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Breakup Support Group

Breakup Support Group

A 4-session small group for anyone going through a breakup and wanting to feel more steady, clear, and connected again. Whether it ended recently or a while ago, this space helps you make sense of what happened, deal with tough emotions, and rebuild confidence in yourself and your relationships. You don’t have to go through this alone — let’s untangle it together, one week at a time.

Struggling post-breakup? Take this quiz to understand your distress and start healing

65 total reviews

Start Date: Within next 3 months

4 Zoom sessions | 75 minutes

Confidential | Small group, 6-8 people

Group Type: Support Group

Includes 3 Free Peer Calls*

Led by Therapist

Regular price Rs. 3,000.00
Regular price Sale price Rs. 3,000.00
Early Bird Booked out
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Goal of the group

• Understand what your breakup has brought up for you — emotionally and mentally.
• Reflect on how it’s affected your confidence, identity, and daily life.
• Talk openly about feelings like anger, sadness, or confusion without judgment.
• Notice patterns or red flags from past relationships.
• Learn simple ways to manage emotional triggers and overthinking.
• Build more self-kindness and trust in your own choices.
• Find ways to communicate and connect better going forward.
• Make space for forgiveness — only if and when you’re ready.
• Begin writing a new story for yourself that feels more grounded and real.

Who is the group for?

This group is for anyone navigating the emotional, physical, and psychological aftermath of a breakup. Whether the separation was recent or still reverberating months later, this space is for you.
We understand that healing is not about “moving on” but learning to move with what hurts — at your own pace, in the presence of others who understand.
Each week offers a safe container to explore grief, identity, and self-restoration through a mix of somatic grounding, psychoeducation, reflective exercises, and optional sharing. The group is not intended to "fix" pain, but to honor it, normalize it, and begin a process of re-connection with the self.

Glimpse of the regime

Week 1: Acknowledging the Loss and Creating Emotional Safety

Objective:
To gently enter the group space, establish emotional safety, and begin acknowledging the breakup as a significant and layered loss.

• Group Orientation & Safety Agreements
– Co-creating a space rooted in mutual respect, confidentiality, non-judgment, and choice
– Emphasis on participants’ autonomy: sharing is always optional

• Psychoeducation: Why Breakups Hurt So Much
– Exploring breakup grief through an attachment lens
– Understanding how the loss of a partner can feel like the loss of emotional safety, identity, and future dreams
– Normalizing the intensity and duration of grief responses

• Guided Visualization & Reflective Writing: “What This Relationship Meant to Me”
– A brief, gentle visualization guiding participants to recall a defining or meaningful moment in their relationship
– Followed by individual reflective writing, honoring what the relationship represented emotionally, mentally, or symbolically

• Optional Sharing & Group Validation
– Space for those who feel comfortable to share reflections
– Validation of diverse responses to heartbreak: numbness, anger, confusion, longing, relief—all are welcome

• Closing Practice: Grounding & Resourcing
– A grounding visualization to help participants reconnect with an inner or external resource—something that brings ease, strength, or calm (a place, person, memory, or sensation)

• Takeaway Prompt (Journaling for the Week):
“What parts of my world fell apart with the breakup?”
– Explore the loss of identity, shared routines, emotional anchor, imagined future, or support system

Week 2: Meeting the Inner Landscape of Heartbreak

Objective:
To explore and validate the emotional layers activated by the breakup, and begin tending to the different inner “parts” carrying the pain using a gentle, parts-based approach.

• Somatic Check-in & Breathwork
– A grounding arrival into the body with a brief somatic check-in (e.g., “What sensations are present today?”)
– Simple breathwork or regulation technique to support safety and presence

• Psychoeducation: Understanding Our Inner Emotional Parts
– Introducing the concept of inner “parts” (from an IFS-informed lens)
– Exploring common emotional parts that arise post-breakup:
– The Abandoned One (loneliness, grief)
– The Angry One (injustice, betrayal)
– The Hopeful One (longing, bargaining)
– The Ashamed One (self-blame, inadequacy)
– Emphasis on how each part holds a piece of the story and often functions to protect us

• Guided Reflection & Worksheet: Mapping My Inner Landscape
– Participants receive a gentle worksheet to explore and name the different emotional parts showing up since the breakup
– Reflection questions include:
– What is this part feeling?
– What is it protecting me from?
– What does it need from me right now?

• Group Sharing (Optional)
– Voluntary space to share insights from the worksheet
– Group emphasis on resonance, not rescue—simply holding space for each other's truths without trying to fix

• Closing Practice: Affirming the Part That’s Surviving
– A short visualization or affirmation practice acknowledging the resilient part that continues to show up through the pain
– Gentle reminder: "Even if you're hurting, you're here. And that matters."

Week 3: Reclaiming Lost Selves & Rebuilding Boundaries

Objective:
To reflect on how the relationship may have shaped, silenced, or stretched one’s sense of self—and begin reclaiming the parts that are ready to return. Participants will also explore how to gently rebuild boundaries that support emotional safety and self-respect.

• Check-in & Body Awareness Practice
– Gentle somatic arrival: noticing where and how the self is showing up in the body today
– A few moments of breath or mindful movement to ground in the present

• Psychoeducation: The Impact on Self & Boundaries
– Exploring how breakups can destabilize self-esteem, identity, and boundary clarity
– Discussion on:
– Enmeshment vs. connection
– Abandonment wounds and how they affect post-breakup coping
– Anxious and avoidant attachment tendencies and how they might show up in healing

• Reflective Timeline Exercise
“Who Was I?”
– Participants chart their evolving sense of self across three stages:
– Before the Relationship
– During the Relationship
– After the Breakup
– Focus on changes in self-expression, values, confidence, and boundaries
– Encourages noticing what was lost—and what might be ready to return

• Skill-Building: Emotional Boundaries vs. Emotional Walls
– Group exploration of the difference between healthy emotional boundaries and protective walls
– Practicing short internal boundary dialogues (e.g., “It’s okay to say no,” “I can care for others without abandoning myself”)

• Group Ritual: Letters to the Emerging Me
– A writing ritual where participants compose a compassionate letter from their wiser, grounded self to the hurting or younger part of them
– Prompts may include: “You didn’t deserve...,” “Here’s what I want for you now...,” “You’re allowed to...”
– Optional sharing in pairs or with the group

• Closing Visualization: Calling Back Silenced Parts
– A gentle guided visualization inviting participants to reconnect with aspects of themselves that were quieted, neglected, or given away during the relationship
– Imagery might include a “welcoming back” of younger, freer, or more authentic parts

• Takeaway Practice: Ritual Reclamation
Prompt:
Choose one small act this week that reconnects you to your individuality.
Suggestions:
– Listening to a favorite childhood song
– Preparing a comforting meal just for yourself
– Going for a solo walk without your phone
– Reengaging with a forgotten creative or playful impulse

Week 4: Integration, Meaning-Making & Beyond

Objective:
To reflect on inner shifts, find meaning in the heartbreak, and gently acknowledge the ongoing journey of healing with more clarity, compassion, and self-trust.

• Grounding Practice + Emotional Check-in
– A gentle arrival into the body with breath or sensory awareness
– Emotional check-in: “What’s alive in you as we begin our final circle together?”

• Psychoeducation: Breakups as Initiations
– Reframing breakups as potential initiations—a passage from rupture to rebirth
– Discussion on:
– Post-traumatic growth: how pain can deepen insight, empathy, and self-connection
– The nonlinear nature of healing: relapses, triggers, and grief waves are part of the process, not setbacks

• Guided Writing: Meaning-Making
– Prompts to explore personal wisdom gained through heartbreak:
– “What have I come to understand about love, loss, and myself?”
– “What inner strengths or truths am I carrying forward?”
– Invitation to reflect from a place of compassion rather than pressure to find closure

• Worksheet: What I’m Taking Forward
– Participants name:
– 3 key insights
– Inner resources they want to honour
– New or redefined boundaries
– Messages they want to carry into future connections

• Group Ritual: Letting-Go Practice
– A symbolic ritual to release what’s no longer needed
– Options may include: tearing up a letter, letting go of a small object, sharing affirmations aloud, or visualizing release
– Framed not as forgetting, but as making space for what’s next

• Closing Check-out
– Space for each participant to share (if they wish):
– Something they’re grateful for about the group or themselves
– What they’re taking with them into the next chapter
– Group grounding to anchor into inner and outer support

• Takeaway: Ongoing Support Resources
– A curated list of tools for continued healing:
– Books (e.g., Attached, Tiny Beautiful Things, The Body Keeps the Score)
– Podcasts (e.g., On Being, Therapy Chat, The Love Drive)
– Journaling prompts for integration and emotional clarity
– Grounding tools (breathwork, somatic resources, visualizations)
– Local/online therapy or support circles

Interested in multiple groups? Access at 60% off

What you get:

  • Unlimited Support Groups – Join any eligible group throughout the year at no extra cost.
  • Exclusive Weekly Series – Join our weekly Women/Men Unfiltered sessions on relationships, career, identity, and mental health.
  • 24 Free Peer Calls – Connect one-on-one with other members for support and shared experiences.
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FAQs

What are SoulUp Groups?

At SoulUp, you'll meet people who get what you're going through and might be living some of the same realities. People looking for extraordinary conversations, just like you.

✔️ Small group, 6-8 people

✔️ Every meeting led by a world-class facilitator

✔️ Weekly 75-minute online video sessions

What happens in a group session?

While the format can vary as per topic, here’s a flow that most sessions follow

Check In. Participants check-in with each others' feelings and answer the prompt given by the facilitator if any.

Conversation. Your facilitator will guide the group through free-flowing conversation coupled with some simple exercises or activities —with the goal of sharing openly, connecting to your emotions and learning specific skills.

Check Out. Participants share what they're taking away from the session.

How is confidentiality maintained in Groups?

Confidentiality in Support Groups is maintained using secure meeting links and enabling waiting rooms to control participant access. Participants are bound by mutual confidentiality clause within the group. Also, sessions are not recorded without explicit consent.

Are Group sessions done on video?

Yes, all group sessions are conducted on video via Zoom. While participants are allowed to use pseudonyms - they need to be on video to make the most of the session.

What is SoulUp's refund policy on groups?

1. After you have registered for the group and you'd like to opt out:
- Full refund if you cancel 30 days before the group start date.
- 50% refund if you cancel 16-30 days before the group start date.
- No refund if you cancel 0-15 days before the group start date.

2. If SoulUp cancels a group, we will refund the entire signup fee.

3. If SoulUp reschedules a group by more than 2 weeks, we will inform you and give you an option to opt out and get a full refund.

4. SoulUp reserves the right to remove participants from a group if found unsuitable to the group. In such cases participants are given the option of claiming the pro-rata amount left as a refund or using it for another service on SoulUp.

* Are FREE Peer calls available to everyone who signs-up for this group?

You can book 3 Peer calls for FREE as part of signing up for this group.

Please note: This is only available to first-time participants of a SoulUp group (those trying a SoulUp group for the first time).

Can I use multiple discounts while signing up for a group?

You can use only 1 type discount while signing up for a group. Cash backs cannot be coupled with discounts either.

How long has SoulUp been around?

SoulUp was founded in Feb 2022 by Punita Mittal and Mahak Maheshwari - a team of IIT Delhi and IIT Bombay with more than 20 years of combined healthcare experience. SoulUp is redefining mental health through groups that are effective, but also fun, social, and challenging.

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