Gabriel Medina and Yasmin Brunet broke up after a year of marriage, but it seems that the friendship and affection between them remain firm and strong. So much so that the surfer made a point of sending a public message to the model, congratulating her on the launch of her beauty products brand.
“Congratulations and success. Happy for you,” Medina wrote, sharing a post by Yasmin about her new endeavor.
Medina and Yasmin have been married since 2020, and on social media, they talked about their partnership and what it was like to start a relationship during the Covid-19 pandemic. The actress’s publicist confirmed the end of the relationship but stated that she will not issue a statement giving details.
The separation, despite taking everyone by surprise, ended up generating a lot of speculation on the web. Among them, the break that Medina had with his family and the relationship of dependence, almost as if the two were one. Other than that, fellow surfer Flávio Nakajima ended up revealing that Gabriel would have walked away from his friends because of the relationship.
For psychoanalyst and writer Regina Navarro Lins, an expert on TV Globo’s “Amor&Sexo” program, and author of books such as the best seller “A Cama na Varanda” and “Novas Formas de Amar”, this symbiosis that the couple experienced was crucial. to the end of the relationship.
“The responsibility for this is the myth of romantic love, which preaches that the two have to become one, that one will have all the satisfactions taken care of by the other. The complicated thing about this point is the emotional dependence that marriage lends itself to, when you make the other the center of your life, only the other is important. They often move away from friends, from activities that they used to enjoy, this is very harmful,” he explains.
Angela Fabbri, a clinical psychologist, agrees that individuality is a necessity in life together. “We enter relationships carrying our beliefs and values and, when we fall in love, we want to be accepted and validated by the other. It turns out that the other also has their beliefs and values and, often, to accept the rules created within the relationship, we get exhausted trying to adapt. And that, over time, leads to illness in the relationship and the individual”, he teaches.



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