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Love…What is it all about? That’s the question
Providing a definition for love is most difficult. Experts have spent decades trying to provide an answer to the question of love; and the discussion continues. “Love is an emotion,” is the most common definition and, even though nobody can argue it, we believe love is more than that. A mystical emotion opened to a universal definition, says Susan Johnson, international expert in attachment and relationships.
Expert in relationships and founder of Imago therapy, Harville Hendrix states that love is a decision. Why? Because there are two types of love according to him: Romantic love and conscious love. Romantic love is the glue that initially bonds two people together but it is supposed to end. When reality sets in, conflict and defects come to the surface and then the stage of power struggles begins. Most couples get so caught up during this period that they either end the relationship or become miserable finding themselves trapped and not understanding why they stay in such a terrible situation. The typical answer: because they are in love. Reality: because they have childhood wounds they need to heal and the relationship represents an opportunity for them (if willing) to look at old wounds, heal and, finally find the healthy relationship that everybody wants and deserves. The problem is that we can find all types of rationalizations to stay in a relationship, to flee or to rebound into another relationship right away just to repeat the same pattern. All of these mechanisms impede us to do the work that we need individually and/or as a couple to move forward. This requires a conscious decision and conscious work. Regardless of what we may believe, relationships are not born of love, but of need; real love is born in relationships, as a result of understanding what they are about and doing what is necessary to have them.
Now more than ever, we can’t afford to continue thinking love can not be defined or to continue our unhealthy patterns in its name. “Therefore it is imperative that we comprehend what love is, how to make it, and how to make it last.”(Johnson, 2008). Love is the most powerful compelling survival mechanism of the human species, not because of reproduction since we can manage to do that without love, but because of the bond/attachment that it produces. Love brings us the nourishment and security that we all need in order to feel alive and to face the world everyday. The need to be loved is wired into our genes and our bodies. It is as basic to life, health and happiness as food, shelter, and sex are. We need to be emotionally attached to others to be physically and emotionally healthy, and to survive.
Therefore, we need to be more conscious and do what we need to do to experience the love we are talking about and achieve happy adult relationships and marriages. Here are some first steps:
Remember that change is the catalyst for healing. In changing to give our partners what they need, we heal our own wounds. Our own behavior was born in response to our particular deprivations; it is our adaptation to loss. In giving our partners what is hardest for us to give, we have to bring our hidden selves out into the light, owning traits we’ve repressed (rather than projecting them onto our partners), and enlivening atrophied parts of ourselves. When we change our behavior in response to our mate, we heal our partner and ourselves. The capacity and willingness to make that decision is what love is (Imago Relationships International, 1992) |
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