💔Mood Tracking Guide

Your Mood Tracking Guide for Breakup Recovery

A breakup doesn't just end a relationship -- it rewrites your entire daily routine, your future plans, and your sense of self. One day you're a 'we' and the next you're an 'I' again, and nobody gave you a manual for this. The pain isn't linear, the healing isn't pretty, and some days it feels like you're going backward.

Breakup recovery feels chaotic because grief doesn't follow a straight line. You'll have a great day followed by three terrible ones and think you've lost all progress. Tracking shows you that the great days are increasing and the terrible ones are getting shorter -- even when it doesn't feel that way.

What You'll Learn

  • Whether your emotional recovery is actually progressing, even on bad days
  • What specific triggers set off waves of sadness, anger, or missing them
  • Which coping strategies help you heal vs. which ones just delay the pain
  • When you're ready to move forward vs. when you need more time to grieve

Common Breakup Recovery Patterns to Watch For

Heartbreak has its own rhythm. These patterns are almost universal -- recognizing them helps you know that what you're feeling is normal, not a sign of weakness.

The wave pattern -- good days then sudden crashes

You'll feel okay for a few days, maybe even smile genuinely. Then a song, a place, a smell brings it all crashing back and you feel like day one again. This isn't regression -- grief comes in waves, not stages.

Track the duration and intensity of each wave. Over weeks, you'll see waves becoming shorter and less intense. That's healing, even if it doesn't feel like it when you're mid-wave.

The morning gut punch

You wake up and for a half-second, everything is normal. Then you remember. That daily gut punch is one of the cruelest parts of early breakup recovery. It gets lighter, but slowly.

Track how long the morning pain lasts. In week one, it might color the entire morning. By week six, it might be 10 minutes. That shrinking duration is measurable progress.

Late-night urge to reach out

Between 10 PM and 2 AM, your resolve crumbles. You want to text, call, check their Instagram, or 'just talk.' The nighttime loneliness activates the craving for their specific comfort.

Track when the urge hits and what you do about it. If you reach out and feel worse after, that's data. If you resist and feel proud in the morning, that's data too. Build your strategy around the pattern.

The anger phase arriving late

Sadness comes first for most people. Anger shows up weeks or months later -- anger at them, at yourself, at the situation. This feels alarming but it's actually progress. You're moving from helplessness to agency.

Don't suppress the anger when it arrives. Track it, process it with WTMF, and let it fuel your forward movement. Anger after sadness means you're reclaiming yourself.

Nostalgia filter distortion

Your brain starts editing the relationship, removing the bad parts and highlighting the good ones. Suddenly the person who hurt you becomes 'the one who got away.' This isn't love -- it's your brain's coping mechanism.

When nostalgia hits, write down three real reasons the relationship ended. Track how often nostalgia distorts reality vs. how often you remember the full truth. This prevents going back for the wrong reasons.

How to Track Your Breakup Recovery

1

Rate your overall emotional pain daily on a 1-10 scale

Every evening, give your day a pain score. Don't overthink it -- your gut feeling is accurate. This creates a recovery timeline that shows progress even on bad days.

WTMF's daily check-in is especially powerful during breakups because it creates a record your emotional brain can't argue with. When you feel like you'll never get better, the data says otherwise.

2

Log specific triggers that brought up the ex

A song on the radio, walking past 'your' cafe, a mutual friend's story, a memory from a photo. Note exactly what triggered the pain spike and rate its intensity.

Tracking triggers helps you prepare for them. If you know a certain route triggers you, you can choose a different one until you're stronger. It's not avoidance -- it's strategy.

3

Track whether you contacted them and how it made you feel

No judgment. If you texted, called, stalked their socials, or asked a friend about them -- log it and rate how you felt after. The data usually speaks clearly: contact sets healing back.

Build a 'post-contact mood' log. After 3-4 entries showing that reaching out made you feel worse, the evidence becomes your best argument for maintaining no contact.

4

Note one small win or positive moment each day

Laughed at something. Cooked a meal. Got through a full workday. Went 8 hours without thinking about them. These wins feel tiny, but they're the building blocks of your new normal.

On days when you can't think of a win, 'I survived today' counts. Breakup recovery is about getting through, not performing happiness.

5

Do a weekly recovery review

Every Sunday, look at the week's data. Compare average pain scores to last week. Count triggers and notice if any are losing their power. Celebrate the wins, even the small ones.

WTMF's weekly insights show your recovery arc. The first time you see your average pain score drop by even one point, it's proof that this won't last forever.

Heartbreak makes you feel like you'll never be okay again. Your mood data tells a different story -- one of gradual, real healing that you can't see from inside the pain.

WTMF tracks your breakup recovery, shows you the healing that's happening beneath the surface, and gives you an AI companion for the 2 AM moments when you almost text your ex.

Common Breakup Recovery Triggers to Track

Places you went together

Certain restaurants, parks, streets, or even grocery stores trigger a flood of memories. Track which locations cause pain spikes and whether the intensity reduces over time.

You don't have to avoid these places forever, but give yourself permission to avoid them for now. When you're ready, reclaim them with new memories -- go with a friend, not alone.

Their social media activity

Checking their Instagram, Twitter, or LinkedIn triggers either pain (they look happy without you) or hope (they look sad, maybe they miss you). Track mood before and after each check.

Mute or block. Not out of hatred, but out of self-preservation. Every social media check resets your healing clock. You can't move forward while constantly looking back.

Mutual friends mentioning them

A friend casually drops their name or mentions what they're doing. Track whether these mentions spike your mood or you can handle them neutrally.

It's okay to tell friends: 'I'm not ready to hear about them yet.' Real friends will understand. Set this boundary early so you don't have to explain mid-meltdown.

Anniversaries, their birthday, or 'your' dates

Mark these dates and track mood around them. Your body remembers anniversaries even when your mind tries to forget. The first year of firsts is the hardest.

Plan something kind for yourself on these dates. Don't leave yourself alone with memories. Fill the day with people, activities, or a WTMF journaling session to process what comes up.

Seeing happy couples everywhere

Suddenly every couple in the world seems to be holding hands, laughing, and rubbing their happiness in your face. Track whether this trigger is worse on certain days or in certain moods.

Reminder: you're seeing 30 seconds of their relationship. You have no idea what happens when they go home. Your next chapter hasn't started yet -- don't compare your pause to someone else's play.

Loneliness hitting hardest at night or on weekends

Track whether breakup pain is worst during unstructured time when you'd normally have been with them. Evenings, weekends, and holidays create a specific kind of ache.

Rebuild your evening and weekend routines without them. New rituals, new shows, new habits. The emptiness they left is real, but it's also a space you get to fill with whatever you choose.

Your Weekly Breakup Recovery Reflection

1.

What was my average pain level this week compared to last week?

2.

What was the hardest moment this week, and how did I get through it?

3.

Did I contact or check up on my ex this week, and how did it affect my recovery?

4.

What's one thing I did for myself this week that the 'relationship version' of me wouldn't have done?

5.

Am I healing at my own pace, or am I pressuring myself to 'get over it' faster?

This weekly review is sacred during breakup recovery. It's your evidence that time really does help. When your pain score drops from 9 to 7, that's not nothing -- that's two entire points of healing. WTMF stores your full recovery journey so that six months from now, you can look back and be genuinely proud of how far you came.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to get over a breakup?

There's no universal timeline. Some research suggests half the length of the relationship, but everyone's different. What tracking shows is that healing IS happening even when it doesn't feel like it. Most people see measurable improvement within 4-8 weeks of consistent tracking.

What if my mood tracking shows I'm not getting better at all?

If your data shows flat or worsening mood after 6-8 weeks, that's a signal that you might benefit from professional support -- a therapist who specializes in relationship grief. The data makes it easier to seek help because you have evidence, not just feelings.

Should I track mood if the breakup was my decision?

Absolutely. Ending a relationship doesn't mean you don't grieve. You might be dealing with guilt, doubt about your decision, relief mixed with sadness, or all of it at once. Tracking helps you process the full complexity of your emotions.

Is it bad that I still miss them months later?

Not at all. Missing someone is not the same as wanting them back. You can miss what was good about the relationship while knowing it needed to end. Track the nature of your missing -- is it them specifically, or is it the comfort of having someone?

How does WTMF help with breakup recovery specifically?

WTMF's AI companion is available at 2 AM when you want to text your ex. It helps you process the feelings without making a decision you'll regret. Plus, the mood tracking creates a visual recovery arc that proves you're healing, even on the days it doesn't feel like it.

Tracking your mood is step one. Understanding it is where growth happens.

WTMF helps you track, understand, and improve your emotional patterns with AI-powered insights. Free on iOS.