Closure Isn’t Always What You Expect
For months, Dora believed that one final talk with her ex would finally make the past make sense. But when the moment came, it left her unsettled, and a bit relieved. In this episode, she unpacks why closure is less about getting answers and more about accepting that some endings will always be unfinished.
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(ambient music) Headspace Studio. (gentle music) Hi, you are now listening to "Radio Headspace". It's Dora here. So here we are, the final piece of my post-breakup saga. I learned to hear my own voice, stopped treating my healing like a performance review, and was finally allowing myself to be soft. I was actually doing pretty well, and then eight months after our breakup, I got a text from my ex, "Hey, I know this might be weird, but I'd really like to talk. I think we both deserve some closure." Closure, the holy grail of breakup recovery, the thing every self-help article promised would set me free. I was so excited. I literally called three of my closest friends and said, "He wants closure. We're finally going to get closure." Navi, who had watched me go through this entire journey just sighed and said, "Dora, what exactly do you think closure is gonna look like?" I had this whole fantasy, you know, we'd meet at our old coffee shop, have this mature healing conversation where we'd both acknowledge our mistakes, forgive each other, and walk away with this beautiful sense of completion, like the final scene of a really good indie movie. Two hours later, I'm sitting in my car outside that coffee shop crying and more confused than I had been in months, because closure, it turns out, is not what I thought it was. I think we've been sold this myth that every story needs a neat ending, that every relationship, every chapter of our lives, every difficult situation, should wrap up with a bow and a clear understanding of what it all meant. Closure has become this thing we chase like it's going to retroactively make all of our pain make sense. But what if closure isn't something someone else can give you? What if most of life's chapters end with three dots instead of periods? What if the real closure isn't in getting answers, but in making peace with the questions? The coffee shop conversation was fine. We were both very polite, very mature, and very careful with our words. He apologized for some things. I apologized for some things. We talked about what went wrong, like we were conducting a postmortem on a failed business project, and I kept waiting for the moment, you know, the moment when everything would click into place, and I'd finally understand why we didn't work, why it had to end, what it all meant. Instead, I left with more questions and answers. Why did he wait eight months to have this conversation? Why did some of his explanations contradict things he had said before? Why did I still feel this mix of sadness and relief and confusion? I drove home expecting to feel a sense of lightness, this sense of completion. Instead, I felt like I had just taken a final exam where half the questions were in a language I didn't speak. That night I emailed my...
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About your teachers
Andy PuddicomeHeadspace Co-founderMore about AndyA former Buddhist monk, Andy has guided people in meditation and mindfulness for 20 years. In his mission to make these practices accessible to all, he co-created the Headspace app in 2010.
Eve Lewis PrietoHeadspace Director of MeditationMore about EveEve is a mindfulness teacher, overseeing Headspace’s meditation curriculum. She is passionate about sharing meditation to help others feel less stressed and experience more compassion in their lives.
Dora KamauMeditation TeacherMore about DoraAs a meditation teacher, Dora encourages others to live, breathe, and be with the fullness of their experiences. She loves meditation’s power to create community and bring clarity to people’s minds.
Kessonga GiscombeMeditation TeacherMore about KessongaKessonga has been an acupuncturists, therapist, and meditation teacher, working to bring mindfulness to the diverse populations of the world.
Rosie AcostaMeditation TeacherMore about RosieRosie Acosta has studied yoga and mindfulness for more than 20 years and taught for over a decade. Rosie’s mission is to help others overcome adversity and experience radical love.

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