Saturday 14 April 2012

Past the Fantasy to the Fairy Tale

Marriage.  For many single women, it's the ultimate goal to experience happiness. It's the handsome prince on the white horse sweeping her into his arms and cantering off into the sunset. It's the laughter. It's the butterflies when lips touch. It's the white lace and candlelight. Love is effortless.  Love is all consuming. Love is addictive.  Life doesn't really start until you find that special someone. Jerry McGuire's "You complete me!" strongly resonates with society, suggesting you aren't really whole until you find your soul mate.


I can honestly say that I didn't start out in this group of whimsical women. I did not have my wedding planned out at 16.  I never owned a bridal magazine until I had an engagement ring on my finger and knew I needed to pull something together. I always tried to keep my feet on the ground, not in the clouds. But, I must say the whirlwind of the wedding and honeymoon even brought out that naive hope in my heart of living "happily ever after" effortlessly.

If we subscribe to Hollywood's version of love, we believe we should "follow our hearts." Sounds so beautiful, doesn't it? How simple is that? We believe love should be effortless.  If it starts to become work, we are with the wrong person.  You shouldn't have to force love.  It should descend like fairy dust upon the fortunate few who are lucky enough to find it. And, if the feelings of love should fly like a bird from their shoulders, then we should follow it until it rests upon the next person to captivate our hearts. Just like you shouldn't keep hammering a square peg into a round hole, you shouldn't keep working at a relationship that offers you no reward.

We've been sold the biggest fantasy wrapped as reality. This is why half of all marriages fail. Our expectations are all out of wack! This is why we are never content and are always searching for our "happily ever after," trying on new relationships like new running shoes. We love them at first with the flashy new colors and cushion soles, but when they wear out, they are thrown out. Society has been trained to keep looking for the next best thing to make us feel good. Why wouldn't that translate to our relationships?

There are two types of love we will explore.  One is an addiction and one is an action.  One is a feeling and one is a choice. One is the fantasy and the other is the true fairy tale.


To be transparent, I will share some of my story. Pain is the fastest teacher, although learning things the hard way is not necessary if we would just follow God's principles. It spares us much heartache. When I was first married, I thought I was one of the few people who had been blessed with that special effortless love only a select group experience. I adored my new husband and he adored me. We had dated for a year with all the romantic bells and whistles needed to bring out all those fluffy feelings, while keeping Godly principles in place. When we were first married, making him breakfast in bed, designing romantic "getaways" using wall posters, ocean CDs, rolling chairs as airplanes, and a fake passport to tropical destinations, back rubs, and gazing at him adoringly as he slept all came so easily. But, like anything, what you focus on is what you cultivate. Over time, our focus shifted.

We had some pretty tough first few years with outside disappointments in career and health hitting our young marriage. Soon, because of our frustrations and failure, we focused on career over each other. We were so comfortable that our marriage was secure, we gave ourselves permission to neglect it - believing it would always be there. It was a slow fade that wasn't noticeable in the day-to-day living. It was seen in those moments when we gradually stopped doing what we used to do to keep our marriage strong. It was one less kiss goodnight.  It was one less conversation on the porch swing watching the sunset. It was one less morning cuddle. It wasn't that we weren't still loving, but we were putting our energy towards big goals, time was money, and we were forgetting to cherish what we had.


It all came to a head when we were forced to separate for about a year.  My career was going well and I wasn't ready to leave it, and his dreams were taking him to a foreign country to continue his education. We thought we would be o.k. in a long-distance marriage.  After all, this was the one area we had down. Our marriage could handle anything! This separation was only temporary until his training was over. Our overconfidence was our downfall.

At first, being alone was the toughest thing I had ever experienced.  We had married right out of college, and before that I always lived with roommates, so it was my first time living by myself. The  big house was so empty without him.  But, I loved him.  This was what he wanted, and I certainly wasn't about to hold him back because I was a needy wife. Besides, my job, the house we owned, and the life we had in Florida was our security blanket.  He wasn't ready to let it go anymore than I was. Career and financial security took the place, temporarily in our minds, of our commitment to always be together.

So, I stayed behind while he left the country. Unfortunately, our marriage was already worn down by years of hard work, jobs on different schedules, stress, and few hours spent together. It was much weaker than we knew.

To fill the void, I threw myself into work, marathon and triathlon training, and church activities. Then, to my surprise, as time past I found I could live life without him.  I developed new friendships that filled the void of his absence. I fought off depression with the endorphin highs of training. The pain of missing him in my heart gradually lessened, and finally ended. He also learned to live his life without me.  We became two separate people with separate friends and separate lives. When he came home, I suddenly realized I wasn't in love with him anymore and that he felt the same way. The feelings had grown cold. It was then that we were faced with a choice - give up or dig deep.


We chose to change our priorities and pursue love regardless of what we felt. I sold the house and gave up the amazing career. He found a new apartment where he was going to school that would accommodate our family of three crazy dogs, and I moved to live with him again in a new country. We sought counseling, confessed our wrongs, forgave each other, and shifted our focus back on our marriage. While I will never be so arrogant to say our marriage is rock solid as we are both sinful people who need to cling to Jesus to be the kind of spouse the other deserves, we are healing every day. And, the feelings are coming back. They aren't coming back like they did the first time, with the rush of new young passion, because there is now much pain between us. But, like Dickinson's "hope is a thing with feathers" softly singing, the sound is heard more perceptibility each day.


Here are seven things I have learned about love through this experience, additional reading, past relationships, and being married my first decade. If you want to really explore some of these concepts more in depth, I would recommend His Needs, Her Needs by Dr. Harley. Most of these concepts I have learned from his training. And all of them I'm still striving to improve upon.
  • Emotional love is not a unique once-in-a-lifetime treasure, it is nothing more than an addiction.  Rutgers University did a study of people who were going through break-ups.  They saw that they experienced withdrawals in the brain's nucleus accumbens and orbitalfrontal / prefrontal cortex region just like those coming off of cocaine and cigarette addictions.  So, when you feel that rush at the beginning of a new relationship, you really are high.  If separated from the source of the addiction, the feelings of emotional love do fade in time for most people if they give up all contact. Just like you can't be an alcoholic and still drink occasionally, you can't still allow the addictive relationship in your life. This is helpful information to those who are going through the heartache of a breakup.  Completely removing yourself from the other party is the most healthy way to heal. While you may always still love the person, the feelings of addiction and pain will dull with time. Just remember that you can't trust your feelings when it comes to addictive love. What your heart demands isn't always what is best for you.
  • Feeling emotional love is the natural result of meeting top emotional needs.  Most women, me included, have the same four top emotional needs: 1) Conversation 2) Affection 3) Recreational Companionship and 4) Sexual Fulfillment.  If you want to know the man's side of things or see the rest of the needs on the list, read the book or go to Dr. Harley's website at www.marriagebuilders.com for tons of free information and quizzes to uncover your top needs.  Conversation for me is my strongest need and is felt by a man's ability to communicate deep theological concepts and emotional feelings and experiences with me. Affection encompasses all those little touches seen in loving relationships - kissing, hugging, hand holding, and back rubs. Recreational Companionship is simply having fun together and spending quality time doing different activities. Sexual Fulfillment is pretty self explanatory. What I have learned is that while some of top emotional needs are very easy to keep for your husband alone based on common sense (affection and sexual fulfillment), some are not (conversation and recreational companionship). If a wife allows any other man to meet any of those needs, or if a husband allows another woman to meet his top needs, however innocent they are deemed to be, the marriage is open for trouble as affections can shift away from the marriage relationship to another person. Also, if the husband fails to meet those needs for his wife, she needs to immediately let him know what is happening and demand that he learn to meet them versus continue in silence and weakness. The onus to meet his needs also falls on her, and if she is failing he needs to tell her.
  • It is my responsibility for my husband to feel "in love" with me, and it is his responsibility for me to feel "in love" with him. This was a revolutionary concept for me. We cannot generate those feelings long-term without the other person's conscience effort. Beating yourself up for not feeling in love with someone is an unnecessary guilt trip. The feelings we feel are in direct proportion to how well our spouse has learned to meet those top emotional needs.  And, keeping our marriage strong is in direct proportion to how well we guard our top emotional needs from anyone else.  
  • New relationships naturally generate emotional love, but keeping that high going requires deposits in our proverbial "love bank."  In the beginning of relationships, we easily meet top emotional needs because we are focusing on that person, which generates the rush of feelings - that high. Think about it, we take our new interest out on dates; we talk to them, spend every waking moment with them, invest in them. We also gravitate to those people who are naturally good at meeting our top emotional needs and fill up our emotional love bank. Anytime our needs are meet, deposits in the love bank are made.  Any time someone hurts us with what Dr. Harley calls "love busters," withdrawals occur. Our emotional feelings are generated by how much "love" currency is in our banks. If that special someone makes lots of deposits and few withdrawals, we feel strong love for them.  However, if they continue to make many withdrawals and few deposits, the feelings fade.
  • Many times as marriage grows more comfortable, we stop investing so much. The security of the legal binding contract makes us lazy, and the embers begin to die. Do you want to feel deep love for someone? The feelings can come back, but you can rarely generate it by yourself, no matter how much you want to. They have to make deposits and you have to be open to accepting them. And, they have to learn to stop making withdrawals by changing hurtful habits.  The same responsibility is shared equally by both parties. If you follow this concept, the feelings of love remain strong.  If you don't, love fades and sometimes people find someone else to make deposits to fill the gaping hole in their emotional needs left unmet by their partner. You see the pattern occurring all around, but it is most clearly glamorized in Hollywood, where people follow the rush of new love from marriage to marriage. 
  • Even if that person does not want to learn to meet your emotional needs, this does not give you the excuse to allow others to meet them.  The choice and sin to open up your emotional needs to the services of others over your spouse still falls on you. Instead, teach your spouse how to meet your needs.  Seek counseling from someone who can teach these concepts.  Most men in particular like a connect-the-dots concept of love.  If they have a checklist that they feel is manageable, which you should provide them, they can see how to fix the problem. You also need to get a checklist from them to hold yourself accountable to meeting their needs as they learn to meet yours. It may sound unromantic, but it is extremely effective. If both parties feel there is a mutual benefit to the exercise, they will embrace it.  
  • You also learn that you must only do those things that have the enthusiastic agreement of the other person.  If you follow this rule, no one ever feels that they are unwillingly being drug along with a martyrdom-like attitude and resentment never develops. A win-win solution can always be achieved, it just may take more time to discover it. 
We have thoroughly explored how to generate the feeling of being in love.  Believe it or not, it really is that unromantic. At first, the concept was tough for me to accept.  I liked my version of love - that magical idea that there is one person who is my soul mate, who completes me. I thought I would feel the butterflies forever. The concept that a person's talent to meet my emotional needs can evoke those once sacred feelings I thought were reserved for the holy grail of relationships seemed to make it less special. One plus one just equals two. Meeting top emotional needs and not making withdrawals equals feelings of romantic love. But, if we can learn to dispense with the fairy dust and appreciate the science of it, the butterflies are no less real, just predictable. And, the knowledge can be liberating. Successful fulfilling marriages, not just those staying together because of the children or religious commitments, have learned this equation and practice these things daily to keep the love bank currency full and generate the in-love emotion. Marriages where both parties are feeling the high of being in love, where no action is taken without the enthusiastic agreement of the other person, and that contain people who have their top needs met don't end in divorce. It's just that simple.

There is also the Biblical version of love.  I really fleshed this concept out in my previous post, but I will highlight it again here. This love is a choice, not a feeling. What we've already explored ties in well with this.  If you do the work for the other person to generate those in-love feelings in them, you are following the definition of love that God set out.  Long-lasting Biblical love isn't something that materializes like a genie from a lamp.  It is something that is the end product of 1 Corinthians 13.  If your love "seeks not its own" (1 Cor. 13:5) you will work to learn how to meet the needs of your spouse, and they will do the same. You will take responsibility for them feeling in love with you and generate actions based on this, and you will do whatever it takes to fight for their heart. If you truly seek to love them God's way, you will confess your wrongs, forgive, and turn away from anything that hurts your partner for "love covers a multitude of sins" (1 Peter 4:8).  Men will give up selfishness and "love your wives, as Christ also loved the church and gave Himself up for her" (Ephesians 5:25). Women will give up control and will "let the wife see that she respects her husband" (Ephesians 5:33). Respect, coincidentally, is a top emotional need for men. Seeking God first and developing His character helps us to learn to love like this, as He heals the deepest wounds in our hearts and relationships.


There is nothing wrong with seeking the feeling of being in love.  Without it, you wouldn't get married. God designed this emotion for our benefit. It's fine to be high on the love of your spouse.  But, just like a person doesn't just suddenly wake up and feel good when they run a marathon with no training, people don't stay in the bliss of addictive love without daily actions to keep this flame from dying out. Like a frog in a slow-warming frying pan, you don't realize how far away you drifted from each other until the water is boiling. By then, it's often too late unless radical changes and efforts are made. If we do let the embers die, we then learn that true love is a choice to continue to unlock the mysteries of the other person's heart, regardless of the benefits to our own selfishness. Love is a purposeful commitment whether we profit from the feelings or not.

This is the love that God gives freely to us. We would be in a lot of trouble if God's love was based upon our actions versus His choice! This is the love He expects us to give to Him and to each other.  This kind of love continues determinedly on the same course, setting the sails to accommodate the feelings no matter the direction. With God's help, may we all set the sail toward His standards, His example, His heart. May our marriage be what He designed it to be - earthly examples of His perfect love for His bride the church. If marriage, one of the few things created in the perfection of Eden and brought into our current sinful existence, can triumph by God's grace - we can better reflect God's love for His people in our small microcosmic image of His much bigger love story to the world.

 "As the young man rejoices over the bride, so shall your God rejoice over you." Isaiah 62:5

Sunday 8 April 2012

Paper House Love

He leaned against my passenger door and asked for a ride. In Grenada, it's very common to give rides and almost cultural to pick someone up. I had just dropped off some missionary friends on the street when he approached my stopped car. He was 25, good looking, well-groomed and seemed polite. I agreed to take him as far as I was going, he jumped in, and we sped off. Within 5 seconds of our trip, he was propositioning me.

Like a slick used car salesmen, he told me he would give me a good time like I had never experienced before. He leaned in and gave me a resume of all the things he could do. He told me I was the most beautiful woman he had ever seen. I could feel his breath on my neck and took that moment to take my attention off the road, look him in the eyes, and tell him firmly that if he didn't stay on his side of the car, things wouldn't go well for him. He seemed taken aback that his charm wasn't working on a complete stranger and asked why I was rejecting him while thankfully settling back in his seat.

"I'm married..." I stammered, still shocked this was happening. I am used to subtle advances from the men on the island - a compliment here or there, a yell from a group of boisterous guys when I jog by, an offer to be overly helpful. The culture is much more passionate on many fronts, and most of the guys like to yell compliments at women here. But, this was the first time I had been brazenly asked for sex.

"What's that got to do with anything? No one has to know!"

"But I love my husband. There is no way I will do what you're asking."

Then, he said something strangely profound. "What's love got to do with any of this?"



In Grenada, where having sex with a stranger is seen as slightly more intimate than a handshake by many locals, where girls are mothers by the time they are in high school because they listen to these guys, where whatever feels good is the best option... I have to wonder, why would I expect them to know any different? Do we? Maybe adultery is not as accepted in mainstream circles, but the root of it... hurting someone we claim to love to satisfy our selfishness is blatantly seen and apathetically accepted in both Christian and secular circles.

Satan has twisted the word love around into so many versions, the truth becomes a needle in a haystack of false definitions. Making "love" means going through the motions to achieve a feeling of personal pleasure. We live in our own amusement park. We may get in the line of our favorite ride for a while, but eventually it becomes boring, the line is too long, we are tired of climbing the stairs to get to the top of the tower, and we look for the next thing to satisfy our appetites. Whatever feels good, that's the ride we want to try next. The only thing love means to us is what we love most at the time. Why would loving someone mean we should change our behavior to consider them? Why would loving someone negate our primal urge to put self first and do whatever makes us happy?

It's not really so different in the US, or anywhere else in the world. The problem of self is why the divorce rate is just as high for Christians as non-Christians. You love them as long as they love you correctly. You love them as long as they meet a certain physical or emotional standard. You love them as long as you get something out of it that makes it worth your while. If it looks like someone else can do a better job of making you happy, then you call up one of the hundreds of divorce lawyers in the area and jump on the next thrill ride of endorphins. You enjoy the thrill of the new car smell until you realize that person is just as imperfect as the one you left. We treat people we "love" like items that wear out.


We do the same to God. We love Him as long as it's comfortable. We love Him as long as we can get the emotional rush or benefit in some way from following His path. We love Him as long as He doesn't ask us to give up everything. But, when things get hard, we question His love.  After all, we go to church every week.  We give our tithe. We drop a tract on the table for the waitress. We've put in our dues.  Why does He allow all this pain in our lives? How quickly we forget the life that Jesus lived was not pleasant, long, or painless.  If the Savior sweat drops of blood for us, can we expect anything less for our journey? Yet, we live as though our happiness, not God's glory, was not just the expectation but the rule.

The Bible gives a very different version for love. If you do a search for the world "love" you will find about 500 references in the Bible. It was obviously an important topic to God, which is why Satan seeks so forcefully to distort it. Here are just a few of God's definitions:
  • And you shall love him as yourself (Lev. 19:34)
  • You shall love the LORD your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your strength. (Deut. 6:5)
  • Love is as strong as death (Song of Solomon 8:6)
  • Many waters cannot quench love, Nor can the floods drown it. (Song of Solomon 8:7)
  • I will heal their backsliding, I will love them freely, For My anger has turned away from him. (Hosea 14:4)
  • He will quiet you with His love (Zephaniah 3:17)
  • For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life. (John 3:16)
  • Greater love has no one than this, than to lay down one’s life for his friends. (John 15:13)
  • But God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us. (Romans 5:8)
  • Love does no harm to a neighbor; therefore love is the fulfillment of the law. (Romans 13:10)
  • Knowledge puffs up, but love edifies. (1 Cor 8:1)
  • But have not love, it profits me nothing (1 Cor 13:3)
  • Love suffers long and is kind; love does not envy; love does not parade itself, is not puffed up; (1 Cor 13:4)
  •  Love does not behave rudely, does not seek its own, is not provoked, thinks no evil; (1 Cor 13:5) 
  • Love does not rejoice in iniquity, but rejoices in the truth;  (1 Cor 13:6) 
  • Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. (1 Cor 13:7) 
  • Love never fails. (1 Cor 13:8) 
  •  And now abide faith, hope, love, these three; but the greatest of these is love. (1 Cor 13:13)
  • Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ also loved the church and gave Himself for her (Ephesians 5:25)
  • So husbands ought to love their own wives as their own bodies; he who loves his wife loves himself (Ephesians 5:28)
  • But above all these things put on love, which is the bond of perfection. (Colossians 3:14)
  • Husbands, love your wives and do not be bitter toward them. (Colossians 3:19)
  • Labor of love (1 Thess 1:3)
  • Putting on the breastplate of faith and love (1 Thess 5:8)
  • For whom the LORD loves He chastens (Hebrews 12:6)
  • And above all things have fervent love for one another, for “love will cover a multitude of sins.” (1 Peter 4:8)
  • By this we know love, because He laid down His life for us. And we also ought to lay down our lives for the brethren. (1 John 3:16)
  • But whoever has this world’s goods, and sees his brother in need, and shuts up his heart from him, how does the love of God abide in him? (1 John 3:17)
  • My little children, let us not love in word or in tongue, but in deed and in truth. (1 John 3:18)
  • Beloved, let us love one another, for love is of God; and everyone who loves is born of God and knows God. (1 John 4:7)
  • He who does not love does not know God, for God is love. (1 John 4:8)
  • There is no fear in love; but perfect love casts out fear, because fear involves torment. But he who fears has not been made perfect in love. (1 John 4:18)
  • For this is the love of God, that we keep His commandments. And His commandments are not burdensome. (1 John 5:3)
Wow!  This love focuses not on what we get but on what we give.  It's a verb, not a feeling. It is hard work! It requires sacrifice, forgiveness, death to self, obedience, putting others first, endurance, suffering, labor, giving up our lives... It is powerful. It is painful. It is messy. No wonder we chose to say it so casually! We would rather label it with our definition than God's!

The Bible says God is love. So, when we mar the meaning of the word we are redefining the very character of who God is. That's the goal of the enemy... to make sure we don't really understand God, because if we truly knew how much He loved us and what He endured to be with us, we wouldn't be able to stay away from Him.

I'm writing these thoughts as the entire world celebrates Easter Sunday.  What a sobering thought! God humbled Himself to come in the flesh as a baby, to endure the rebuke and abandonment of His closest friends, and to end up willingly dying an agonizing death on the cross because He loved me even when I didn't love Him. I gave Him nothing, yet He gave me everything! If we all followed that definition of love, our world would be a much different place. But, people would rather have their hands full of the benefits of love and drop them when they get painful or heavy, than have their hands pierced by the sacrifice of it.

Love is also what defines us as Christ's disciples.  Jesus said, "By this all will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another.” John 13:35.  This is why our understanding of love is so important. It is how the world will know that we are His.  If Satan can get us to take a watered-down, easy-to-swallow pill of what love is, than our witness is over. We try to sell the world a paper house in a rainstorm.  They see right through us. But, show them the blood-stained nail-pierced-hands-of-Christ kind of love, and you will shake them to their core. That love is rarely seen but when it is, it changes people.

God is searching for men and women who love fearlessly to do His final work. If I am honest with myself, I will admit freely that I have no idea how to love Him or others the way He loves me.  But, daily He gives me opportunities to grow in this area. Minute by minute, I have to ask Him to help me surrender my natural desire to seek personal pleasure and comfort at the expense of others. He offers to teach me His kind of love.  If you're tired of the world's definition, He offers this to you as well. And, the more we learn, the more we realize the kind of love He has for us. God doesn't offer us the paper house love, He offers us the diamond castle more beautiful than any fairy tale. It is our choice which version we want to cling to.  I'll take the castle!  

"For I am persuaded that neither death nor life, nor angels nor principalities nor powers, nor things present nor things to come,  nor height nor depth, nor any other created thing, shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord." Romans 8:38-39