Love can influence us to do all kinds of crazy things, can't it?
In the best case scenario, love motivates us to move outside our comfort zones into areas that feed emotional, spiritual, mental, and physical development. And in the worst case it can fuel our
desire to hurt, injure, or destroy another, or even ourselves.
I am particularly interested in love when it causes couples to marry, because married couples, often those who are no longer "drunk" on love, are the majority of my therapy clients. They enter my office feeling betrayed by love and by each other, wondering if they can ever trust their feelings again.
How can love, such a welcoming and powerful host, "abandon" us once we accept its enticing invitation? How is it that love can, over time, peel back the illusion to reveal a partner who is not who we thought they were?
Well, it is my assertion that love does not do these things, rather, it is our conditioned way of thinking about love that creates these thoughts.
Real love, when practiced regularly, does not sneakily reveal uncomfortable truths about our partner. It instead can show us layers we did not know were there--levels of history and experience that continue to be molded and reinterpreted. Real love reveals not lies or flaws, but vulnerability, which is essential to creating closeness, trust, and safety.
What does this have to do
with whether or not a couple should marry? It has everything to do with it! Couples have the option of marrying for reasons that, over time, either work or don't work, but I notice they often find themselves in the latter position, sadly. Fortunately this outcome is preventable. There are a lot of different reasons why a couple "should" get married, but in this article I intend to highlight the one reason I have found that leads couples to real love over time.
Click HERE to continue reading the feature article.