More than being in love, be love. Then you will never
stop loving!
Someone wrote to me wondering, “Why do people,
who fall in love and get married, fall out with each other?” Good question.
This happens all the time. Many factors contribute to a marriage or a
relationship breaking up. But principal among them is the fact that the couple
have lost the ability to love; not just each other – but to be loving themselves.
Let’s understand love and loving in the context
of relationships.
When two people come together professing love
for each other, all they are saying at first is that they love the way each
other is, they love the experience and they love the circumstances that have brought
them together. They soon start exploring each other – physically that is.
People often talk of a great chemistry between young couples – that’s nothing
but an expression of their sexual energy. Then they start experiencing the
non-physical side of each other. It is this constant exploration that keeps
them engaged in each other and together.
Then what goes wrong over time? First, when
their exploration goes beyond the physical, they realize that they don’t like
certain things about each other. “He smokes way too much and I hate his
breath.” “She talks a lot and shops like a maniac.” Next, the way they
experience each other has become predictable, boring. The thrill of meeting her
at a coffee place or texting sweet nothings is no longer there. She knows he’s
busy chasing deadlines and he knows she’s tearing her hair between her work and
looking after the baby. Both know that they will be exhausted when they meet –
even having sex then becomes a mechanical exercise, merely to meet a biological
need. So, what’s there to experience anew? And finally the circumstances that
brought them together have changed – people meeting and dating each other when
single is a dramatically and diametrically different context when compared to them
living together. Whether in or out of a wedlock, living together is a lot of
work – the dishes have to be done, the meals have to be cooked, the beds have
to be made, the floor has to be mopped, bills have to be paid. So, when
circumstances change, the way people look at – and experience – each other
changes.
There lies the crux of the problem. Love, the
way it is understood and practised in relationships today, is flawed. Whereas
love is really about being compassionate for another person, no matter what the
circumstance is, love today, sadly, has become an expression of selfishness and
ego. Over time and through living together, when you find qualities in your
partner that you can no longer tolerate or accept, you are basically telling
yourself that you love yourself more. Which is why you find your companion’s
tobacco habit or tendency to flirt or workaholic nature unacceptable. Which is
why even sex has become boring. Which is why you cannot accept your partner in
the new, changed circumstances. Consider the conversations that couples have
after a few years of living together: “You no longer care for me.” “Do you know
how much I do for you?” “You just don’t have the time for me or for the
children.” “You are drinking way too much and I don’t like it.” “Is there
someone else in your Life that’s taken you away from me?” All the reasoning is
focused on how you are being treated by
your companion. It’s your view. It is self-centered and does not immediately
invite a mutual perspective. I believe the key lies in dropping your ego, your
desires and your selfishness. Stop looking at what you like or what you want. A
better way would be to simply observe your Life with your companion. And ask
yourself what you both can do together – about whatever needs addressing.
Magically, you will find the romance blooming again – irrespective of age,
physical condition and circumstance.
I have learnt that it is more important to be
love, and to be loving, than being “in” love. When you are “in” love, you can
be “out” of it too. But when you are love – you are loving. Period. I learnt
this from my wife. We too came together, 27 years ago, through a confluence of
liking each other, enjoying the experience of being with each other and the
carefreeness that our circumstances then allowed us. But soon things changed. I
developed a ruinous habit of chewing tobacco, I became obsessed with my work
and decisions I took with our business caused it to blow up and landed our
family in abject penury. But my wife’s love for me has remained unchanged. When
I understood why she continued to be loving – despite my excesses and the
circumstances that we found ourselves in – I gained great insight. She is
selfless and sees the entire journey as something that always involved the two
of us. She never saw my destructive habit or my Work-Life imbalance or my poor
and costly decisions as her problem. She saw it as ours. This is what I mean
when I say you have to go beyond yourself – and drop your ego – if you want to
be love and be loving! When you are loving, and not just in love, you are
relating to the other person. You are not simply imposing conditions or
demanding they be met. Instead your relating helps you make the exploration –
that began when you first came together – an ongoing process, now in a new set
of circumstances. And it keeps the experience of being with each other, for
each other, engaging. Remember: Living and loving always happen only in the present continuous!
Of course, when you have tried hard,
selflessly, to make your relationship work, and you have discovered that it
doesn’t seem to be going anywhere, the best thing to do is to let go! Do it
very calmly. Just let go. An important aspect of being loving and selfless is
to give the other person, no matter how you have been treated, all the freedom
and compassion. A divorce or separation turns messy because you ask, “What’s in
it for me?”. Instead ask, “What can I give him or her that can make his or her
Life better?” Being loving means giving the situation, the context, the
relationship and the person all that you possibly can – physically, materially,
financially and spiritually.
So, don’t ask where’s all the love gone? Just be loving.
In your loving, and being love, you can make Life beautiful – for you, for your
companion and for your precious family!
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