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HEAL AND TRANSFORM THE PAIN OF DIVORCE WITH THE 10-WEEK REBUILDING PROGRAM

While divorce is the end of a relationship, it’s also your doorway to a wonderful life.

As you work through the 10-Week Rebuilding Program, you’ll learn how to let go of the grief, anger and confusion that’s holding you back.

You’ll rediscover joy and purpose, realize your potential and rebuild a life that’s better than before!

WHAT OUR CLIENTS SAY ABOUT THE PROGRAM

There was no Divorce Workshops available near where I live. I was skeptical that an online class could help. The Seminar, with the technology, made it very easy and accessible. All my questions were always answered. The facilitation and teaching were excellent. I made friends with several students – we talk weekly. All of us grew so much as a result of the Seminar

- Chris

Words cannot express the valuable insight I found during my workshop experience. I find myself stronger, much happier & less anxiety-ridden. I believe processing every single emotion truly made the difference. I tell anyone going thru a split to invest in this class. The structure & support of people in the trenches with me, were priceless. You really helped in leading me to the path toward healing.

- Anne N

I believe the most impactful part of our seminar for me was, how it taught me about myself. I became aware that I mattered. I had completely lost myself throughout my life of marriage and kids. I had existed as a non-entity until now. I learned that I am worth focusing on, being taken care of, valued, and cherished. I am worth having a good time, laughing, and my feelings, thoughts and dreams matter! I am a kind and giving person, but I can also take care of ME now as well. I am stronger than I think I am, and I am ENOUGH! This will be a constant journey of self-worth for me, so please keep me in all of your prayers and thoughts. You are all forever with me! Thank you, Nick!!!!!!!!!! Thanks everyone.

- Leisa

When my husband left suddenly and I was new to Denver, I knew I needed help navigating the scary world of separation and divorce. I discovered the The Fisher Rebuilding Seminar through online research and believe this course not only sustained me during a difficult time but also provided key resources for building a life apart from one’s partner. Nick Meima does a superb job of creating a safe space for thoughtful and meaningful exploration during a very fragile time in one’s life. The deliberate and intentional topics help those in distress make sense of what is happening and create new stories for how to create purposeful lives. It has been a time of growth, healing and tremendous encouragement.

- M. Larma

NEW BEGINNINGS


Take this important step and register for the FREE First Class: New Beginnings.

You’ll learn how to:

  • Use your divorce as a doorway to a wonderful future

  • Stop the desperation, fear and overwhelm

  • Transition from being powerless to empowered

  • Disentangle from your ex-spouse

  • Stop being codependent

  • Gain emotional strength, stability and resiliency

ADAPTATION


You'll learn how to:

  • Identify destructive and constructive behaviors

  • Keep moving forward in the process of emotional separation from your partner

  • Create healthier relationships

  • Identify the forms of manipulation that cause conflict in relationships

GRIEF


You'll learn how to:

  • Relate and express your grief

  • Recognize the negative consequences of avoiding grief

  • Manage your grief as you let go of the past

  • Communicate with people who aren’t able to deal with their grief

ANGER


You'll learn how to:

  • How to use your anger instead of being used by your anger

  • Why anger is the most misunderstood emotion

  • Where you are on the anger continuum and how to deescalate your anger

OPENNESS AND VULNERABILITY


You'll learn how to:

  • What masks you have used to protect yourself in the past

  • The limitations of using masks

  • Why you can’t get needs met while using your masks

  • How vulnerability is a strength and a way to create fulfilling relationships

SELF-ESTEEM


You'll learn how to:

  • Why you haven’t been able to build self-esteem

  • How your lack of self-worth has contributed to most of your difficulties and challenges

  • How disentangling from your ex-partner is essential for your self-esteem

  • Practical ways to build self-esteem every day


You'll learn how to:

LOVE

  • Why old ideas about love need to be replaced

  • The distinction between attachment and love

  • Why you can’t give others love if you don’t have it for yourself

  • What the words “I love you” really mean


You'll learn how to:

FORGIVENESS AND PURPOSE

  • What forgiveness is and isn’t

  • How to forgive others and yourself

  • Why forgiveness is critical to moving forward

  • How divorce offers you the opportunity to discover a new purpose

  • The distinction between life purpose and being purposeful


You'll learn how to:

INTIMACY

  • Why emotional intimacy is a need we all have

  • Ways to create emotional intimacy with yourself first

  • Ways to create emotional intimacy with others

  • Why sexuality and intimacy are often are not the same thing

  • How to communicate in ways that result in intimacy


You'll learn how to:

AUTHENTICITY AND NEW RELATIONSHIPS

  • How to build the foundation of an authentic life

  • How to communicate with authenticity

  • How to draw out authenticity in others

  • How to create authentic friendships

  • Key dos and don’ts for dating

Here’s What’s Included in the 10-Week Rebuilding Program:

Support – Information – Practical Tools

Based on Bruce Fisher’s best-selling book, Rebuilding When Your Relationship Ends, this series has been refined over 40 years to enable you to move forward with strength, clarity and wisdom. It includes:

  • 10 weekly online group sessions

  • In-class exercises

  • Weekly homework assignments, reviewed in each class

  • Several individual check-in coaching sessions during the first weeks of the program

  • A workbook with additional teaching materials and handouts

  • The Fisher Divorce Adjustment Scale (FDAS) self-tests and interpretation (before and after the program)

Our next live seminar starts Monday March 30th at 8pm ET (5pm PT)

WHAT OUR CLIENTS SAY ABOUT THE PROGRAM

Nick told me that we all go through the ending alone and that in order to heal and grow we cannot get through by ourselves. The huge amount of support I gained from the book, the teaching, the session with Nick and from my fellow students was amazing.

- Melanie N.

Refund Policy

Having served hundreds of students worldwide , we are confident that you will find our 10-week Rebuilding very helpful in moving forward . We offer a “money back guarantee” that you will be satisfied with the 10-week program. If there are any issues, notify us of your concern(s) so we have an opportunity to rectify the matter(s). If we cannot rectify the matter, a full refund will be made.

CONTACT US TODAY!

1777 South Harrison Suite 1200

Denver, CO 80210

Phone: 720-524-3664

DIVORCE SUPPORT RECENT POSTS

Release Anger After Divorce

How to Release Anger After Divorce (Without Forgiving)

January 17, 20266 min read

How to Release Anger After Divorce (Without Forgiving)

Anger after divorce can feel like proof that what happened mattered.

And honestly—sometimes it is totally justified.

But here’s the problem: having a good reason doesn’t make anger disappear. And if it stays stuck inside you long enough, it doesn’t just “fade with time.” It starts leaking into everything—your sleep, your health, your focus, your relationships, and your parenting.

A lot of people have heard some version of this line:

“Holding onto anger is like drinking poison and expecting the other person to die.”

It’s a powerful idea (and it’s widely repeated with different attributions). (Fake Buddha Quotes)

Whether you love that quote or hate it, the point is real: unreleased anger hurts the person carrying it.

1) Why divorce anger happens: it’s a “safety violation”

In relationships, there’s a core question running in the background:

“Am I safe with you?”

When betrayal hits—an affair, deception, abandonment, disrespect, manipulation—your system registers it as a threat. That’s why anger can show up so fast and feel so intense.

Anger isn’t “random.” In this model, it’s protective energy after a safety violation.

And that’s important, because when you understand what anger is for, it becomes something you can work with—rather than something you’re ashamed of.

2) Most anger starts as a thought, not a behavior

A lot of people assume anger is just “how they act.”

But for most people, it begins earlier than that.

It starts as a thought like:

  • “I don’t matter.”

  • “I was deceived.”

  • “Was it all built on a lie?”

Those thoughts hit the nervous system like a threat.

Then anger shows up to protect you.

This is why you can’t simply “logic your way out of it.” Your body is responding to what it believes is dangerous.

3) Anger is often the “top emotion” — what’s underneath matters

Anger is frequently the most visible emotion. It’s the one you can feel in your chest, your jaw, your hands.

But anger is often protecting a deeper layer—feelings we don’t like to feel, such as:

  • hurt

  • fear

  • shame

  • grief

  • confusion

  • anxiety

So one of the best questions you can ask when anger is rising is:

“What is this protecting?”
“If I wasn’t angry, what would I feel?”

This isn’t about making anger “wrong.” It’s about getting accurate—because accuracy is what helps you move forward.

4) Unprocessed anger isn’t harmless — it goes outward or inward

Anger is energy.

If it doesn’t move through you, it tends to move into your life.

In the divorce world, a pattern shows up again and again:

Option A: It goes outward

That can look like:

  • passive anger

  • picking fights

  • revenge behavior

  • making the other person’s life harder

  • yelling, breaking things, escalating conflict

Option B: It goes inward

This is where people often get blindsided.

When anger gets trapped inside, it can harden into:

  • resentment

  • numbness

  • shutdown

  • depression (often anger with nowhere to go)

(If you’ve ever thought, “I’m not even angry anymore… I’m just tired,” that’s worth paying attention to.)

5) Resentment isn’t a personality trait — it’s anger + time

Resentment doesn’t usually appear overnight.

A simple way to say it:

Resentment is unexpressed anger plus time.

That’s why “waiting for it to dissipate” usually isn’t a strategy. It often turns into avoidance, and avoidance builds pressure.

So the goal isn’t “manage it forever.”

The goal is release—so it doesn’t calcify into something that runs your life.

6) Current anger vs. past (stored) anger: don’t mix these up

This is a huge distinction:

Current anger

This is anger about what’s happening now:

  • texts

  • custody conflict

  • court

  • finances

  • disrespect

  • ongoing problems

Current anger often needs boundaries.

Past anger (stored anger)

Divorce often activates older pain:

  • old abandonment

  • old shame

  • powerlessness

  • old betrayals

Past anger needs processing.

When people mix these up, they stay stuck.

Why? Because they try to “process” what actually needs a boundary, or they try to “boundary” what actually needs emotional release.

7) Grief and anger are often “joined at the hip”

In divorce recovery, grief and anger often travel together.

Sometimes grief triggers anger. Sometimes anger triggers more grief.

This is one reason people can feel like they’re “going in circles.”

And it’s also why—after decades of working with people—this process tends to go better when grief work and anger work are handled clearly (instead of trying to force both at the same time).

8) Releasing anger is not the same thing as forgiving

This is where a lot of people get stuck:

They don’t want to let go of anger because it feels like letting the other person “off the hook.”

But here’s the reframe:

Releasing anger isn’t forgiveness. It’s removing poison from your own system.

You can still have standards.
You can still have boundaries.
You can still tell the truth about what happened.

Releasing anger is simply refusing to let it keep costing you.

If you want a single line to remember:
The goal isn’t to be nice. The goal is to be free.

9) If you have kids: anger control isn’t optional

If you’re co-parenting, anger has extra consequences.

Kids don’t need you to be perfect—but they do need you to be regulated.

Using children to get back at the other parent (or leaning on them emotionally) doesn’t just “blow off steam.” It puts them in the middle.

And kids fundamentally want to love both parents. (Many co-parenting resources emphasize how conflict and hostile co-parenting dynamics can harm kids’ emotional safety.) (OurFamilyWizard)

So if you’re thinking, “I can live with my anger,” the hard truth is: your kids can’t.

Regulation is one of the most protective gifts you can give them during divorce.

10) A simple next step: measure what you’re dealing with

One reason people stay stuck is they’re guessing.

They don’t know if they’re “a little angry” or living with a level of anger that’s wrecking their body and brain.

That’s why measurement helps: it turns a foggy emotional experience into something you can actually work with.

Next steps (choose one):

  • Take the self-test to get a baseline of where you are right now (including anger).

  • Or watch the full video episode if you want the complete model and the full teaching.

(Place your links here)

FAQ

How long does anger last after divorce?

There’s no single timeline. Anger tends to last longer when it’s being avoided, suppressed, or constantly re-triggered by ongoing conflict. The more you learn to process and release it, the less it controls your day-to-day.

Is it bad to feel angry after divorce?

No. Anger is common and often understandable. The issue isn’t the emotion—it’s what happens when anger stays trapped in your system and starts shaping your health, your decisions, and your relationships.

Do I have to forgive to heal?

No. Forgiveness and emotional release aren’t the same thing. You can release anger for your own freedom without excusing what happened or reconciling.

What if my ex keeps triggering me?

Then you likely need two tracks: boundaries for current triggers, and processing for stored anger that makes you reactive. Mixing those up is a big reason people stay stuck.

divorce angerrelease angerlet go of angerresentment after divorceunprocessed angerbetrayal trauma
blog author image

Kevin Van Liere

Divorce Coach, CEO of Rebuilders International

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