Be in Love Forever: 5 Simple Steps
Be in Love Forever: 5 Simple Steps
Be in Love Forever: 5 Simple Steps
All of us are searching for love that will last “’til death do we part” but secretly
believe that passionate love and “hot sex” are doomed to die as soon as a
relationship moves out of the romance phase. We are told to settle for “mature”
love and forget trying to recapture the feeling we remember when we first fell in
love. Even most marriage and family counselors believe that passionate love
can’t last. I’m here to tell you that you can be “in love” forever.
I can’t tell you how many people have told their partner, “I love you, but I’m
not In Love with you.” Whether you are on the saying or receiving end of such a
statement there is a sad, cold feeling that runs through you. You are aware that
something precious is no longer alive in your life. But as a psychotherapist,
marriage and family counselor, I can tell you that you can keep that “in love”
feeling forever. I don’t mean every moment of every day for 40, 50, or 60 years.
But I do mean that love doesn’t have to leave a relationship.
There are reasons love dies and there are ways you can insure that it doesn’t
happen to you. Here’s how.
1. Recognize that old ways of viewing love actually kill off love.
Some believe that love is all about sex, romance, and the indefinable
“chemistry” that magically occurs between two people. No one can really
understand it, promote it, or make it grow. Benjamin Franklin, who was so
astute about many things, was mystified by love. It said it is “changeable,
transient, and accidental.”
In this view, you just have to let love find you, be grateful when it
comes, and understand that it can leave as quickly as it came.
Others see love as bargain that two people make in order to get the
things they want. He’ll make the money and she’ll stay at home and raise
the children. Or if you’re a modern couple, she goes off to the hospital
and treats her patients and he takes care of the kids and goes to school
board meetings. Very practical, but not very romantic!
Some, more historically inclined, look at love as a sentimental social
custom created by the minstrels of the thirteenth-century France. We
longed for love and agonized when we were away from our lover. This
kind of romantic love, it was believed, worked best when the lover was
unavailable.
What these, and many other approaches, have in common is that they
don’t allow love to grow, deepen, and last through time. They kill love,
rather than nurture it.
The first stage of love, the lust phase, is driven by the sex hormones
testosterone and estrogen – in both men and women.
In the second stage of love, the attraction phase, you are truly love-struck
and can think of little else. Scientists think that three main neurotransmitters
are involved in this stage; adrenaline, dopamine and serotonin.
During the third stage of love, the attachment phase, couples stay together
long enough for them to have and raise children. Scientists think there might
be two major hormones involved in this feeling of attachment; oxytocin and
vasopressin.
One of the most articulate proponents of this new conception of love is Dr.
Sue Johnson. I met Dr. Johnson at the recent Evolutionary of Psychotherapy
Conference. Some of the most articulate and well-known people in the field
were there including Aaron Beck, Deepak Chopra, Robert Sapolsky, and
Andrew Weil were there.
However, it was Sue Johnson, who really knocked my socks off and
opened my eyes to the true nature of love. In her newly released book, Hold
Me Tight: Seven Conversations for a Lifetime of Love, she says:
“We now know that love is, in actuality, the pinnacle of evolution, the most
compelling survival mechanism of the human species. Not because it
induces us to mate and reproduce. We do manage to mate without love! But
because love drives us to bond emotionally with a precious few others who
offer us safe haven from the storms of life. Love is our bulwark, designed to
provide emotional protection so we can cope with the ups and downs of
existence.
4. The key to love is our drive for attachment.
It was the British psychiatrist, John Bowlby, who first discovered the
critical importance of emotional bonding in our conception of love.
Most of us have never heard of Bowlby. Here’s what Sue Johnson
says about him. “Let me be honest. As a psychologist and as a
human being, if I had to give an award for the single best set of ideas
anyone had ever had, I’d give it to John Bowlby hands down over
Freud or anyone else in the business of understanding people.”
What Bowlby saw clearly was that the quality of the connection to
loved ones and early emotional deprivation is key to the development
of personality and to an individual’s habitual way of connecting with
others.
This means staying open to your partner even when you have
doubts and feel insecure. It often means being willing to struggle to
make sense of your emotions so these emotions are not so
overwhelming. You can step back from disconnection and can tune in
to your lover’s attachment cues.
This means tuning in to your partner and showing that his or her
emotions, especially attachment needs and fears, have an impact on
you. It means accepting and placing a priority on the emotional
signals your partner conveys and sending clear signals of comfort
and caring when your partner needs them. Sensitive responsiveness
always touches us emotionally and calms us on a physical level.