How To Know If You Know Longer Feel In Love With Your Spouse
Do you no longer feel
"in love" with your spouse
I had an “aha” moment the other day when talking to a
client about finding a solution to her marital problem. She had a
laundry list of “things” he did to irritate her. None of which were worth
ending a marriage and dismantling a family.
Then she says to me, “I’m not in love with
him.” And it hit me, she was not able to see the solution to the problem
because she was basing her desire to divorce on a feeling…the feeling of
romantic love. I immediately started humming that old song, “What’s Love Got to
do With It” and wondering why people expect to marry and feel constantly “in
love.”
There is a difference between romantic love and committed love.
- Passionate love is defined by Hatfield as a “state of intense longing for union with another.”
- Companionate love is the affection we feel for those with whom our lives are deeply entwined.”
When we first meet and fall in love we have
butterflies in our tummy, long to spend every moment with the object of our
love and are consumed by thoughts of him/her. The problem with
romantic/passionate love is that it doesn’t last. It is a phase we move through
on our way to committed/companionate love.
The longer we are with someone the less
intense we feel, the less consumed we become because it is only natural that
life and the realities of living a productive life begin to take precedence
again. The problem in today’s society is that, some expect romantic/passionate
love to last forever and when those feelings are gone they want to move on and
find it again.
They either don’t want to settle for
committed/companionate love or don’t understand that, that is what love is…a
series of phases we go through that lead to a love that leaves us with feelings
of sincere concern and caring for another person.
We hear more about the experience of
romantic/passionate love. It is well covered in movies, books and the media. It
is understandable that a person would be confused about the state of their
marriage when they pass through the initial phase of butterflies and weak knees
to deep concern and caring.
Weak knees and butterflies are so much more
fun than deep concern and caring, I fully understand that. I can also
understand the quest for such a love but what we all need to understand is
this…we have a choice, live our lives constantly seeking romantic/passionate
love or reveling in the contentment that comes from deep concern and caring for
another.
The next time you think to yourself, “I no
longer love him/her” answer the questions below:
1. Do I respect his/her values
and belief system?
2. Do I want him/her to feel
good?
3. Am I concerned about
his/her well-being?
4. Are his/her feelings
important to me?
5. Do I appreciate the things
he/she does for me?
6. Do I want to do things for
him/her?
7. Is he/she good to me?
8. Do I want to be good to
him/her?
If you can answer these questions with a yes
then you have moved from romantic/passionate love to committed/companionate
love. You are right where you are supposed to be! You’ve come to a place in
your relationship where finding meaning in simple things and shared values is
more important than feeling butterflies in your tummy.
I read an article recently by a woman who had
divorced her husband because she did not want to settle for a “companionate
relationship.” I wondered to myself if this woman would ever realize that she
had thrown away the most valuable thing she would ever have. You see, when you
get to that phase of love, you’ve found “true love.”
Good write up.
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