CLUE 7. How Do You See Each Other?
February 15, 2006 by gayla
Filed under Relationships
Infatuation: you live in a two-persons world. You two tend to neglect your family and pay little or no attention to your other friends. You turn a deaf ear to your teachers or your boss. You fail to do your homework. You lose interest in things that used to excite you. It becomes not only the most important thing in your world but the only thing that really matters to you. Your relationship tends to be exclusive. Your other friends feel left out, neglected, or ignored. Since this “romantic love” (infatuation) is of such central concern to you, nothing must be allowed to stand in its way. You think you are justified in giving up anything in favor of this amazing event that has happened so unexpectedly.
Infatuation is a vaccine that immunizes you against seeing anything wrong with the other person. You tend to idealize your partner. No one can tell you anything wrong about the object of your affections. At best, you won’t believe it. At worst, you may turn against the accuser in anger and rejection. If you are infatuated, you defend the other person against all critics. You just will not admit that he or she has any faults. You idealize not only each other, but also your situation. You two may have gross problems and obstacles to cope with – different religions, hopes, values, family, and cultural backgrounds. Danger signals by the dozen! Yet you are not concerned. You don’t even feel the need to think about these enormous hazards before marriage. You think that somehow it all just has to come out OK.
What makes us idealize so much? For one thing, we tend to be on our best behavior while courting. We show only our best side. Another reason is the “”halo effect,” or the tendency to judge the whole personality largely in terms of one or two highly admired qualities. One great trait or two can fool us into thinking that the whole person is great as well. And sex gets into the act, too. One study showed that male subjects who were sexually aroused rated the pictures of the same girls to be much more attractive than did the same males when they were not aroused. So in infatuation, you’ll tend to see what you want to see in the other person, rather than what is really there. LOVE IS NOT BLIND, INFATUATION IS.
IF IT’S LOVE, YOU ADMIT THEIR FAULTS BUT LOVE THE PERSON IN SPITE OF THEM. You see the person’s real merits and build on that. A mutual process is set in motion. Your love leads you to appreciate the best in the other. In turn, as the other person learns of your love, it brings out the best in her or him. You are frank to admit that the other person is not perfect. But you see so much to be admired and respected that you can live with those faults.
Real Love: as with infatuation, in real love the beloved may well be the most important person in the world to you. But there’s the big difference. In real love, you expand your world to include the beloved. If you really love each other, you don’t abandon or neglect your other relationships. Instead, you just add this wonderful new relationship to all the others you have. It becomes a plus, not a replacement. You still maintain good ties with your family, your friends, your teachers. You retain your interest in your work or studies – assuming that you had such an interest in the first place. Things that you liked to do before, you still like to do. Your world grows larger, not narrower.














