Wednesday, January 17, 2007

People shouldn't experience the act of love until they are in love.


What can I say? Eversince I've heard of limerence, I never stopped wanting to know more about it. It's so intriguing that I want to completely understand the logic behind it. Personally, I think Tennov has made a significant move to understanding why some relationships fail. And I guess, she's not alone at this. At a very young age, I have started understanding what could be the real meaning (feeling) of love. I don't believe that love can fade. Because love is ...

Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It is not rude, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.

Clearly, the study is being supported by this verse. People do mistake feelings for love without them realising it. My question is this..."how many romantic love can one have in his lifetime?" In my opinion, I don't believe that we could love different persons in the exact same level. There's only one true love in a person's lifetime. Other love feelings could just be limerence or whatever feelings one mistake for love.

when limerence wears off, some people fear they are falling out of love. In reality, love has just moved on to a new phase, and many people use limerence as a springboard for a long-term relationship. Arguably, we need this temporary madness, to convince us to set up home and intertwine our destinies with relative strangers.

So, limerence is not at all (can't) just (be) plainly a mistake of two overwhelmed individuals. It could be a stage. But it's all up to them to make love happen.

The first and most basic question in managing a relationship is simple: are both partners having the same kind? Mismatches in expectation about this cause a colossal amount of grief. That's especially so when one partner bids to change the mode of the relationship and the other doesn't follow. So the first rule of relationship management is this: know (and tell your partner) what mode you're in, know what mode your partner is in, and do your damnedest to make sure they match!

Hmmm...a pretty sensible and promising advice. But of course! Openess, I believe is the most important ingredient that makes a relationship successful. However, insisting what both the persons in a relationship want from each other won't cause anything good either. So, there's a need to add compromise. Respecting each other's wants and needs (sometimes opinion) could also help get the relationship to another stage. That is of course, if both are envisioning a future together.

If either of you are misrepresenting what you are giving and expecting (whether because of self-deception or deliberate other-deception) the relationship is a tragedy waiting to happen.

Assuming you and your partner can in fact agree on your goals and be honest about what you're doing, there are other issues. Some of these have to do with commitment -- for how far and into what kinds of futures do the partners bind themselves together?

So, getting into another stage also depends on decision. Can love be a decision? I think you can only start compromising when love is involved. No matter how two persons try harder to make the relationship work, but none of them or just one of them can completely commit to taking it to a higher level, then nothing positive could take place. That's why breaking up happens.

What can help to keep the "emotional juices flowing" in your relationship? The following information might be helpful:


- Touch each other a lot. Touch is one of the best ways of communicating your feelings to another. Touch, skin and body contact are an important part of the overall continuing relationship. *** Try touching your partner lightly with your fingertips. The ends of the fingers will communicate their own language to the person touched. This language will be a personal conversation between the two of you.

- Surprise each other. Be each other's best friend. Make your partner understand that your relationship doesn't just revolve around sexual activities but it actually goes beyond that. Keeping an open-communication can help.

- Swap your interest. Don't stop learning new things about your partner. Treat your partner as if a mystery yet to be unfold. Surely, there's still a lot of fascinating things to discover about each other.

- Develop shared habits. Find out what you have in common and make it your habit to enjoy the things that both of you love doing. Pick a day in a week where you can spend quality time together doing what you agreed to do.

- Give each other space. Always remember that each partner still needs room to be an individual. The individual that he was before you even met him and the individual he still can become.

- Communicate. Again, being open and honest will always lead to more understanding and acceptance of each other's differences.





Saturday, January 13, 2007

It is not a lack of love, but a lack of friendship that makes unhappy marriages.



The period of limerence lasts on average six weeks before reality sets in and each partner begins to notice that the other is not quite perfect.. A vital thing to understand is that (despite what you've absorbed from a hundred sappy movies) limerence is not romance. It can be the launchpad of romance, but you won't really know what kind of relationship you're in until the glow of limerence fades.


It's a study by a psychologist back in the 1980s. What do we know? Love is not what we think it is. But, finally, I've found an answer to "why people mistake some feelings for love." When one is happy with someone, they immediately jump into the conclusion that "it could be it (love)". Could be. But, not always. It is just a launchpad (limerence). This is also the same reason why couples divorce after a some years of being married (there are times marriages last for just a year). Because once upon a time, they were blinded by something that caused butterflies inside their stomachs. They weren't really thinking. All they ever cared about was what's making them happy. They only cared about the overwhelming feeling that's engorged them. We know better now. Our folks never learned about what we're learning now like "limerence" and other discoveries on love-relationships but they were able to sustain their intimacy for generations. Why can't we? Is it because we are given so many choices? There is divorce in the US and Annulment in the Philippines. Just what is the difference between the two? Yes, I know of the legal terms but basically they are just the same. They separate families.

The bottom line here is, I think everyone (especially the younger generations) should understand that love is something else. It is not what we see everyday. Man and woman of our dreams walking along the busiest street and we found them. Then, it ends there. It is not. Love is more than that. You need to ask yourself questions to really say, "this is it!" Questions like: "is this the person I want to see first thing in the morning laying beside me?" "Will I be strong and mature enough to accept this person's flaws?" "Will I be able to forgive and compromise?" "Can I see myself with this person til our old days?" These are but a few questions to ask yourself. I posted Morrie's quote about marriage on my previous post. But I will post it here again...

In this culture it's so important to find a loving relationship with someone because so much of the culture does not give you that. But the poor kids today, either they're too selfish to take part in a real loving relationship, or they rush into marriage and then six months later, they get divorced. They don't know what they want in a partner. They don't know who they are themselves--so how can they know who they're marrying?

In many cases, love is never enough. Not because we strongly feel for someone already means, we'd end up with each other happily ever after.

"marriages are such high-maintainance relationships"

Of course, when we're looking for love, we are also looking for a future with someone. And because we are all unique; because couples are two individuals, there is still a need to consider whether we can deal with another person (the person we choose to be in a relationship with). Not because we love someone already means they are meant for us. That it is already that easy to deal with each other's differences. No, it doesn't work that way. If it does, then there couldn't be divorces. With the many options laying on the table, people are given the right to make choices even if they are not entitled to it anymore. I am talking, of course, of married people. After some fights and arguments, they'd resolve to breaking up. It's the most convenient thing. They still hope that out of this grueling relationship they can still find true happiness. Only, after several failed relationships and they've reached their 40s, many haven't found what they're looking for still. So, how's it? Bottom line, feelings don't go with happy endings. Not all that can make us happy is good for us. More so, not all that can bring us temporary happiness could really make us happy.

A research by social psychologists Michael Argyle and Mark Cook confirms the importance of eyes meeting across a crowded room. They found that when humans experience intensely pleasurable emotions our pupils dilate and become larger, which unconsciously and involuntarily betrays our feelings. What is more, a small increase in the secretion of the tear-ducts causes the eyes to glisten, producing what Argyle and Cook call the 'shining eyes of love'.

It is easy to think that love ends because of some monstrous piece of bad behaviour, but more often it decays gradually through a million minor hurts. In fact, loving attachment can never be taken for granted and, like anything precious, it needs to be carefully tended.

We all have the responsibility of teaching the younger generations to choose their partners well. And that love is not everything. Of course, it is the most important component of any relationship but, to believe in it so much without using our heads, it couldn't lead to anything good. Their future might still be at risk. Be wise.



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A Love with a promise of permanence.

"...if any hear MY voice and open the door,  I will come into their house and eat with them,  and they will eat with ME." ...

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