A realization
Sun, 28 Aug 2005 Filed in:
Journal
Something that’s been puzzling me a
lot lately is my reaction to possible romantic relationships. When
I was younger I remember wanting to meet someone very much, and
getting into relationships almost as quickly as they became
available. But I realized in the end that either my personality is
not very amenable to living with another person (something I still
think may be true), or I’ve been finding women who don’t really
want the kind of person I am. These days I’m averse to any sort of
relationship other than friendship. When things start to get
closer, I pull back, sometimes harshly so. The mere thought of it
depresses me, and I find myself getting unhappier the more things
might develop with someone. It has led me to believe that I might
have been made for the hermit’s life, spending most of my time with
thoughts and other interests. But last night a realization struck
me with all the force of the truth, and I think I understand now
why I’ve been avoiding it — other than the usual reasons of fear
and uncertainty. What I was thinking about was love. Most of the
poems I’ve written about love start with the thought of a
particular person (or persons), with real inspiration coming from
the translation into the spiritual dimension. I’m thrilled by the
reality of love, and find my happiness wherever it occurs: love for
beauty, computers, ideas, people, food, etc. It doesn’t really
matter what prompts my experience of love, since they all seem to
share common traits that I connect back to their origin in God. In
this way I experience God through my love of the world. It’s been
my life’s ambition to learn how to love all things. This is no easy
task — many things still bother me and I wish for them to change,
as if to wipe them from my experience of life — but month by month
I learn more, and move further down that road. Life as I experience
it today is incomparably richer than what I knew as a young person.
It’s a labor I dream of, and I feel as if untold worlds await me
behind each new moment. I describe this as a pursuit of universal
love, or true love; but the world’s [[romantic.ideal][romantic
ideal]] seems to credit only exclusive loves. Everyone I talk to
wants love, but often they want only one or a few forms: love of a
person, career, family, etc. When I talk about universal love, some
suggest that it’s impossible for mortal beings, or flatly state
they don’t want such a thing! Of those who want it, many retain the
thought that it lies always beyond reach. But I intend to find this
universal love, this complete vision, or die having made of my life
an earnest attempt. Yet this also where I run into problems with
those who want the typical ideal. The modern romantic ideal
envisions one person as the primary focus of our capacity to love
(with a possible allowance for children, though some relationships
even suffer when children appear, because it distracts from that
singular mutual focus). In essence, one person becomes the “sink”
of the other’s best energies, and they the “source” for
replenishing them. By feeding each other in this way, the
relationship perpetuates with enough excess that some degree of
social involvement is possible. Too much external involvement,
however, deprives one side of the pair of what they need to
replenish that lost fuel. One cannot be the focus of another who is
too much outwardly occupied. This is the situation of an “unloved
spouse”, who must turn to others to get what he or she needs. This
dynamic is what I grew up believing in, and I used to see no
problem with it. I was even eager to participate. But I found in
the end *that my dream of universal love is incompatible with the
romantic ideal*, and I am unwilling to give up that dream. Why is
it so essential to me? Because I believe that if I can discover
true love for all things, then I can believe — with all my mind, my
heart and soul — that God loves all things in me. This is a form of
my quest for God, and it seems unreasonable and unjust for a person
to ask me to give up that quest. There are things we should never
ask of one another. The thing is, I have many loves — programming,
reading, thinking, photography, chess, and more — and almost all of
them require significant amounts of uninterrupted time to achieve
fruition. This fact has been called “selfish”, because I demand
time to myself to complete what I love. (To those who’ve said it,
my being “selfish” is usually paying attention to things other than
themselves — though they rarely see how selfish this claim of
selfishness is. If a man can never expect time to himself, how are
people to get anything done?) Under pressure to be less “selfish”,
I have bent to the ideal before: the belief that all my love and
attention should go to one person. But when my love turned again to
other things, the word “selfish” returned, and with it various
forms of jealousy: anger, resentment, vindictiveness. I’ve heard my
laptop called “the other woman” more than once, because I chose to
focus on it rather than the person I was with. When they’re around
they want it all! absolute focus and attention; an exclusive love
that ignores every other thing. Exclusive love, however, is the
anti-thesis of universal love. Rather than making progress in
learning to love all things, I experienced a constant pressure to
love one thing above all. However much I’ve heard the desire
expressed to watch my spirit to fly, I’ve felt an unconscious wish
to ground me. At times, it even seemed others wished to become my
God: a focus of worship, origin of laws, setter of standards. If I
happened to choose one of God’s laws above their interests, it
provoked anger. Faced with this demand to relinquish my universal
dream, I have at times relented. I’ve bent as far as I could, until
the bitterness of despair was too great. My dream and my romantic
love became at odds: pursuing my passion began to hurt the one I
loved. How can I withhold my heart in this way and still have
something left to give? What in the world was being requested of
me?? But I can no more sacrifice my soul’s life than I could
violate my integrity in the name of a just cause. They want a
passion from me that asks for the muting of all other passions.
Unsurprisingly, I became more and more dead inside as this
progressed. I stop writing, creating, seeing people. My life became
an endless hope for escape. I could neither move nor stop. My
existence began to decay. And when things ended this way, I faced a
terrible realization (this is what I became conscious of last
night): *Where did all my love go*? I spent years trying to devote
the majority of my heart and soul to one person after another —
curtailing my writing, hobbies, and creative output — but where is
that love now? As far as I can see, it was wasted. Whenever I
pursue the universal love, the results affect large numbers of
people: those who use the software I write, who read my thoughts,
experience my friendship or find beauty in my art. In this way I
feel worthwhile, because people around the world receive the fruits
of my love. If one doesn’t care for something, another will. I
don’t have to tailor my work to one bias — there are as many
perspectives as there are people. As long as I honestly love what I
do, someone out there will appreciate it. The demands of exclusive
love are the opposite of this. Rather than benefiting whomever is
receptive, I must aim my love at one mind, one point of view, one
set of prejudices. If they don’t appreciate it, it falls flat; if
they do, they might keep it to their own heart. The fruits of this
love rarely reach beyond that one person, unless it’s an
outward-directed activity we both share in. As a result I can spend
years devoting my heart to one person, expending time and thought
and energy — and then one day they leave, and all of it is lost.
There is nothing to show but what I learned from the experience.
Even that does not go beyond the relationship, does not touch
other’s lives, except insofar as I now treat them better. It’s like
a mutual navel-gazing society to which no one else is invited. In
this type of scenario I feel my capacity as a human being is
wasted. This is why I fear relationships that seek the romantic
ideal. When I start dating someone, they don’t want to hear about
my love of all things, about how sometimes I don’t want to go out
with them but would rather stay home and write. They want to hear
how I love them more than anything else, how they are more
beautiful than everyone else, that I would give up everything for
their sake. Hence my realization: that I avoid romantic
relationships because I have a dream and don’t want to be pulled
away from that dream, sucked dry by a heart who in reality is
thirsting for God. I am not a surrogate God by any means, and do
not wish to devote my life to anyone’s quest for satisfaction. Is
it really “selfish” that I would rather benefit more people than
just one? Each time I’ve been married, I stopped writing. But I
would rather write and offer myself to whomever passes by, than
lose my writing for one person’s sake; while the person who could
join me in this endeavor is the one who would cause me to write
even more.