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When I was 24 years old I fell madly in love. I was
madly in love for three weeks, and then spent the next
30 years struggling to regain and maintain that
wonderful feeling. In the course of my long marriage and
in the 35 years I’ve been counseling individuals and
couples, I’ve learned what it takes to keep love alive
and what diminishes the feelings and experience of love
The concept of what it takes to keep love alive is
really quite simple, but not so easy to do. The simple
answer is this: love flows between two people whose
hearts are open to learning and to sharing love. The
hard part is keeping the heart open
Before I go more deeply into what does keep love alive,
I want to focus on what doesn’t work to keep love alive.
The bottom line of what diminishes or even eventually
kills loving feelings is controlling behavior
There are two major forms of controlling
behavior that always result in dampening loving
feelings:
1) Overt control such as anger, blame, criticism and
judgment, defensiveness, lecturing, teaching,
righteousness, physical violence, and so on.
2) Covert control such as withdrawal, withholding truth,
compliance, giving oneself up, resistance, denial, and
so on.
None of us like to be controlled. Most people, in the
face of controlling behavior, react with their own
controlling behavior. Controlling behavior diminishes
love because the focus is on changing the other person
rather than on changing yourself. When the intention of
your behavior is to change your partner’s feelings or
behavior, your behavior will often be experienced by
your partner as manipulative and/or rejecting. Trying to
change how someone feels about you or treats you with
overt forms of control feels manipulative and rejecting
to your partner, while covert forms of control such a
compliance or “niceness,” feels manipulative and
inauthentic to the other person.
The good news is that love can be kept alive, even in
long-term relationships. Love is kept alive when each
person is more devoted to learning about being loving to
themselves and to each other than to getting love. The
moment the intention is to get love, controlling
behavior takes over. In any given moment, we either want
to be loving and share love, or to get love. Trying to
get love diminishes love. Being loving and sharing love
keeps love alive. Being loving and sharing love means:
Each person learns to take responsibility for your own
feelings rather than making the other person responsible
for your feelings of worth, lovability, security,
happiness, joy or pain.
Each person has your own and your partner’s highest good
at heart. Each of you supports your own and your
partner’s joy and well being. Both of you are
considerate of the other person without giving
yourselves up.
Each person chooses to be honest and authentic about how
you feel and what you want and don’t want. You are
willing to speak your truth without blame or judgment.
Each person stays open to learning about your own and
your partner’s wants, needs, and fears, especially in
conflict.
What keeps love alive is each person’s willingness to do
whatever inner work is necessary to keep the heart open
to loving and learning. Controlling behavior is
motivated by fear – of loss of self and loss of other,
of engulfment and rejection, of smothering and
abandonment. When each person is willing to do the inner
work necessary to heal these fears, they are able to
keep their hearts open more and more of the time. Love
flows freely when hearts are open to loving and
learning.
Practicing the Six Steps of Inner Bonding that we teach
is a powerful way of doing this inner work. Partners who
both consistently practice this process discover the
great joy of keeping their love alive. Even when it
seems that there is no way to get love back, it does
come back when both partners are devoted to learning to
take loving care of themselves and to sharing their love
with each other.
We cannot give to another what we do not have within.
Inner Bonding is a process for creating so much love
within that it comes spilling out, to be joyously shared
with others.
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