Friday, May 10, 2013

LOVE





                                                  LOVE                                         


In matters of love, choosing style over substance is disastrous. 
It also helps us know when we're making that mistake.
Salt is unique in that its taste doesn't cover up the food it seasons but enhances whatever flavor was there to begin with.
Real love, real commitment, does the same thing. 

Only if you and your beloved can honestly say them to each other is your relationship likely to thrive.

"I can't live," wails the singer, "if living is without you." It sounds so tragically deep to say that losing your lover's affections would make life unlivable—but have you ever been in a relationship with someone whose survival truly seemed to depend on your love? Someone who sat around waiting for you to make life bearable, who threatened to commit suicide if you ever broke up? Or have you found yourself on the grasping side of the equation, needing your partner the way you need oxygen? The emotion that fuels this kind of relationship isn't love; it's desperation. It can feel romantic at first, but over time it invariably fails to meet either partner's needs.

The statement "I can't survive without you" reflects not adult attraction but infancy, a phase when we really would have died if our caretakers hadn't stayed close by, continuously anticipating our needs. 
The hunger for total nurturing usually means we're in the middle of a psychological regression, feeling like abandoned infants who need parenting now, now, now!
If this is how you feel, don't start dating. Start therapy. Counseling can teach you how to get your needs met by the only person responsible for them: you. 
The "I can't live without you" syndrome ends when we learn to care for ourselves as tenderly and attentively as a good mother. 
At that point, we're ready to form stable, lasting attachments that can last a lifetime. 
"I can live without you" is an assurance that sets the stage for real love.


Most human beings seem innately averse to change. Once we've established some measure of comfort or stability, we want to nail it in place so that there's no possibility of loss. 
It's understandable, then, that the promise "My love for you will never change" is a hot word. Unfortunately, this is another promise that is more likely to scuttle a relationship than shore it up.

The reason is that everything—and everyone—is constantly changing. We age, grow, learn, get sick, get well, gain weight, lose weight, find new interests, and drop old ones. And when two individuals are constantly in flux, their relationship must be fluid to survive. 
Many people fear that if their love is free to change, it will vanish. The opposite is true. 
A love that is allowed to adapt to new circumstances is virtually indestructible. 
Infatuation relaxes into calm companionship, then flares again as we see new things to love about each other. 
In times of trouble and illness, obligation may feel stronger than attraction—until one day we realize that hanging in there through troubled times has bonded us more deeply than ever before. 
Like running water, changing love finds its way past obstacles. Freezing it in place makes it fragile, rigid, and all too likely to shatter.


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