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Cómo Superar un Crush: Técnicas para Recuperarte del Amor No CorrespondidoCómo Superar un Amor Platónico – Técnicas para Recuperarse del Amor No Correspondido">

Cómo Superar un Amor Platónico – Técnicas para Recuperarse del Amor No Correspondido

Irina Zhuravleva
por 
Irina Zhuravleva, 
 Soulmatcher
11 minutos de lectura
Blog
octubre 09, 2025

Immediate action: Stop contact for a defined period – set a 30-day no-contact rule, delete and archive messages, mute social feeds and add a calendar check every 7 days so you can measure progress without reopening conversations. This rule is not symbolic: removing visual cues from your phone and browser reduces trigger frequency and gives your nervous system space to stabilize.

Concrete plan for the first month: Week 1 – log every intrusive thought on paper and time how long it lasts; Week 2 – replace 10 minutes of rumination with a 10‑minute guided video on focused breathing; Week 3 – schedule three 30‑minute walks; Week 4 – invite one person for coffee. These steps are designed to slowly shift attention onto actionable tasks. Clinical surveys show mean intrusive-thought duration falls noticeably within 2–4 weeks when contact is removed and consistent replacement activities are used.

Process feelings without shame: Allow yourself to grieve – name sadness, anger and disappointment out loud for five minutes daily and then jot one sentence about what each emotion means to you. If you feel angry, label its physical location and then do two rounds of high-intensity exercise to discharge the surge. Stop idealizing by imagining realistic scenarios: list three ordinary habits they have that make them less like a celebrity and more like a person who lives with flaws. This practice provides perspective and reduces fantasy-based attachment.

Tools to continue progress: Use transitional rituals to mark change: burn one dated paper note that lists what you expected from them, curate a playlist that includes a cathartic track (a Speedwagon song can work) and then create a 45‑minute “redirect” session of work, call, or hobby after listening. An alternative to immediate rebound dating is a 60‑day focus on skill-building at work or study; measurable progress reinforces that your worth is not contingent on another’s response.

Practical metrics: Track three signals weekly – frequency of thoughts, intensity on a 1–10 scale, and number of social-check attempts. If frequency does not drop by ~25% after two weeks, increase structured activities and consider brief therapy focused on exposure and behavioral activation. These steps make the experience manageable, help you continue forward, and remind you that feeling hurt does not mean you are unworthy.

Acknowledge the Grief: Name Emotions and Set a Practical Time Frame

Set a precise 4–6 week grieving window: each morning name three emotions aloud, score each 0–10, and log triggers. Enforce strict no-contact rules for that period – unfollow, mute, block – and limit social checks to two timed sessions per day to avoid falling down a feed-spiral that brings back July memories or other timestamps.

Daily protocol and metrics

Daily protocol and metrics

Create a one-page tracker: date, emotion words (use concrete labels: sad, jealous, relieved), intensity, trigger, tactic used (walk, reading, call a friend). Calculate weekly mean intensity; if mean drops by at least 30% by day 28, reduce active restrictions; if mean stays >5, extend another 14 days. Rate each tactic’s efficacy weekly and replace any that give no measurable relief within two attempts.

Use inward values mapping three times a week: list top five values, mark which were met, then write one truth statement in one line (example: “This craving is mine to observe, not act upon”). When self-talk says “I was stupid,” fact-check it into behaviors and lessons – that reframing brings less negative rumination than name-calling.

Behavioral boundaries and supportive actions

If feelings remain intense or you are young/younger and emotionally raw, avoid risky choices that feel romanticically driven; impulsive contact can be dangerous to mental health. Schedule two 30-minute blocks of work or hobby time daily to distract productively – reading, exercise, creative work – and take small social steps: one coffee with a steady friend, one short call with a therapist or coach. Many therapists’ clients and couples who follow structured windows report greater comfort and clearer values after the phase has changed; use that pattern to remind ourselves that heartbreak is an intense phase, not a permanent identity.

Create Distance: Cut Contact and Minimize Triggers

Immediate action: block, mute and archive their profiles and messages for 60 days; set a calendar reminder to re-evaluate when you feel ready and avoid searching their name during that period. Remove saved photos and unfollow their page so feeds stop delivering visual prompts.

If you live closer to places they frequent, change routes and schedules for two months; relocate items that trigger longing into a sealed box and store it out of sight. If you have a daughter, explain age-appropriate boundaries and keep family routines steady so household mood stays stable while boundaries are kept.

Stop checking notifications, stop watching their stories and stop reopening old conversations. Use a combination of app mutes, browser extensions that hide profiles, and a simple rule: do not search or talk about them in group chats. In scenarios when others talk about what happened, say you prefer not to be involved and exit the conversation.

Replace longing and dream-thinking with targeted self-care: schedule three activities per week that lift mood (exercise, creative work, socials). Seek supportive friends who will listen without replaying every detail; pick one person you trust to be blunt when you ask for reality checks. Note what has worked in the past and repeat those actions rather than replaying what you liked about the person.

Track progress with measurable markers: log days without contact, rate daily mood on a five-point scale, and review notes in July and again after 90 days. Expect setbacks; cravings are quite normal and rarely linear. Treat distancing as a practical thing with clear steps so these triggers stop dictating everything that is happening in your life.

Redirect Your Focus: Build New Daily Habits and Enjoyable Activities

Replace one hour of rumination with a 30/30 routine every day: 30 minutes of structured journaling (prompted entries: trigger, emotion label, next action) plus 30 minutes of a cost-effective local activity (walk, community library, volunteer shift). Commit to 21 consecutive days and log each session to develop new neural patterns in your brains.

Design measurable micro-goals: three 45-minute skill sessions per week (language, instrument, coding) and one social meet-up every 10 days. Each session gets a single objective and a quick checklist so progress is obvious: add one new word, play one chord, complete one tutorial. Tracking shows whether motivation is task-driven or only tied to the crushing thought loop.

When a trigger appears: stop, breathe for six counts, name the feeling aloud, then perform a 5-minute redirect activity. Use inward labeling like “sad” or “irritated” instead of telling yourself you are “stupid” or that the situation means nothing. This reduces the automatic tilt toward obsessive thought and keeps you mentally present.

Establece límites claros: decide specific rules for contact and alone time (example: no messages after 9 PM, no social media checks for 48 hours after seeing them). Write the rules, share them with a friend or coach such as marcia, and treat them as non-negotiable. Boundaries reduce passive exposure to triggers and protect everyday routines.

Use journaling with prompts that develop resilience: each entry answers three questions: What triggered me today? What did that feeling push me to do? What constructive activity replaced the reaction? Collect entries weekly and score emotions 1–10 to quantify change.

Choose cost-effective, high-return activities: community classes, library memberships, public gym passes, local volunteer shifts and group hikes. These minimize financial cost yet maximize chance encounters, skill development and full engagement of attention – far better than doing nothing or scrolling alone.

If you catch yourself telling only one story about the crushs, force a rewrite: list two concrete alternatives that would mean the same feeling but lead to a productive action. Repeat until the inward loop weakens. Small, consistent changes create measurable movement in mood and behavior toward a fuller life.

Lean on Support: Reach Out to Friends, Family, or a Therapist

Schedule a 30-minute check-in with one trusted person within 48 hours, set a strict agenda (5 minutes emotion, 10 minutes reality-check, 15 minutes action plan) and treat the meeting like business so you can manage intensity without rehashing.

Practical steps to use immediately

Working with a therapist or peer support

Additional tactics to apply

Si el progreso se estanca

Priorizar el Autocuidado: Sueño, Nutrición, Ejercicio y Límites

Establezca una hora fija para acostarse y levantarse y apunte a dormir de 7 a 9 horas por noche; si el sueño total baja de 7 horas dos noches seguidas, mueva intencionalmente la hora de acostarse 15 minutos antes y mantenga ese horario durante al menos 7 noches para restablecer el ritmo circadiano; evite revisar noticias o historias de redes sociales en la cama y redirija el uso del dispositivo hacia un audiolibro o sonidos para dormir.

Coma 20–40 g de proteína en el desayuno, intente consumir 25–35 g de fibra al día, limite los azúcares añadidos a menos de 25 g por día e hidrátate 30–35 ml por kg de peso corporal (70 kg ≈ 2,1–2,45 L). Planifique tres comidas más un refrigerio, prepare por lotes dos comidas semanalmente y etiquete las porciones para llevarlas consigo para que el hambre no se convierta en un desencadenante de la decisión. Utilice clips cortos de ejercicios o recetas en youtube para la técnica, pero confíe en información medida y conocimientos básicos de nutrición en lugar de consejos aleatorios; si encuentra que las listas o los artículos no son útiles, busque esa lectura en otro lugar.

Asigna 150 minutos de actividad aeróbica moderada semanalmente o 75 minutos vigorosa, más dos sesiones de resistencia que impacten los principales grupos musculares; aumenta la carga progresivamente en un 2–5% cada 7–14 días. Si no toleras el trabajo de impacto, elige ciclismo, natación o remo como opciones de bajo impacto. Cuando intentes contactar o pienses en contactar, pregúntate: “¿Qué quiero lograr?” y “¿Esto me ayudará a conectar con una persona que me apoye?”. Usa guiones breves para establecer límites: “Estoy enfocándome en mí mismo/a ahora mismo; no participaré en ese tema”, o “Por favor, no envíes actualizaciones; necesito espacio”. Si alguien se movió de manera diferente a lo que esperabas, acepta que hay un patrón humano que no puedes cambiar en lugar de hacer algo necio como enviar mensajes repetidamente; si se rompe un límite, trátalo como un problema práctico para resolver (silenciar, bloquear, pausar) y redirige la atención intencionalmente hacia tu rutina.

Tiempo Action Métrica / Nota
06:30 10–20 min exposición a luz brillante + 10 min de movilidad mejora el momento de dormir
07:00 Desayuno rico en proteínas (25–30 g) reduce los antojos a media mañana
12:30 30–45 min caminata o cardio cuenta para el 150 minutos semanales
18:00 Sesión de fuerza (30–40 min) 2 sesiones semanales construye resiliencia
21:00 Relajación: sin pantallas 60–90 min reduce la latencia del sueño

Mantén una lista corta de contactos de apoyo y un terapeuta o coach para la rendición de cuentas; contarle a un amigo de confianza tu plan aumenta el cumplimiento. Si te encuentras intentando reconectar, pausa y pregunta si la acción se alinea con tus objetivos declarados: redirige los impulsos a otro lado y utiliza las pequeñas victorias (una hora extra de sueño, un entrenamiento completado) como retroalimentación medible en lugar de perseguir historias o noticias sobre esa persona. vaya — los cambios pequeños y constantes se acumulan; trata el cuidado personal como un protocolo práctico, no como un juicio moral.

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