When we insist that our partners show their love the way we want them
to, we might be avoiding having a truly intimate relationship. We may
be having a hard time appreciating how our partner expresses their love
and surrendering to the love they do offer.
We can feel deprived when our partners fail to demonstrate their love
the way we want them to. Maybe they don’t
remember our anniversary or
bring us flowers or cook us our favorite meal or say nice things just
for the heck of it. Would it be so hard for them to just do the things
we want?
Maybe it would be hard for them, though I’m not saying they shouldn’t
try. But if we are complaining about what we are not getting without
appreciating what we do receive, we are rejecting a very intimate part
of them. And we don’t want to reject them! We love them. We love that
they love us. We just want them to express their love differently – the
way we want it.
How a person loves might be the most intimate expression of who
they are; when this is not embraced, it can feel like a profound
rejection.
Our Fantasies about Love
We grow up with fantasies of what it will be like to find our
life-partner. These ideas or fantasies about love are often based on our
experiences with love growing up in our families and culture.
Starting in infancy, we develop within the minute-to-minute
interactions with our families. How we are loved by our caretakers lays
the foundation for our sense of ourselves in relation to others—how we
feel loved. As we grow up, we watch how our parents
love each other; this provides us with our first model of an intimate,
romantic love. Later still, we are saturated with cultural
representations of love: love songs, TV shows, movies and the like.
When the reality of our relationship doesn’t match our fantasies, we
can become disappointed. We might assume that we are with the wrong
person. Or we might doubt whether they love us at all – after all, if
they really loved us wouldn’t they ________________ (fill in the blank)?
There is always an element of fantasy in romantic relationships.
Romance engages us at the core of our being – reaching all the way back
to infancy – so it is going to awaken some pretty irrational stuff.
But if we want true intimacy, it won’t be found with someone who
fulfills our fantasies or fits into our ideas of an “ideal” partner.
True intimacy requires recognition of a separate other person with their
own thoughts, feelings, desires— and ways of demonstrating love.
Pam and Jake
Pam complains that Jake doesn’t show her love. Jake bridles at this
remark enumerating all the ways he shows his love. He tells of all the
times he has dropped what he was doing to run to Pam’s aid, even when he
knew that Pam was just being a hypochondriac. Pam agrees that she can
always count on him but insists that he never tells her how amazing she
is and how he admires her.
Pam always imagined finding a man who would find her beautiful and intelligent.
As a young girl, she imagined being showered with the kind and
thoughtful words she heard from her parents, but this time from a
charming man. Her family demonstrated their love with words.
Pam finds herself with a man who is not a big talker—he prefers to
demonstrate his love through actions. When questioned, Pam readily
agrees that she is loved by Jake, but she still feels this niggling
absence that makes her question whether Jake is the right guy for her.
Intimacy and the Surrender to Love
Surrendering to how a partner loves us means we value their
viewpoint—we honor the legitimacy of how they intend their actions or
words to be received. Anyone can send us flowers or give us a compliment
without loving us. In love, it is the intention behind the act that
matters.
When we sympathize with our partner’s perspective, finding it to be
as valid as our own, we expand our sense of what is acceptable—we are
changed. The more we learn about our partner and value how they see
things, the more we take them in and the greater our sense of intimacy.
Surrendering to how our partner loves does not diminish us; we don’t
abandon our own perspective. Love is additive—we experience growth by
expanding our sense of what it means to be loved.
ABOUT AUTHOR
David Braucher, L.C.S.W., Ph.D., is a psychotherapy supervisor and member of the faculty of The William Alanson White Institute’s Psychoanalytic and Intensive Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy Programs. He is on the Editorial Board of the journal, Contemporary Psychoanalysis, and Executive Editor of this blog, Contemporary Psychoanalysis in Action. He has lectured at the NYU School of Social Work. He writes on relationships and is in private practice in The West Village in Manhattan.
Contemporary Psychoanalysis in Action,
edited by David Braucher, PhD, Susan Kolod, PhD and Melissa Ritter,
PhD, is under the auspices of Contemporary Psychoanalysis, the journal
of the William Alanson White Institute.
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