Don’t just cling on to a
relationship for the sake of society – learn to focus on loving, relating and your
happiness!
A friend of mine is going through a messy
divorce. He developed an extra-marital relationship which, quite naturally, his
wife objected to. My friend’s reasoning was that he had stopped enjoying being
with his wife and found that he related better to his friend with whom he
“wanted to spend the rest of his Life”. The three people in this story are in
their mid-forties and are neither immature nor irresponsible. My friend’s
friend, his lover, is divorced, and has a child; but she says she feels “secure
and wanted” in my friend’s company. She’s not insisting that he marry her. All
she wants is his companionship for the rest of her Life. My friend too sees her
the same way. But my friend’s wife sees their relationship as scandalous and as
a conspiracy to “rob her of all her wealth”. So, the divorce has gotten messy –
my friend says he’s ready to accept a divorce immediately and is also willing
to settle the financial aspects amicably but he simply refuses to allow “an
extortion” by his wife. Therefore the matter drags on, for all three parties!
If you distill the issue, it all began with
an extra-marital relationship. And I guess if you look around, there are so
many of them, extra-marital relationships, going around us all the time. Except
most don’t turn up in the open. Even so, why is the polygamous tendency of
humans subject to so much scrutiny and scandal? Why is it necessary, from a
social point of view, that people suffer in bad marriages than be happy in
newer, and even multiple, relationships? If you consider history, man has been
polygamous. It is society that has imposed monogamy as a preferred code of
conduct. Just as you can’t wear round-neck tees, shorts and sneakers in certain
old-world clubs, founded by the British, in India, if you have to live in most
societies in the world, you have to be monogamous. But that really is
suppressing people’s freedom of expression, is holding them hostage to dead
relationships and is, quite simply, killing love and happiness.
What happens when two people come together
is that they fundamentally enjoy each other’s company. It is their friendship that
drives their being together. They may be different, as in most cases, but they
can relate to each other. When that relating stops, one of them, or at times
both of them, drift apart. When the drifting happens, they are not just seeking
sexual satisfaction in a new partner, from a new companion, but they are
looking to be happy with that other person. When they enjoy that other person’s
company, they “engage” with that person. It is as simple as that. Now, while in
some cases, people continue to relate to each other and enjoy each other’s
companionship, in most cases, people stop relating to each other because both
of them have changed. Or, at least, one of them thinks and believes the other
has changed over time. Which is what is causing the lack of relating between
them. Osho, the Master, says that marriage has ruined society. He champions a
new world where there is no marriage – but where there are only lovers! This
may seem like a radical idea, the way society is today – but isn’t it better
having a world full of lovers than a world that’s infested with co-sufferers
and broken homes arising from broken, or even dead, marriages?
The bottom-line in Life is to be happy. No
matter who is causing you to be unhappy, you must simply move away from them.
Suffering someone just to keep your image in an indifferent and couldn’t-care-less
society is a grave injustice you will do to yourself. When you move away, or
move on – if you will, have the courage to be open about your choice, have the
integrity to go through a formal (if necessary, legal) and fair (especially if
there are children involved) process of separation and be truthful to all
concerned. By following through on your happiness, you may
encounter strife in the short term, but in the long run everyone involved will
be at peace. At the end of the day, isn’t that what really matters?
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