If you're reading this, you've probably already tried the begging,
pleading, and emotional cries for mercy - and been soundly rejected. So some of
your friendly moderators and royal members have gotten together to try to
compile a "now where do I go from here, and why won't he/she listen to me?" tips
and advice - with explanations as to WHY you're being advised to take these
steps. Hopefully it'll give some of you a better handle on what your exes might
be thinking and feeling - and why what you've tried simply hasn't worked.
Important: This is assuming there's no third party waiting in the wings
and you've heard the "I need space," "I think maybe we should date other
people," or "I don't know if this is going to work out," or other "iffy"
statements that imply they're questioning their feelings and/or feelings about
being in a relationship... or you've had indications from other sources that
your ex is not so happy with their decision.
Let's start with why begging and pleading for another chance doesn't work.
Ok, it might work once or twice, but you know why? It's because you've
administered a heavy dose of guilt, and chances are said ex still has feelings
for you - and caved under the pressure. Now, if you've ever been guilted into
doing something, you know you're not going into it wholeheartedly, in a sense
it's emotional blackmail, albeit unintentional, and it leads to resentment just
waiting to blossom in the first conflict that comes after. I know, you THINK
you're just letting them know how much they mean to you. However, what's heard
is "you're breaking my heart, you're hurting me incredibly, this person who
loves you so!" Always, always, always try and think a step ahead - if you needed
a break from a relationship for some reason and still had feelings for someone,
how would this make you feel? Yep, approximately an inch tall and the lowest
life form on the planet. Needless to say, this is NOT a good beginning to trying
to rekindle a romantic relationship!
Step one - ok, you've all heard it, seen it advised, and wondered how the
heck it helps when you're thinking you need to be around to remind your love of
all the good times you've shared and how much they mean to you. Yep, the dreaded
"no contact" rule. (Note: if no contact isn't completely possible due to
work/school situation or shared friends, skip on to step 2
)
The reasoning that you need to remind your ex of your presence? First error in
judgement. The hard fact is, you have to be noticeably "not there" for your ex
to MISS you. The last thing someone who may rethink things wants is someone
hounding their footsteps trying to influence them. The first thing they're gonna
miss, assuming you guys have been together more than a few weeks, is that
"person being around to share things with" that they've grown accustomed to.
After you've been in a relationship for a while, think about it - when you've
had a bad day at work, or done really great on a test, gotten a part in a play,
a job promotion - the instinct is to pick up the phone and call that person to
share it! That needs no reminder, and THAT is what you want working in your
favor. You want habit and that emotional "sharing" bond working FOR you here,
rather than giving your ex ammunition to stay strong against you.
Ok, now during this "no contact from you" phase - make SURE you stay BUSY.
Bear in mind if/when your ex does get in touch with you - what kind of person do
you want them to find at the other end of the phone, message, email, or "chance"
meeting? A depressed, broken, morose husk of a person? Or that confident person
they've had fun with and were attracted to? If you've seen problems in yourself
that contributed to the breakup originally? Now is the time to get off your butt
(mentally) and work on them! Use the time to make yourself someone you're happy
with, someone you know is attractive, and yes, if you're up to it, even go out
on some casual dates, or at the least, hang out with friends. A teasing grin is
WAY more attractive than a morose frown or scowl - and how you think of yourself
tends to show through any act you can put on.
Worst case, since it's not guaranteed - you'll be taking active steps to
heal from the breakup and prepare yourself for a new relationship - and even
best case - going BACK into a relationship, you want to do it as a whole,
complete person. This no contact phase is likely to be one of the HARDEST things
you ever have to do. If you feel yourself weakening - visit websites, call a
friend, go for a walk, work out, ANYTHING. But try not to give in - or you'll
have to start this step ALL OVER again. Now if knowing that isn't incentive, I
dunno what is! 
Step two - initial or casual contact. This can take MANY forms - it could
be a casual call about something seemingly insignificant, an email asking you if
you want a CD back that he or she JUST noticed they had in their car, ANYTHING.
Rule #1 - if it seems like a really silly reason to call, it probably is. In
other words, take heart, it's probably an excuse to initiate contact without
looking like a weak idiot who wants to talk to you. BIG DON'T - do NOT point
this out!!! BIG DON'T #2 - do NOT start off by thinking this is an open door to
go into an emotional speech about how you've missed them so and your life hasn't
been complete without them! Keep it cool, casual, comfortable. Don't bring up
the relationship unless they do first. Don't bring up dating other people. Don't
make a POINT out of saying how grand things are going - it should all be in the
attitude, not in obvious points. DO respond nicely to "I've missed talking to
you," but more with "yeah, it's really good to hear from you." Not with the
impression you've been waiting weeks to hear it (even though you have!). DO take
opportunities for light, flirty, "cute" comments and compliments, without
overdoing it. The goal here is to make these contacts enjoyable, give the
impression you still think of this person as an attractive member of the
opposite sex, and keep it light and playful enough to avoid any pressure or
discomfort. You want them to keep coming back for more, right? So make sure they
end on an "up" note - and be the one to say you gotta go - nicely, but in a way
that implies "I still have a life." In other words "oh man, I hate to run, but I
told John I'd be at his house 5 minutes ago - it was great talking to you, hope
to cya later!" says about 4 things at once - you had a good time talking, enough
to be running a little late, your life isn't on hold, and you'd welcome hearing
from him or her again. If you managed to hit that "fun and mood/ego boosting
note" in the conversation - you've just made it almost a certainty the contact
isn't going to end here. People come back for more of what makes them feel good,
and feel attractive and desireable without being overwhelmed. This is a
tentative "feeling out the vibes and mood" stage - intense can push away,
completely aloof can be discouraging. So encourage their contact - without
putting yourself on the line here.
Step three - meeting again, or less casual conversations, casual dates
etc. The point where the ex starts openly questioning things about the breakup.
Comments like "I've been thinking a lot lately about us," "Do you ever think
about being with me?" "Have you started seeing anyone else yet?" Now, I know,
this is what you've been waiting to hear! And impulse is to go with it and
scream "oh thank GOD, I've been HOPING you'd consider going out with me again
because I still love you as much as ever!" WHOA BUDDY!!! Apply the brakes here!
Go with the flow - but let THEM lead the conversation and exploration here -
you've got to find out what their "comfort zone" is as far as thinking about the
relationship - and you're not gonna do that by taking control of the direction
the conversation is headed in away from them! By all MEANS be encouraging,
"yeah, I've been thinking about it as well, I've missed being with you,
penny for your thoughts?" Really listen to what's being said, encourage them to
voice what they're thinking and feeling, respond honestly - but without being
overwhelming about it. For example, they say "I dunno, I really miss some of
what we had together," "yeah, me too, you think if we'd communicated better we
could've worked it out?" "I wonder if it would be possible for us to figure out
what went wrong in our relationship? Even if that means we don't get back
together, that would help me tremendously in my next relationship." Remember,
you NEED to know what the perceived problems were if you're going to build
something better, don't get defensive, don't crawl on your knees begging
forgiveness, make sure you get across you're going to really listen with an open
mind, and offer suggestions and compromises you think might've helped. Blaming
yourself at this point won't help, letting them blame themselves won't either.
If they change the subject - even if you want to scream and bang your head into
a wall because you still had questions - let them change it. Either they have
enough to think on for the moment - or they've hit the end of their "comfort
zone" before they feel pressured, so in either case, pressing the issue is going
to work against you. Be patient, be encouraging that talking about it isn't
going to make you defensive or lead to an argument, be encouraging you're
interested in starting over again with them - without making it an issue you
don't want to talk it out if they're not ready for that.
Stage four - getting back together. If you've worked all the way through
stage three without jumping, you'll be in a good position to build a stronger,
NEW, relationship with your ex if after all your conversations, you're sure
that's still what you want. Of course there will still be bumps in the road -
but hopefully by talking through the causes of one breakup, you'll be better at
talking things out before they hit the wall again.
And always keep in mind - especially when it's them that's done the
breaking up - they will be much more confident if they have to work a little to
get you back - nobody wants a doormat they can take for granted, the things we
invest some effort into, the things we work for, are the things we value the
most.
Authors' notes: This should not be taken as "how to make someone love
you," because while you can encourage positive interaction with someone who
already has strong feelings for you, you can't make someone HAVE those feelings.
This is not intended to imply you can control that. What you can control are
your actions, which will either encourage or discourage someone from contact and
involvement with you when their feelings are already involved. There's no
magical solution, and no perfect bible of "how to." If you find yourself stuck -
always try and put yourself in the other person's shoes and think what you'd
find most encouraging in THEIR position.