Unfollow your ex to heal jealousy and anger

There is a specific kind of torture that did not exist thirty years ago: opening an app and watching someone who broke your heart appear to be having the best summer of their life. New photos. New places. Maybe a new person. And there you are, sitting in the wreckage of something that still feels very much on fire, watching them live in what looks like the after-party you were not invited to. When did rage become the thing you have to hide? When did scrolling become something you do at 2am knowing it will ruin you, and doing it anyway? And when did 'I just want an apology' quietly become the thing you've been waiting for so long it's started to feel like a part of your personality? These affirmations were not written for someone who is over it. They were written for someone still inside it, still furious, still checking, still unable to fully exhale. Not because the words fix anything. But because something has to interrupt the loop, and sometimes that something is a sentence you say out loud until your nervous system starts to believe it.

Why these words matter

Here is the thing about anger after a breakup: it does not stay in your head. It moves into your body and sets up a room there. Researchers at the University of Miami tracked people over time as they thought about someone who had wronged them. What they found was precise and a little uncomfortable: the more you replay the betrayal, the angrier you stay, and the angrier you stay, the further forgiveness gets. It is not that forgiveness has to mean what they did was okay. It is that rumination, the mental reruns, the imagined arguments, the obsessive scroll through their Instagram to find evidence that they are not actually fine, is the exact mechanism that keeps anger locked in place. One feeds the other in a loop that tightens over time. Unfollowing an ex is not petty. It is interrupting that loop at its source. When you stop feeding the comparison machine, you stop manufacturing fresh reasons to be furious. Affirmations work in a similar way, not by pretending the anger isn't real, but by giving your brain something different to run on. A sentence repeated with intention is a pattern interrupt. It won't dissolve months of rage in a sitting. But it can stop the next spiral before it starts, and that matters more than it sounds.

Affirmations to practice

  1. I am letting go of anger and negative emotions
  2. I am letting go of all anger and resentment
  3. I release all feelings of hate and anger
  4. I am still angry months after breakup
  5. I am free from the burden of resentment and anger
  6. I release all resentment and choose inner peace
  7. I release the pain not because they deserve forgiveness but because I deserve peace
  8. I choose to let go of anger and overcome negative self-talk
  9. I forgive my ex partner
  10. I forgive myself for staying in a toxic relationship
  11. I release the need for revenge and focus on my own happiness
  12. I let go of blame and choose peace instead
  13. I am working toward letting go of resentment toward ex
  14. I choose to forgive for my own peace not theirs
  15. I am healing from toxic relationship
  16. I am releasing all anger from my body
  17. I am free from the toxic relationship and its negative influence
  18. I release all negative emotions and energy
  19. I let go of the past and focus on the present
  20. I trust my own reality after narcissistic abuse
  21. I deserve better than an emotional punching bag
  22. I am enough after emotional abuse affirmation
  23. I am reclaiming my power from toxic ex
  24. I forgive myself for staying longer than I should have
  25. I am no longer available for toxic patterns

How to actually use these

Start with one affirmation that feels the least false, not the one that feels true, just the one you can say without your whole body recoiling. That is your entry point. Use it in the specific moments you know the anger spikes: right before you open their profile, right after you see a photo that wrecks you, right when the apology you never got starts replaying in your head. Say it out loud if you can. Write it on a Post-it and put it somewhere annoying and visible. The goal is not to feel it immediately. The goal is repetition until your nervous system stops treating every reminder of them as an emergency requiring your full attention.

Frequently asked

Should I unfollow my ex on all platforms, or just some?
Go wherever the pain is worst first. If their Instagram is what you check at midnight, that is the one. Muting is a softer version, but it requires more discipline, you have to choose not to look every single time. Unfollowing removes the choice entirely, which is often the more honest option when you are still deep in it.
What if repeating these affirmations feels completely fake?
That feeling is the point, not a sign it's not working. You are not affirming what is true right now, you are practicing what you want to become true. The gap between the words and your current emotional state is exactly where the work happens. Expect it to feel hollow before it feels real.
Do affirmations actually do anything for anger this intense?
On their own, no, not quickly, and not if anger is all you're using them against. But research consistently shows that what you choose to replay in your mind directly shapes how long and how intensely you feel what you feel. Affirmations are a tool for redirecting that replay, which is not nothing. Pair them with the boundary of unfollowing and you are working on two fronts.
My ex looks genuinely happy and I am not okay. Is it normal to still be angry months later?
Completely. Anger that doesn't have anywhere to go, especially when there's been no apology, no acknowledgment, no closure, doesn't follow a polite timeline. What you're seeing on their profile is also a curated fiction. What you're feeling is real. Those two things are not comparable, even though it feels like they are at 2am.
Is this the same as forgiving them?
No, and conflating the two is one of the reasons people resist both. Unfollowing someone and releasing resentment are about protecting your own nervous system, they are not a verdict on what they did or didn't do. Forgiveness, if it ever comes, is something that happens slowly and quietly inside you. It has nothing to do with whether they deserved it or ever apologized.