not fights it.

Balance

We hear a lot about balance.

But when the rubber meets the road…is balance even real?

In theory, sure.

In practice, not so much.

Life is messy.

Life is demanding.

Life throws curveballs you didn’t order.

Some areas will need more of you.

Others will have to wait their turn.

That’s not failure—that’s physics.

Don’t chase perfect balance.

Rotate.

Adjust.

Adapt.

Shift weight where it’s needed.

No guilt. No drama. No self-punishment.

Nature has seasons.

Growth does too.

Don’t break yourself trying to juggle everything.

There’s a Time and Place

There’s a time to put the pedal down.

And a time to ease off.

A time to fire up.

And a time to cool out.

A time to sprint.

A time to walk.

A time to lift heavy.

A time to lighten the load.

A time to lock in.

A time to let loose.

A time to stand out.

A time to blend in.

A time to spend.

A time to save.

A time to push.

A time to pause.

Most people only know one gear.

We learn all of them.

Because the real skill—the one that actually shapes your life—is knowing when each moment calls for which version of you.

Discernment is strength.

Learn the difference.

Live the difference.

The Power of Few

We’re taught that more is better.

More exercises. More skills. More projects. More apps. More people pulling on our time.

But more doesn’t build mastery.

Focus does.

Everyone only has so much energy, attention, and bandwidth.

When you spread it across too many targets, none of them get enough pressure to change.

Pick two or three things that matter right now.

Then give them real attention.

Track them. Feed them. Protect them from noise.

You don’t need a bigger life.

You need a more honed in one.

Choose fewer targets. Apply more pressure.

Happiness

The world isn’t set up for your happiness.

It’s set up for its own momentum—for commerce, efficiency, distraction, and noise.

The world doesn’t care if you’re fulfilled. It just keeps moving.

That’s why happiness has to be forged, not found.

It’s not inherited, not given. You forge it in the choices you make daily—in how you treat your body, how you spend your time, and who you let into your circle.

Waiting for the world to make you happy is like waiting for the weather to lift your weights.

It’s not going to happen.

Happiness is an inside job…and you handle your own construction.

Build it.

Sunday Sendoff #45: You Can’t Bubble Wrap Life

Brickwall's Sunday Sendoff

My son fell off a scooter this week and broke his arm.

And yeah—I felt it immediately.

That punch of guilt.

I’m his Dad.

I should’ve said no. I should’ve set better rules. I should’ve protected him.

That’s where your mind goes.

Backwards.

Replaying it. Rewriting it. Trying to fix something that’s already done.

But here’s the truth:

He’s ridden those scooters hundreds of times. The risk was always there. I accepted it.

Because you can’t bubble wrap life.

Kids are going to run. Climb. Fall. Get hurt. That’s part of growing up. That’s part of living.

And if you try to eliminate all risk…you don’t raise a strong kid.

You raise a fragile one.

So yeah—it happened.

It sucks.

But we handled it. We got him taken care of. He’s healing. He’ll make a full recovery.

That’s what really matters.

And it gave me something I didn’t expect:

Perspective.

It reminded me how much I love him. How much I take for granted.

His health. His energy. His presence.

The normal, everyday moments that feel so routine…until something shakes you awake.

I’m not taking that for granted anymore.

Here’s the bigger picture:

You can play it smart and minimize risk…but bad things are still going to happen.

To you. To your family. To the people you care about.

You don’t get to control that.

What you do control is your response.

Are you going to sit in guilt? Beat yourself up? Shut down?

Or are you going to step up?

Accept it. Handle it. Make it right.

Then move forward.

That’s the job. That’s the standard.

Because life doesn’t stop.

And neither should you.

Builder Principle

It’s less about what happens, and more about how you respond.

Something to Ponder

When things go wrong, how have you handled it in the past? How could you have handled it better? How are you going to handle things in the future?

See You In the Arena

This week is just about over. Next week is just about here. Let’s keep building.

Brick by brick.

Sonny the Alien: The Case of Really Bad Timing

Sonny the Alien

Earth Log Entry #17: Hoopus Interruptus

Sonny, Chad, and Vanessa were on the couch watching the NBA playoffs.

TV blaring. Final minutes.

Chad was standing. Vanessa was pacing.

Sonny sat on the couch, watching stoically and crunching numbers on his laptop. “The Timberwolves still have a 48% chance of winning the game.”

Vanessa glanced over. “You’ve been saying that for five minutes, Good Will Hunting.”

Sonny didn’t look up. “The probability has remained consistent.”

Chad gestured with his hands. “We’re good. A couple stops and we’re in control.”

Vanessa took a sip of her soda. “Yeah, we just gotta stop the best scorer in the league.”

Chad shrugged. “If anybody can shut him down, it’s us.”

Sonny looked up. “Win probability has dropped by four percentage points.”

KNOCK KNOCK KNOCK.

They all looked to the door, then at each other.

Chad turned back to the TV. “Not a great time.”

Sonny stood up. “Someone appears to require access to us.” He walked to the door and opened it. “Oh. Hello, Dale.”

Dale sauntered in, bathrobe on. “Hey Sonny. Hey y’all. Quick question…you guys know when Chipotle closes?”

Vanessa gestured toward the TV. “Not now, Dale!”

Chad looked over. “Really bad timing, dude.”

Sonny, still at the door, folded his arms and peered at him. “This moment in time is suboptimal, Dale.”

Dale chuckled nervously and backed toward the door. “Okay…I’ll just give ’em a call.”

Sonny closed the door and sat back down.

Shot goes up.

Ball clanks off the rim.

Horn sounds.

Sonny glanced at his laptop. “…0%.”

Vanessa dropped onto the couch. “We can see that.”

Chad stood frozen, hands on his head. “…that was it.”

The door cracked open. Dale poked his head in. “Chipotle closes at 11.”

They all turned and glared at him.

Dale nodded. “Just FYI.” He closed the door.

Chad sighed. “A burrito does sound good right now, though.”

Vanessa nodded in agreement.

Sonny took out his Earth Log device and began typing.