3. “You’ll find someone better.”
Your friend probably will, but now’s not the time to start planning and plotting her next conquest. “Even though she probably realizes her relationship wasn’t going to work out in the first place, she’s still very emotionally attached to that person—and the idea of that person,” says Brenner. “Being told it was no good fails to provide empathy for the parts of her that are still involved, and can lead to feelings of anger, hurt, and resentment within the friendship.” Instead, one of the best things you can do is listen and not give too much advice in the beginning—and definitely don’t lecture her. “Repeat back some of the things she’s told you, so she knows you’ve been listening intently,” says Dawn Michael, Ph.D., certified sexualty counselor, clinical sexologist and author of My Husband Won’t Have Sex With Me.
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