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Cultivating Real Love What builds a great love affair? It's more than romance. Cultivating affection takes devotion, friendship and commitment.
I want to refer you immediately to a most extraordinary book: A Marriage Made in Heaven: A Love Story in Letters, by Vatsala and Ehud Sperling. It's a documentation of the building of love between a 35-year-old single woman living with her Hindu Brahmin family in India and a 40-year divorced American Jewish man living in Vermont. They found each other through a personals advertisement Ehud placed in an Indian newspaper. Their love developed through letters, and in them they arranged and defined the marriage they wanted—all without having met each other. Through the magic of the writing process, the Sperlings told me, "we were forced to think about things, clarifying ourselves. It was exhilarating." For the Sperlings, who live in Vermont with their son, a good marriage requires matching based on values. This is a significant shift from the romantic idea that is so dominant in our culture but unsustainable in real life. To rely exclusively on romance does not fulfill all one's needs, says Vatsala. "It leads you to fall into unconsciousness." There are other aspects of affection worth cultivating—devotion, friendship, commitment. In our narcissistic culture of surfaces, the Sperlings were searching for and found deeper connectedness. Based on their experience, Vatsala Sperling offers her list of Do's that go into a good relationship:
Psychology Today Online, 2 February 2004
Last Reviewed 23 Jul 2008 Article ID: 3238 |
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