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Topic Review (Newest First)
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| Today 12:39 PM |
| Dude111 |
Very good thread!!
Yes it hurts like crazy... But when you realise who you love and set towards that goal,its wonderful!!
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| Today 12:18 PM |
| Feli |
Why Teenage Love Hurts So Much
Why Teenage Love Hurts So Much
1. Emotions are on a whole different level.
Teenage brains are flooded with new hormones, and the parts of the brain responsible for impulse control and long-term thinking (the prefrontal cortex) aren't fully developed yet. This means that happiness feels like the highest high, and sadness or rejection feels like the end of the world. You don't just get hurt; you get devastated.
2. You're still figuring out your own identity.
In your teens, you're answering huge questions: Who am I? What do I believe? What do I want to do with my life? When you fall in love, you often merge your identity with your partner's. So if the relationship ends, it doesn't feel like losing a boyfriend or girlfriend – it feels like losing a part of yourself.
3. Lack of experience and perspective.
Most teenage relationships are a first for many things: first kiss, first serious argument, first breakup. You have no roadmap for the pain. An adult who has been through a few breakups knows, "This hurts now, but I'll be okay in a few months." A teenager often feels like the pain will never, ever end because they have no evidence to the contrary.
4. The stakes feel impossibly high.
Your world in high school is relatively small. It's your friends, your classes, and your social circle. Losing a relationship feels like your entire world has collapsed because, in many ways, it has. There's no perspective of a wider adult world with jobs, cities, and new people waiting for you.
5. It's often mixed with insecurity and social pressure.
Teenage years are filled with social anxiety about fitting in, being liked, and being "enough." A relationship can feel like a validation that you are enough. So when the relationship fails, it's not just a romantic loss; it also feels like a personal failure and a public embarrassment. This is amplified by social media, where you watch your ex move on in real-time.
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