Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Love is Never Enough

¡Hola! Everybody...
First, blame my lovely friend E.Volve, for this post which might very well give you a headache... The first version of this post was written several years ago and posted to a forum on a singles site. You would not believe the tremendous amount of hate mail I received! LOL

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-=[ Romantic Love and Attraction ]=-

Love isn’t a feeling.


Amor is the Spanish word for love, but it loses so much in the translation. Amor comes from the root word, alma, which means soul. Therefore, to say te amo translates as I love you is terribly inadequate. It loses its essentialness. Te amo is a powerful statement, so much more than a mere, “I love you.”It is to love someone with the core of your soul.

In our culture we tend to use the word “love” in many different ways. If we’re going to attempt to untangle the confusions and miscommunication surrounding our relationships, we need to look at this a little closer. There are three separate elements of “loving” in intimate relationships: love, romance, and chemistry.

Of the three mentioned above -- love, romance, and chemistry -- love is probably the simplest to understand (and the hardest to practice!). Attempts at defining love has gone on since time immemorial, but I will offer today one of the simplest. Love is simply what is when your heart is open. Love is manifested in your body (and mind) as openness. Anger and hate is expressed as a contraction. Love = openness; hate = contraction.

Simple, right?

You could love almost anything or anyone. You could love your lover, your dog, your mother, your car, your sexual organ, painting landscapes, etc. When your heart is open, you love whomever or whatever in your life. Love is the union of you and the one you are with.

To do love is to open your heart. There is no loving with a closed heart. It is true that many of us suffer from closed and broken hearts, but I get ahead of myself. So, love is what is when your heart is open. If you’re waiting to feel love, as in soulmate or a Divine act of randomness (as if “God” didn’t already have enough to do) or the arrival of the prophesy of an idealized “The One,” you will be waiting for a long time. (Oh yeah! And psssst: there’s no Santa Claus.) Love happens when you open up, whether that’s right now, or ten years from now.

Love has nothing to do with sex. You can love someone and not have sexual desire for them. In fact, and contrary to popular myth, you can experience extremely fulfilling and Grand mal seizure-like orgasmic sex with someone you do not love. The fact is that you exist as love when your heart is unguarded and you cut yourself off from love when you guard your heart. In my view, you can actually learn, or increase your capacity, to love. Love is not something that happens out there in some mysterious way. This capacity or potential to open up is the foundation of true intimacy.

Have you ever met someone and immediately felt an attraction for that person? You meet at a party, or some other social function or internet site and you both hit it off from the start. Sparks fly, you feel as if you have known each other for lifetimes. It’s hard to believe you have just met and you both feel as if you’ve known each other for a long time. The conversation is effortless, and you really enjoy being with this person. Maybe, you think to yourself, “Maybe this is ‘The One’ Eddie is always laughing at. Maybe this is my soulmate, the person I’ve been waiting for all my life!” ::wet knickers:: Have you ever experienced that?

You feel all giddy inside and then the two of you begin seeing each other regularly. You feel a certain “specialness” about the relationship, and you begin spending more time together. IMs, text messages, marathon telephone calls, blah, blah, blah…

You feel: This is meant to be!

This is romantic attraction, infatuation, “falling in love.”

Romantic attraction begins with this powerful feeling of oneness and of bonding, a feeling that you have always known each other. You have probably experienced this feeling for a person at some point in your life. If you have, you know that feeling doesn’t last. I know I’m fucked up for saying this, shoot me. But it’s true. After several months, or if you’re lucky (or unlucky), several years, this powerful romantic attraction wears off.

Then the unthinkable inevitably happens. This magical person who was going to be “The One,” who was going to give you everything you ever wanted, who was going to bring endless love into your life, seems to turn into precisely the person who does not give you what you want.

Eventually, relationships based on romantic attraction always crash and burn and result in not getting the love you desire.

Why?

Romantic attraction is based on a script imprinted in your psyche during childhood. There are a great many books, therapists, and workshops, etc. out there clearly explaining that those people to whom we are attracted are exactly those people who embody the qualities, good and bad, of our parents. Whatever our parents didn’t give us enough of (i.e., love, attention, praise, freedom), is exactly what we will not get from our romantically chosen partner.

The reason why you feel as if you “already know” your romantic partner is because you did know him or her: the parental imprint on your childhood psyche. The reason for the “specialness” you feel for this person is that you unconsciously hope to continue the relationship you had with your parents and finally get the love you have always wanted, the acceptance you always desired, the fulfillment your heart has always craved, but have never received.

In addition, because you have unconsciously chosen your parents as your partners, you have chosen someone who will not give you what you always wanted in exactly the way that our parents didn’t. And here’s the kicker (and what always gets me): even if your lover could give you what you wanted you won’t accept it because it’s not part of your script. Your imprinted childhood script will not let you believe it’s real.

What happens is that as the thrill of being “in love” wears off, your love interest seems perfectly adapted to cause you pain. He or she has this amazing ability to push your buttons and hurt you. The person who used to bring out the best in you now seems to bring out the worst, just by being herself or himself. And guess what? You do the same for your partner.

Because romantic attraction is based on qualities in your partner that you unconsciously recognize from your childhood experiences, you’re doomed to be as fulfilled or unfulfilled by your partner’s love as you were by your parent’s.

Love isn’t a feeling people, but so many people have had children as a result of a feeling. LOL!

There is a way out of the merry-go-round folks, but that’s for another day, another post.

My name is Eddie and I'm in recovery from civilization

Resources

For those looking to explore this subject further from the POV preseneted here, I have included a couple of resource.

General Theory of Love (click here for a review): Written by three psychiatrists, this book looks into how early childhood experiences mold our later relationships. It's a little bit dense, but it is about recent science written in elegant language. I first read about "neurological imprinting" in this book. This book will challenge all your previously held assumptions about love. LOL

Reinventing Your Life (click here): I have given this book away as gifts so many times, the authors should cut me a check. I first learned about Schemas (life patterns, life-scripts, or life-traps) here. I was so impressed with the approach, I went a trained in this modality. This is not a self-help book in the common sense. There are actual exercises and homework geared to help you identify and break from habitual patterns of behavior.

Schema Therapy (click here): If you want to look at a quick and simple explanation of Schema Therapy, this site will help. You can also look for therapists trained in schema therapy

Emotional Alchemy (click here): This was the book that led me to Schema therapy. It's schema therapy but from a Buddhist perspective. Another book I've given away as gifts countless times.

Attracting Genuine Love (click here): Sometimes the husband/ wife team of Gay and Katie Hendricks get a bit too commercial for my tastes, but this here is an excellent example of how we often look for love in all the wrong places with all the wrong people.

5 comments:

  1. <p><span>Maybe it is just me, then…</span>
    </p><p><span> </span>
    </p><p><span>It took only my starter marriage to realize that I had married someone who was much too much like my Mother and I agree with your posit that you will get the same sense of lacking from your relationship with your parent(s) as you will get with your partner.<span>  </span>Though the two ‘girlfriends’ that I had in high school bore no resemblance to my Mom in character and demeanor, my ex-wife did.<span>  </span>After that relationship crashed and burned I made a note to self.<span>  </span>Anyone who calls to mind my Mother, I was going to ‘terminate with due prejudice’ the relationship I had with that person.<span>  </span>That is something I feel was fortunate in discovering that I had been drawn by something in my ex-wife that spoke to the little boy in me that was wanting for ‘whatever’ from his Mother.<span>  </span>Mom would never give it and my ex-wife wasn’t thinking about fulfilling anyone else’s needs but her own.</span></p>

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  2. <p><span> </span>
    </p><p><span>I basically agree with the premise of love here in </span><span>America</span><span> being too simple and lacking in the depth of love in other cultures.<span>  </span>That is prolly why they have different words that indicate not only the intensity of the expression of love they sharing with a person at any given time in the relationship.<span>  </span>Right now I think that part of the problem in my relationship with Nebraksa is that we can’t seem to tell one another how one feels about the other without saying the word ‘love’.<span>  </span>It makes me think that we have the same kind of issue that Sam Wheat had in the movie ‘Ghost’ with his girl… she can say ‘I love you’ and all he can offer her is ‘ditto’.</span>
    </p><p><span> </span>
    </p><p><span>Now I may be making a unique claim in recognizing that I was attracted to the ‘Mother I wished I had and was never going to get’, but that isn’t the only way I am unique.<span>  </span>I have had an open heart for as long as I could remember.<span>  </span>It has long seemed to me that I can ‘feel’ and ‘see’ the people who I had the grand possibility of falling in love with before I actually met them!<span>  </span>It was as if there was a profile in my sole and when someone who ‘fit’ would come along, I would make a move on them.<span>  </span>For instance, I am here with </span><span>Nebraska</span><span> in her hometown on the premise that we can work together and have a lasting relationship if we got together.<span>  </span>I did not think we would take off from the runway and fly into bliss, but that we were a good partnership and we could make a loving relationship work.</span>
    </p><p><span> </span></p>

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  3. <p><span>That is the way it has always been for me.<span>  </span>And since I really did not have this ‘feeling’ (Tee Jay would call it ‘an angel on my shoulder’) that I am inadequately describing when I met my ex-wife, I have decided that for me it is the best way for me manifest myself in the dating scene.</span>
    </p><p><span> </span>
    </p><p><span>And it isn’t a physical thing.<span>  </span>I had not seen </span><span>Nebraska</span><span> when I told her that we would be a great couple.<span>  </span>We only had words between us as we met on the internet.<span>  </span>But she is ‘special’ in the way that fulfills all three aspects of loving for me.<span>  </span>Just need to work on its execution and get our lives in a more ordered fashion that would allow for us to be in a cohesive relationship that lasts like the Energizer Bunny!!</span></p>

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  4. Mark: thanks for your willingness to share honestly and openly and for you insights. For me, relationships are infinitely rewarding, tremendously challenging, and ultimately profoundly humbling. LOL

    ReplyDelete
  5. Mark: thanks for your willingness to share honestly and openly and for you insights. For me, relationships are infinitely rewarding, tremendously challenging, and ultimately profoundly humbling. LOL

    ReplyDelete

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