"Have you ever been in love?"
A simple enough question, I guess, yes or no. Yet when I man I'd met on
an online dating service asked me I was stumped for an answer.
I had never been asked that question before. I've been married three times and was what I would have called in love
with all of them at the time we tied the knot. The man asking the
question had been married once, for nearly 40 years, to one woman, and
had been at her side every day as she suffered from Alzheimer's until
she died. That was what he meant by love, and I was not one to argue. It
is the stuff fairy tales are made of, and rom-coms from Hollywood, and
probably a large percentage of the fiction we read. Happily ever after,
and then you close the book and never ask what happens next.
It looks so easy when other people do it, but on the other hand there
are many of us who struggle with the concept for our whole lives. It
would be so pleasant to have a partner for life, someone to banter with
over coffee every morning, some to care for us, observe our triumphs,
soothe us through difficulties, be in love with us forever. In my
experience marriage itself had something to do with the loss of that "in
love" feeling--time, familiarity, a growing awareness of the reality of
the other and knowledge that he had the same awareness of you. My
dating friend told me that he had been his wife's whole world through
their marriage, and in my eyes she was fortunate that he never abused
that devotion. He is a wise and courageous person. How do I, who lived a
rootless, sometimes reckless, often self-centered, and always questing
and questioning existence, respond to a person so sincere, so profound
in his conventionality? All I could say was "I've had a different sort
of life."
He chooses to believe that my last husband, whom I was with for 25 years
and who died of cirhossis of the liver, was the love of my life. I
would not say that. So I look back--was there a love of my life at all,
or am I still seeking him? There were passionate affairs, complex
adjustments, and there was a layer of love over all, but is there one
person I would characterize as the love of my life?
To most people, this seems to be so easy. You are young, you fall in love, you commit for life, and the two of you suffer and grow together through life's highs and lows. You find ways to keep the illusion alive--the illusion that it is the same for always, that the magic hasn't paled or altered over time. I'm trying not to be judgmental here, so I must assume that in most cases it is not an illusion at all.
But the question came from an intimate friend, a man I respected. How to break it to
him, what my life has been, how different the experience of love itself
has been from my family of origin on. It's too much to answer lightly. I
was in love, but I was in another world. and I don't mean the soap
opera either. I was in "The Guiding Light," and in "The Edge of Night,"
but when I was in love I was in another world. Something inside tells me I haven't found the big one yet, or that I didn't know it when I saw it, but that there is still a chance. Every birthday that comes around makes that happenstance less of a possibility. I have learned to love myself in a broader way as time passes, to go through my days cherishing myself if possible as much as a lover would, and to be open in case something or someone comes along who would be that joyous companion for the rest of my days.
Yes, I have been in love. But probably not the way you mean.
I'll be thinking of this post all day long. Big, big question--with complicated answer(s.)
ReplyDeleteAfter reading this i sat and looked out the window for long minutes and then had the same thought as Elly. I'll be thinking about it all day, at least.
ReplyDeleteAbstract concepts can tickle my brain forever and I am on board with your thoughts. A friend told me a few years ago I was "selfish" to enjoy being alone and I am still cogitating on that statement. Before my last marriage I told friends it was either third time is a charm or three strikes and I am out.
ReplyDeleteDepends on how you look at things. I can't imagine calling it selfish not to be married...oh well.
ReplyDeleteI think there is a little of that in the zeitgeist, because i have thought it of myself. I love , no ..i need solitude. I almost mentioned that above. I feel flinty if i am surrounded by people too much. Is that even a word..flinty? I guess i should look that up.. i breathe shallow, i feel a little on edge, i need to work and i can't with people around.
ReplyDeleteAnd I thought I was the only one!
ReplyDeleteLike Lucy, I am an introvert. I enjoy the company of friends--usually one or two at a time--or groups for only a short time--but I am most at ease when alone. I was married once--not well suited for it. We're close friends again now--both introverts. Love? I think it's probably overrated.
ReplyDeleteGlad to hear from so many of you--I hope that everybody who reads the blog will comment. It's a touchy subject and I really wanted to nail it. Your comments indicate that maybe I did!
ReplyDeleteLiving a lifetime with someone is notoriously hard, and lots of couples manage to make each other miserable for decades. I've been lucky, but calling our marriage of 34 years "wedded bliss" would be an exaggeration.
ReplyDeleteI'm currently reading "The Buried Giant". One of its most touching aspects is the deep affection between an elderly couple.
http://www.amazon.com/dp/030727103X/?tag=googhydr-20&hvadid=60263254608&hvpos=1t1&hvexid=&hvnetw=g&hvrand=8591940393707383567&hvpone=&hvptwo=&hvqmt=b&hvdev=c&ref=pd_sl_2tgk7k6743_b
I am probably older than most who have commented here. And my life has been full and rich. I married and divorced early (in my 20s) and lived solo for more than 30 years. I loved the single life. It was the perfect life for me. I traveled widely, earned a few college degrees, wrote books, edited newspapers, shared deep friendships, developed loving relationships. then, in my mid-50s I met a man I did not want to live without. The feeling was mutual. We married. Together we have traveled widely, bought and sold real estate, supported each other through medical emergencies, moved from one coast to the other, and now we're writing travel memoirs together. And what I've learned from all this is there is more than one "perfect." The life I'm leading now is perfect for me. Just as perfect as the solo life I led for many years.
ReplyDeleteAnd I am deeply grateful ...
Sunny Lockwood