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2010-01-18

How do I Love Thee?

What do you call a cross between a romantic and a pragmatist? I don't know; but I am one of them.

I have had many discussions over the past few weeks with women about relationships. And some common themes keep coming up, over and over. Disappointment. Disillusionment. Disenchantment.

Here is the thing. I believe in love. In the truest sense of the word. I believe there is the perfect person for each person. Maybe there are multiple people for each person. The issue is, we have to find that person. That person has to find us. That's where luck, destiny, karma, whatever you want to call it comes into play. This belief makes me a romantic.

The problem is, many of us spend an inordinate amount of time, emotion, and commitment with those who aren't. We settle. We think we can make the best of the situation. We think we can change or change the other person. We bind ourselves in wrong relationships out of fear of being alone, fear of being a social failure because the pressures to be in a relationship are ridiculous. So, if our focus is on something that isn't working, how can we be present and available to discover something that will?

But can we leave it to chance? What if we never meet the one? What if we are destined to always be that single person in a sea of couples? What if that notion is pure crap?

So what? Does that mean we have to spend our lives being unhappy with ourselves, with living? Does that mean we compromise our very being not to be alone? Does that mean we have to make ourselves change to be with someone else? Or we have to fine-tune the other person so that he/she becomes who we want them to be?

If we cannot be who we are with the person we have chosen to share our lives with, if he or she cannot be themselves, then what's the point? Who are we? Who are we with? How can it work?

Bottom line. It can't. Being in a relationship should not be work. We should not be trying to make it work. It should be freeing, easy, uplifting.

Sure, in every relationship there is adjustment. Adjustment to the other person, his/her space, separate interests, perspective, other people in their lives and their lives before us. But that adjustment shouldn't be existentially painful. It shouldn't feel like we are hiding significant aspects of who we are. It shouldn't mean we have to be perfect, because perfection is relative.

It should be like a flower opening up to a bee.

Sure, every relationship has its challenges, its conflicts, its issues. We are human after all, and those arise whether we are in a relationship or not. We are not defined by the problems we encounter. We are defined in how we approach them. If our relationship creates problems, if we find ourselves facing the other like a combatant on the field, then how is this a nurturing relationship? Who is our ally in the conflict? Who do we talk to if not to the person with whom we are facing the challenge? If we can't work together, why are we even bothering?

A relationship should not make us feel inadequate. Should not make us feel like failures. It should allow us to love ourselves even more. It should allow our entities to embrace the other as he or she is. In our good days and our bad. It should be a breath of fresh air, not a labored gasp for oxygen.

8 comments:

Her Speak said...

A very interesting analysis. Your words hit home today as the Muffin and I are in the midst of some mire that we're trudging through. Sometimes--it is work, haha! (We've been together for 6 years...they say that's when you start having "bumps"...) But I believe that if you are in a good, safe, nurturing place, the work is worth the effort. :)

Much Joy, Many many Blissings~*
Molly

Genie Sea said...

I agree Molly. Sometimes there is a job to be done, but together not on each other :) Hope you will sail past the bumps effortlessly :)

Judi said...

Truth. Truth.

Never have figured out why anyone would want to be in a relationship where one or both of you aren't quite " a good fit".

Somewhere out there is our perfect mate and if we are really lucky - then we'll find each other .... just don't settle for not quite right. Learn to love yourself and enjoy your own company .... that'll make you happy and happy sends out great vibes!

Miss Robyn said...

ps great post by the way xo

Miss Robyn said...

this is such a huge subject and I could write a book on what I believe.. but I do think that our lives are 'planned out' before we come and souls come in and out of our lives when needed... and if 'the' one is not meant to then they won't come.. I have been married 3 times and always thought that 'they' were the 'ones'.. but of course life had other plans and the first two went from my life in various ways.. #3 is THE one I know it.. and I feel blessed and very fortunate that he is in my life now.. it is all meant to be..(and if our paths had not crossed? I hope that I would have been able to live my life alone, happily, content with joy & gratitude.. cause I would not like to be with someone just because..) ~
*now I read my comment, does it make sense at all? Oh well, I hope so... I will leave it here xoxo

Breedale said...

You are so wise! It took me years and lots of mistakes with relationships to finally get it. I repeat this sentiment to lots of people and yet unless someone has that ahha moment they don't get it. You my dear get it and that is why when fate sails its course for you, it will be the real deal.

linda said...

these are very wise words and so often i have seen women, especially, settle for someone who is less than they are...because of fear of being alone, the 'what-if' question and it is all so redundant, if there is someone out there to be with, they will show up eventually, like the law of karma...it will happen if it is meant to...there is no forcing - forcing will only force the energy away because it is coming from the belief it won't come in the first place...

wise words, wisewoman :)

rosebud101 said...

Genie, you are amazing, and your personal growth is growing by leaps and bounds. Good post!