Ye, né Kanye West, goes big, he goes big — and that naturally extends to breakups and rebound relationships. As we’re all too aware, Kim Kardashian, 41, filed for divorce from West, 44, last February, and he recently embarked on a whirling dervish of a romance with actress and former dominatrix Julia Fox, 32.He lavished her with Diesel duds, whisked her off to Paris and gave her a Birkin birthday — only to suddenly pivot and get mopey about Kim.
On Monday, Fox’s rep confirmed that the pair had split. West, meanwhile, took to Instagram. “I don’t have beef with Kim … I love my family.
I have faith we’ll be back together,” a seemingly emotional West wrote on the photo-sharing platform. “To be in love is to be crazy about something and I am crazy about my family,” he admitted before closing his cyber salute to Kardashian and their four children with “Happy Valentine’s [Day].”Relationship experts are hardly surprised that West and Fox’s rollercoaster rebound romance — call it a big bounce — crashed and burned.“It’s certainly normal to be in a rebound relationship,” said Megan Fleming, a clinical psychologist in Manhattan. “But if you’re rushing into it with big gestures of love and commitment without ever taking the time to get know the other person, that could lead to trouble because the relationship isn’t being built a solid foundation.”To avoid an implosion a la Juliye — West and Fox’s short-lived couple name — Fleming said one should proceed with caution with rebound romances. “Don’t have any attachment to a [fairy tale-like] outcome in these types of relationships,” said the professional. “When someone hasn’t taken the time to heal from a past relationship or hasn’t invested adequate energy into establishing a meaningful.
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