Love Vs.
Infatuation by Michelle
Drew
Copyright 2005. All rights reserved.
Finally, you have
met, HIM/HER.
You know what I mean, THE ONE. All your
life, or so it seems, you have been waiting for the person who made
your heart pound, made the stars bright, and taken over all reasonable
thought processes with ideas of making love on every beach from here to
Tahiti.
You have a weird
expression on
your face, food suddenly seems like
a mere inconvenience and sleep is just something you used to do. Your
friends tease you about being in love. Your mother WARNS you about
being in love.
Of course, you’re
not stupid.
You’ve been around (more than Mom
knows about), and you have spent time in meditation/therapy having
explored your own needs in the world. You want a soul mate but this
guy/gal is just so sexy that it’s hard to imagine introducing him/her
to your parents at all.
So, things are
going well and
you are looking toward the NEXT STEP,
becoming an item. Going public. Everyone knows and invites you as a
couple. People you know speculate about the future of YOUR
RELATIONSHIP. But the future means forever when it comes to commitment,
so how do you know if this is really a good thing?
Are people
whispering about how
happy they are for you, or are they
wondering if you should be committed yourself (like in a secure mental
health facility)? And how about yourself? Do you feel comfortable with
your newest love interest or do you just want to feel comfortable with
someone? Is this the person that you want to spend your life with or
are you just afraid to march into the future alone?
These very large
questions
deserve great considerations. The
passions of new love are so entwined in our own emotional makeup, that
it seems impossible to find objective considerations when proceeding
along love’s thorny paths. So, for the purposes of this discussion, let
us define love and infatuation so each can be thought about in a more
organized manner.
Love as a dynamic
process. For
me, that means that there is a
relationship that flexes, changes and grows as people mature,
experience happens upon them, priorities and dreams are built and goals
are met. Love brings out the best in people as individuals. The
relationship between them becomes the way they define their lives. As
jobs, careers, and family concerns change, people are able to work as a
team to be understanding and flexible so the relationship (their lives)
will flourish.
Dynamic process of
love equals
a sharing of emotion, trust, and
growth of relationship. Growth is increasing ability of a couple to
live symbiotically, enjoy each others company, trust each other with
more secrets, depend on each other in more crises over the years, in
raising children and taking care of aging relatives. It’s about growing
old together, and long-term investments like real estate and children.
So what about
infatuation?
That’s when you think of someone all the
time, you go out of your way to be around him/her, and you begin to
center your priorities around him/her as well. There is history with
this person: Maybe a short history, but maybe quite a while. You both
enjoy being together. You both daydream about each other and get all
crawly in your underwear. But is it LOVE? I mean, you hate to be wrong
about this kind of thing, especially if you have in mind perhaps
reproducing together (or maybe if you forget to think about it JUST
ONCE).
Infatuation as are
defining it
here, is a static process
characterized by an unrealistic expectation of blissful passion without
positive growth and development. Characterized by a lack of trust, lack
of loyalty, lack of commitment, lack of reciprocity, an infatuation is
not necessarily foreplay for a love scenario. People, however, have
many reasons for making commitments.
Most people are
infatuated with
their love partners to a certain
degree. People who are in love think of their partners periodically
when they are apart (some more than others). Men seem to be better, in
general, in compartmentalizing their lives, thereby putting thoughts of
loved ones aside until the mind is free to dwell on life. And yes,
there are many exceptions and many ranges within the genders.
So how do you know?
The
question, actually is simple, the answer,
however, is not easy to own or accept. And here it is: Does this
relationship bring out the best in both of you?
This is the part
where you get
to assess and evaluate yourself and your partner, and your relationship
HONESTLY.
Though difficult,
evaluating
how things are going at regular
intervals can help to give some direction (and re-direct misdirection)
to people who are self-guided toward happiness and success. For those
who are on a negative course, people who are unhappy,
confused and
perhaps
self-sabotaging, regular evaluation can point
out some hard truths about oneself, and/or about the person you want to
take the next step with.
While you try to
evaluate
whether or not it is THE REAL THING, here are some things to consider:
Are you happy? That
would be a
yes or no. When you wake up, are you
glad to be alive? Are you grateful for the blessings that you receive
daily, like being alive and loved? Are you loved and treated as a
person of value? Does HIS/HER MOTHER know about you?
Is your life on a
positive
track? Do you have hope for the future?
Do you have dreams and work toward them all the time? Is your life
better because your boy/girlfriend is in it? Really?
Are you in this
relationship
alone? Having someone on your arm
makes life less complicated. You get a built in escort and date. Most
people seem to think and feel better as part of a pair. There is a
sense of social relief as well meaning family and friends stop trying
to fix you up. Are you thinking and planning as a pair? Do you
automatically consider both of your plans for the weekend, or merely
anticipate maybe meeting up sometime? Have you postponed or given up
your hopes and dreams for the relationship or have you restructured
your dreams together?
The answers, and
the courage to
face the facts is the key to making
the determination. In infatuation, your gaze, your thoughts and maybe
your world revolves around someone. You have blinders on. It seems that
all the world pales in comparison to this person’s looks, talents,
intelligence, creativity, etc. What you might not see by keeping the
blinders on, what can be serious flaws in any relationship, are the
destructive traits and behaviors that degrade self esteem and cause
some pretty negative effects on one’s choices and decisions.
Many have had the
experience of
looking back at some early romance,
in middle or high school perhaps, when we were “in love” with a special
teacher, or camp counselor. It can be easier to see in retrospect, what
you weren’t ready to see at the time. Your thoughts of
romance were simply
an innocent
fantasy: An infatuation that felt like love at the time.
Aside from your
age, what was
it about you that made you make that
mistake. Innocence? Loneliness?: A longing to grow up, maybe. But those
were things going on in your head. In fact, these feelings had little
to do with the actual object of your infatuation (crush). It could be
that some of those same feelings and needs exist for you today. Beware
of your own vulnerability, and your own desire to “get rescued” from
that solitary life of the unpaired.
In time, the faults
that you
refuse to see will begin to come to
the foreground. You may be infatuated with a rich and powerful person,
but as you come to know that person on a more intimate basis, the
qualities that intrigued you will begin to fade into the background.
In the case of
love, your focus
is on your special someone, and
that someone exists in the real world. Give and take, compromise and
cooperation are characteristics of love relationships. Working toward
common goals, sharing dreams and values define the dynamics of a good
love relationship. People know each other on a separate and private
level than the world at large.
Infatuation can
even be thought
of as love with only 2 dimensions.
With love, that third dimension is REALITY. So, it is actually your
ability to tell what is real in a relationship, versus what is
imagined. You love being part of a couple, but is this the person you
want to be in a couple with?
Look at the reality
of who this
person is, not who she/he wants to
be. Do you always interact over dinner and drinks? Meet under different
circumstances. Become part of each other’s lives. If that is not
happening, why not? Are you spending and enjoying time together? What
happens when you’re apart? Are you sure?
Trying to
differentiate your
love interest from your lust interest
is requires a level head and the courage to face the unpleasant. It
also requires maturity and the ability to take a step back and survey
the big picture. The result is more control and confidence as you
stride your way in love’s direction.
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