Thursday, December 11, 2008

Falling and Failing in Love

We’ve fallen out of love. It happens to everyone, apparently. I’ve read at least one expert opinion that is doesn’t take but 18 months of constant contact to change the chemistry from blazing to blasé. They also say it’s not the end of the world—nor necessarily the end of the relationship. Couples can forge strong, lasting relationships based on a new kind of love—one that simmers comfortably, even if it never returns to a boil.

(According to Reva Seth, author of First Comes Marriage: Modern Relationship Advice from the Wisdom of Arranged Marriages, many people in arranged marriages seem to have the opposite experience. They enter a relationship with no expectation of feeling “in love” but grow closer and more loving over time. Lucky them.)

All that sounds reassuring. But when you watch your partner’s mouth move to form the words "I'm not in love with you," it’s like being dropped into an elevator shaft—without the benefit of an elevator. And it’s just as sickening a sensation when you have to admit that the feeling is largely mutual.

That said, my world actually did not end when I got this news. Said Husband is very adamant that “in love” and “love” are two different things and that he retains the latter feeling for me. (That, too, is mutual.) And we’re both optimistic—and have been assured by many folks who’ve been married longer than we have—that this is just the proverbial “bad patch."

In a way, I’m glad all this is out in the open. Call me odd, but for me hearing the worst is better than imagining the worst. For months, we’ve had a hard time talking, touching, even looking at each other. I just couldn’t figure out why—so my mind ran wild with unresolved speculation. But somehow for me, once I know what I’m actually dealing with—the cold, honest truth of it—I feel like there ought to be something I can DO about it. I feel like I have some power in the situation.

So I did what I tend to do when my life feels like it’s running away with me: I sat down and starting writing, trying to map out a resolution. I decided that perhaps we can push past this phase if we stop wallowing in the painful, disappointing feeling of it and start thinking about what is really going on. To that end, I’ve made myself a list of questions for each of us to ponder.

1. What are the things that I’m not in love with? (Buy a fresh ream of paper and make a list.)

2. Are these things annoyances or things I truly disrespect? (Get over the annoyances. Deal with the deep stuff.)

3. Can any of the “disrespect” stuff be discussed and resolved? Am I willing to understand these things differently (i.e. from the other person's perspective) and accept them, too?

4. What are the things that I do love and respect about my once-beloved? (Make another list and really do your best to fill up another ream of paper.)

5. If I weigh these things with an open heart, are they substantial enough to outweigh the other?

6. Can I be patient enough and stay open enough to make sure the answers I give to these questions are really, deeply true?

I figure that if I really stay deep and contemplate these questions, only one thing can happen: We’ll discover that there are things about one another that just cannot be overcome. And those things will be the ones that tell us, with certainty, that were not meant to make a life together. Or they will be the ones that remind us that nothing can tear us apart.

My objective side says that, either way, we’ll benefit from having a clearer idea of how to move forward. The optimistic side of me hopes that the process will reveal something beautiful and valuable—a new way of thinking that will open our hearts wide to love again.

3 comments:

L'Tanya said...

I've heard the same words and also have to admit that it's like being kicked in the stomach, both hearing them and feeling them about your partner.

I also ask myself, if my husband and I weren't married, would we be friends? What would connect us? Do I even like him and does he like me? I can't answer it objectively and clearly until I no longer blur the love/lust/in love/not in love lines.

I'm pretty clueless. But your questions are definitely thought-provoking.

Light Traveler said...

Being on that raw and ragged edge is painful. But at least you know what you are dealing with. When my marriage of 25+ years failed, I struggled with " mystery demons". I admire your courage here on your blog...you'll be fine...keep writing! I think I may know you?

Writing4Peace said...

T, I say listen to John Legends "Ordinary People". A friend or ours recently told my husband to tell me to listen to the words. This song is like an anthem for married folks. "Girl I'm in love with you, this ain't the honeymoon, we're past the infatuation stage ... we rise and we fall .. I hang up you call ... at times we feel just like walking away ... we take second chances though it's not a fantasy I want you to stay" ... I think that this is all that loving someone and being in love with someone really means ... when we first meet someone, we usually "fall in love" with who we think they are which typically does not include all their faults and shortcomings. Over time ... and with the tests that reality present ... our challenge is to come to love the whole person - the strengths & the weakness, the good and the bad, their hopes and their "annoying" habits. Marriage is like a garden ... it has to be weeded and cultivated over and over and over again ... year after year, season after season ... at times the crop is non-existent if the soil is not turned over and fetilized at all - if no seeds are planted ... at times the seeds are planted and the product, the fruit is beautiful, nourishing, fulfilling and sweet, and at times, that once flourishing crop may die/fade or wither away waiting for a new season, more nourishment, more light, more rain, more soil, more love ... to replant the seed in spite of the change in seasons ... this is love, this is marriage, this is faith ... Breathe ... and be easy because you are, we are ... all just ordnary people. We all have to go there to realize that we truly are there - on the road to loving the whole person in spite of.

Peace and love and hoping to hear, internalize & believe my own words ...