If you miss your ex even though the relationship was unhealthy, you are not alone.

You know the relationship was unhealthy. You can list all the ways it was bad for you. You remember the pain, the fights, the betrayal, the ways he hurt you.

You know, logically, that you’re better off without him.

And yet… You miss him.

woman missing former partner despite painful memories illustration

You miss him intensely. You think about him constantly. You crave him. You want him back. Despite everything you know about how bad it was.

It doesn’t make sense to you. You’re confused by your own feelings: “How can I miss someone who hurt me? How can I want back what I know was toxic? What’s wrong with me?”**

Let me tell you something important: There’s nothing wrong with you. What you’re experiencing is a completely normal psychological response to toxic relationships.

Let me explain what’s really happening and how to move through it.

Why You Miss Your Ex Even Though the Relationship Was Unhealthy

As a man who understands toxic relationship dynamics, let me be clear: Missing an unhealthy ex isn’t about stupidity or masochism. It’s about how toxic relationships hijack your brain’s reward and attachment systems.

Here’s what’s really going on:

You’re Trauma Bonded, Not Just Missing Him

In healthy relationships, you miss the person because you genuinely enjoyed being with them, and they treated you well.

In toxic relationships, you’re not just missing him—you’re experiencing trauma bond withdrawal.

Trauma bonding works like this:

  • Intense highs (love bombing, great moments, feeling special)
  • Devastating lows (abuse, neglect, rejection, pain)
  • Unpredictable cycling between the two

This creates an addiction-like attachment. Your brain got hooked on the intense highs, which felt even more intense because of the lows.

You miss him like an addict misses a drug—not because it was good for you, but because your brain chemistry got hooked on the pattern.

Your Brain Remembers the Highs, Not the Average

Think about what you’re actually missing:

Are you missing:

  • The everyday reality of the relationship?
  • The fights, the anxiety, the pain?
  • How did you actually feel most of the time?

No. You’re missing:

  • The best moments
  • How was he during love bombing
  • The person you hoped he could be consistently
  • The potential you saw
  • How it felt when it was good

Memory is selective. Your brain highlights the peak positive experiences and downplays the painful majority.

You’re not missing the actual relationship. You’re missing a highlight reel that wasn’t representative of the reality.

You’re Grieving the Fantasy, Not the Reality

You’re not actually missing him as he was. You’re missing who you thought he was or who you hoped he’d become.

You’re grieving:

  • The relationship you thought you had
  • The man you believed he could be
  • The future you imagined
  • The potential that never materialized

The fantasy is always easier to miss than the reality because the fantasy has no painful parts.

You’re Confusing Intensity With Love

Toxic relationships are intensely emotional:

  • Dramatic ups and downs
  • Constant emotional activation
  • High-stakes feelings
  • Passionate conflicts and reconciliations

Your brain adapted to high-intensity emotional stimulation. Normal, healthy interactions feel boring by comparison.

You miss the intensity, not necessarily the person. You’re craving the emotional adrenaline the relationship provided.

You’re Lonely, and He’s Familiar

Missing someone intensifies when you’re:

  • Alone
  • Lonely
  • Having a hard time
  • Facing uncertainty
  • Feeling vulnerable

In those moments, even toxic familiarity feels better than a healthy unknown.

You miss him not because he was good, but because he’s familiar and you’re uncomfortable in the present moment.

You Haven’t Processed the Good Parts Alongside the Bad

Here’s what makes toxic relationships confusing: There were good parts. Real moments of connection, love, happiness.

Those good parts were real. They happened. And it’s okay to miss them.

The problem is when you let the memory of good moments override the reality of the overall toxic pattern.

You can acknowledge the good parts that existed while still recognizing the relationship was unhealthy overall.

Your Self-Worth Got Tangled With Him

In the relationship, you probably:

  • Measured your value by his treatment
  • Felt worthy when he was loving
  • Felt worthless when he was cruel

When you lost him, you lost your external source of worth (even though it was unreliable and toxic).

You don’t just miss him. You miss feeling valuable when he chose you, even though that value was conditional and unstable.

You’re Avoiding the Pain of Moving Forward

Missing him and wanting him back is easier than:

  • Fully accepting the relationship is over
  • Processing the grief of losing what you hoped for
  • Facing the uncertainty of your future
  • Starting the hard work of healing and rebuilding

Missing him keeps you in the past, which feels safer than facing the difficult present and unknown future.

Why This Is Keeping You Stuck

You’re romanticizing what hurt you. The more you miss him, the more you forget why you needed to leave. You’re rewriting history to make the toxic relationship seem better than it was.

You’re vulnerable to going back. When you miss someone this intensely, you’re at risk of returning to what hurt you—and the cycle starting again.

You can’t heal while actively missing him. Healing requires accepting that the relationship was bad for you. Missing him conflicts with that acceptance.

You’re blocking new, healthy love. You’re so focused on missing toxic love that you’re unavailable for real love.

You’re teaching yourself that suffering equals love. If you miss the pain and intensity, you’re reinforcing the belief that real love should hurt.

You can’t move forward. You’re emotionally stuck in a relationship that’s over, unable to build the future you deserve.

How to Stop Missing What Hurt You

Step 1: Accept That Missing Him Is Normal

Stop judging yourself for missing someone bad for you.

Acknowledge: “I miss him. That’s a normal response to trauma bonding and loss. It doesn’t mean I should go back or that something’s wrong with me.”

Self-compassion, not self-judgment.

Step 2: Remember the Reality, Not the Highlight Reel

When you start missing him, force yourself to remember reality:

Remember:

  • How you felt during the bad times (which were most times)
  • What you complained about to friends
  • Why you left or why it ended
  • How small/anxious/hurt you felt regularly
  • The specific incidents that were dealbreakers

Write these down. Read them every time you start romanticizing.

Step 3: Distinguish What You Actually Miss

Ask yourself: “What am I really missing?”

Often you’re missing:

  • Feeling chosen (not him specifically)
  • Having someone (not this person specifically)
  • The fantasy (not the reality)
  • The good moments (not the overall relationship)
  • The intensity (not healthy love)

Identify what you actually miss so you can address the real need.

Step 4: Go Complete No Contact

You cannot stop missing someone you’re still in contact with.

Block everywhere:

  • Phone, social media, email
  • Mutual friends’ accounts
  • Any way to see or hear about him

Every exposure reinforces the longing. Cut all access.

Step 5: Process the Grief

You’re grieving. Let yourself grieve.

Grieve:

  • The good parts that were real
  • The potential that won’t be realized
  • The fantasy you hoped for
  • The time you invested

You can grieve what was good while still acknowledging the relationship was bad overall.

Step 6: Address the Loneliness Directly

When you miss him most, you’re probably lonely.

Instead of reaching out to him, address the loneliness:

  • Call a friend
  • Go somewhere with people
  • Engage in community
  • Do something nurturing for yourself

Don’t let loneliness trick you into thinking you miss him specifically.

Step 7: Detox From the Intensity

Your brain got addicted to emotional intensity. You need to detox.

Allow yourself to:

  • Feel bored sometimes
  • Experience normal, stable emotions
  • Sit with peace (even if it feels weird at first)
  • Recalibrate to healthy emotional patterns

The craving for intensity will lessen over time.

Step 8: Build Worth Independent of Him

Your self-worth got tangled with his treatment. Untangle it.

Rebuild worth based on:

  • Who you are, not who chose you
  • Your character, values, strengths
  • Your inherent value as a person
  • Your growth and healing

You are valuable whether he sees it or not.

Step 9: Challenge the “What If” Thoughts

When you start thinking “What if I made a mistake? What if he could have changed?”

Challenge it:

  • “He showed me who he is consistently. I’m choosing to believe him.”
  • “I didn’t make a mistake. The relationship was genuinely unhealthy.”
  • “What if isn’t based in reality. Reality is what actually was.”

Don’t let “what if” pull you back into fantasy.

Step 10: Give It Time

The missing will lessen. But it takes time.

You’re detoxing from:

  • Trauma bonding
  • Emotional addiction
  • Attachment patterns
  • Familiarity

Be patient with yourself. The intensity of missing him will decrease if you do the work.

What You Need to Know

Missing Him Doesn’t Mean You Should Go Back

Your feelings aren’t instructions. Missing someone isn’t the same as them being good for you.

You can miss something and still know it’s not right for you.

The Good Parts Were Real—And Insufficient

The relationship had good moments. Those moments don’t erase or excuse the bad.

You can acknowledge the good existed while still recognizing the overall relationship was toxic.

This Is Withdrawal, Not Love

What you’re experiencing is closer to withdrawal from an addiction than missing healthy love.

Real love doesn’t create this kind of desperate craving after it’s gone.

You Will Stop Missing Him—Eventually

Right now it feels impossible. But you will stop missing him.

With time, no contact, and healing work—the longing will fade.

The Bottom Line

Sis, you miss your ex even though the relationship was unhealthy because:

  • You’re trauma bonded, not just missing him
  • Your brain remembers the highs, not the reality
  • You’re grieving the fantasy, not the person
  • You’re addicted to the intensity
  • Your worth got tangled with him

This isn’t weakness or stupidity. It’s a normal response to toxic relationships.

Stop judging yourself. Do the work to heal.

Remember reality. Process grief. Go no contact. Build independent worth.

You will stop missing what hurt you. You will heal. You will be free.

Choose yourself, sis. What you miss isn’t worth what it cost you.

FAQ

Q: Is it normal to miss an abusive ex?

Yes, extremely normal. Trauma bonding is powerful. Missing an abusive ex doesn’t mean you’re weak or that the abuse wasn’t real—it means your brain chemistry got hooked on the cycle.

Q: How long will I keep missing him?

Varies—weeks to months to over a year, depending on relationship length, trauma bond depth, and whether you maintain no contact and do healing work. It lessens significantly over time.

Q: What if I miss him more as time passes?

That’s often idealization—memory making the relationship better than it was. Or you’re hitting a grief wave. Remind yourself of reality. If it persists, you may need therapy.

Q: Does missing him mean we should try again?

No. Missing someone doesn’t mean the relationship was healthy or fixable. Toxic patterns don’t disappear because you miss each other.

Q: What if the good times really were amazing?

They probably were. But peak positive moments don’t make a relationship healthy if the baseline was painful. A few great moments don’t compensate for consistent toxicity.

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