Forgive me. This one is MUCH longer than usual. The last post I wrote was dedicated to Sydney. I like this practice. This one is dedicated to Nella, because without her I probably wouldn’t have felt so compelled to finish and publish. I’d also like to thank Tiffany and Farnaz, for listening to the first few drafts of this.
I’d like to introduce you to a concept I call the "Love Fantasy."
What is a love fantasy?
A love fantasy is an experience of love that we would enjoy but that is not happening in this current moment. Anything that is not present to the senses lives in our imagination. What is imagined is a fantasy. What is remembered is a fantasy. This is because it is an abstraction of the phenomenon as it occurred into human perception, which is then experienced as a recollection. Even discussing our interpretations of the present moment lives as an abstraction of that moment into speech.
According to our most modern understandings, time itself, and therefore the "present moment," are illusions.
Even as we comment on them, they are already slipping away or exist not as realities but predictions that may or may not come to fruition, no matter how seemingly inevitable.
We can only truly hold space for what is happening and what can happen when we detach from needing external realities to fit our personal perceptions. We can only get to know someone when we don’t project onto them. We can only discover how much healing and care someone is capable of bringing when we are not ruled by the fear of the pain our vulnerability might lead to.
And this openness is one of the greatest gifts we can give to others: true intimacy. To let them discover the beauty of honest connection with us. Of knowing us. But in other ways as well. To hear them not just as we experience them but as they would like to be experienced or need to be experienced. To hear not simply, “I want you to do what I want” when a lover makes a request of us, but to recognize that "you’re the person I want to share this with" is a message they may be failing to properly convey.
"I feel safe to share this part of me with you."
"I revel in our connection."
Sometimes they simply do not have the language, but the meaning could come alive in the actions they communicate to you with, when you learn the language they are speaking.
In mature relationships, it is not simply about getting what one wants but finding successful ways of communicating the beauty of what happens inside of ourselves when we witness the other.
Lovers hopefully create space for each other’s love fantasies to become rich lived experiences and a cultivation of mutual joy. Ideally, some might even have the ability to mutually create love fantasies together that blossom because of the connection they have with each other. Manifesting love fantasies that exist BECAUSE they choose to show up together, not just for the other.
How compatible our personal fantasies are with the reality of the other is important.
It determines the level of intention that must go into actualizing a fantasy. Whether that’s a massage after dinner while watching a film, time in the garden where one tends to flowers as the other paints, or an illicit, all-night, poolside lovemaking session staring at moonlight breaking on the surface of the water in Mykonos. The abilities and limitations of each individual and the environment determine what can and does happen when attempts to make the fantasies realities occur. Do I have working hands and a movie to watch after dinner? Do we have a garden to engage our hobbies in and the materials and time to do this together? Can I plot the course of the moon such that on vacation in Greece there is a sneaky spot to have sex while the moon is correctly positioned over water during the night?
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"If they wanted to, they would."
I love this saying–... because it’s hilariously reductive. When you want to, do you? Do you wear your heart on your sleeve, or do you hide it in a box? Have you been conditioned to take appropriate actions at appropriate times? And what’s appropriate when you’re not sure what the rules are?
As an adult, the most mature answer is probably "discuss our boundaries and establish some agreements, making sure we have space to adapt as life changes." But based on the grievances of so many, this isn’t the case for them.
Not when it matters.
And certainly not frequently enough to make this a waste of time to write.
Beyond that, social media and pop culture tend to err on the side of avoiding vulnerability and "simping." But if you take the risk, vulnerability shows you what this person does when you give them an opportunity for intimacy. If you have the maturity to move as gradually as allows you confidence in your assessments, even if it doesn’t work out, you have so much more capacity for clarity.
And speaking of clarity:
It seems to be part of the current zeitgeist, but we’re starting to recognize and discuss how people often don’t mean the same thing when they use the word “love.”
Some people are saying, "I would do anything for you," and of course, they mean "within reason." Others are literally expressing that they might commit murder or plead guilty to protect you if you were the one to do it. They would literally do anything for you, regardless of the ethics. Perhaps misguided sometimes, but powerful in its own way. Some mean that they will do whatever they believe is right for you. Some of them mean that they couldn’t imagine what is right for you is not right for them. Perhaps codependently. Perhaps because they have faith that the only way to love you is to absolutely accept you as you are, even if that means letting you go.
Forget not meaning the same thing for a moment and consider: Some may not even really understand what they’re saying when they suggest that they love someone.
Do they love how that person makes them feel?
Do they find some heretofore unfelt peace that they did not know they could feel before they met the focus of their affections?
Or maybe it’s excitement and passion they haven’t felt in years or have never felt before?
Perhaps it’s something that can’t even be articulated.
Maybe for now obvious reasons, I like to suggest that before people run around looking for others to fulfill our need and desire for love, it’s important to be open to realizing we don’t and maybe cannot know everything we need to know about love. And maybe that infinite potential for discovery of ourselves, our lovers, and our relationships as they grow and change is beautiful. That maybe this problem of not having or getting what we want is not a punishment for some failing… but an invitation to a new kind of greatness only courageously loving ourselves and others can bring.
I’m blessed to be at a point in my life where more often than not, I do not feel bereft of love or connection. I’m at a point where I truly know I have beautiful love in my life, for myself and from others, even if on rare occasions I do not feel it. When I have found myself feeling disconnected from that, I ask myself questions. I want to offer them to you if there’s even a remote chance that you experience deeper or more fulfilling love for even just their consideration:
What am I actually looking for, and can I confidently articulate it for another or recognize it in them? Do my actions contribute to preserving the relationships my needs are met in, or are my habits and actions self-destructive?
Am I looking to give love, or am I looking to receive love? Am I comfortable with the realities that come with actually getting what I think I want?
Do I know how to experience love in solitude or with distance? Am I at risk of acting/operating from a place of desperation?
Do I know what I want for myself (is it even a question of love)? Will I take steps to experience it, or am I resigned to helplessness?
Considering the love landscape of my life, am I ok with my realities and my limitations?
Do I trust and understand how my partner (if I have one) perceives themselves through these same questions?
Of course, one doesn’t need to have answers to any of those questions.
Life doesn’t force us to be considerate of ourselves or others. And some people will be rewarded or punished for that on communal or cosmic levels, and we have to be ok with that for them, or torment ourselves over the concept of fairness–... which is a topic for another time…
But what are we committing to, or asking others to commit to, if we don’t have the capacity to communicate clearly with the people we are intimate with, whether it’s physically, emotionally, or spiritually? Whether this is a friend, lover, or relative? Trying to get a father to be the dad one needed and not simply the provider they were obligated to be(some failing this as well) has led to many broken hearts.
It’s helpful to stop and evaluate the relationships we have and the way we are going about making sure that we are capable of experiencing mutual fulfillment, that we are engaging with affective empathy, cognitive empathy, and compassion. Do we understand our own internal experiences? Do we have unresolved trauma? Do we have mental or emotional conditions that cause us not to act in our own best interest? Are we reaping the fruits of spiritual or therapeutic practices and unsure how to embrace that change? Are we trying to protect our inner peace from others or to force them to have that experience? Are we willing to wait for the ones who share our values, or are we engaging in snobbery because we’re “better” than those people?
I know I ask a lot of questions. And I’m not sorry about it. The deep motivation of my inner child is curiosity. I refuse to disconnect from that, and it serves me well. I do it for every child whose parents, school, or community is in the process of dissuading them from cultivating it. We don’t have an obligation to “know” who we are. In many ways, we can’t. But it’s a beautiful gift to discover who we might be. And if you take time to sit with your own questions, you’ll probably live a life full of serendipitous discoveries. So if you’re out of practice, I offer you mine.
Some of mine are clearly not for you, but for some of them, I can’t help but believe life put me through something just so you might have the chance to see it or share it with the person who needs it.
So, quite unapologetically, here are still more questions.
This next set of questions helps me personally when I am trying to figure out if I’m loving "unconditionally," by which I mean I feel entitled to figure out what a loving action honestly looks like from my perspective, but I’m not unduly attached to the outcome. I am entitled to my actions, but not their fruits. I remind myself of this whenever I slip into being tempted to allow myself attachment to outcomes that might rob me of joy or peace if things don’t go how I’d hope:
Am I looking to give love, or to receive it?
Am I looking to give AS they wish to receive? Do I expect gratitude and why? Were their wishes/preferences/needs considered?
Am I looking to receive their truth? Is their truth capable of being received as a kind of gift (from them or life), or do I expect/demand deceptions that fulfill my desires/needs without respect to their own other’s truths or reality?
This is about to get a little woo... but bear with me.
Some of us think our love language is words of affirmation, but actually, it’s quality time with conversation. In a relationship fraught with struggles, we sometimes discover that honest communication becomes difficult... And then even the idea of trying to communicate becomes exhausting.
Communicating costs energy. Deception costs even more. And maintaining deceptions creates perpetual stress. It activates the sympathetic nervous system and causes us to produce more cortisol. We do not owe anyone communication, truthful or deceptive. We really don’t owe anyone anything. Not truly. But if we want to have healthful experiences of ourselves and others, we must choose truthfulness. People naturally do what makes sense to them, and lying and deception are what make sense when it’s believed the value of the lie is worth the cost and the risk. When we delude ourselves and buy into falsities, we don’t just erode our integrity, but our quality of life. And to make it less taxing, we likely subconsciously prime ourselves to create and maintain connections that contribute to making that easier.
The reason this is going to sound a little woo is that I don’t have irrefutable evidence for it. It’s intuitive. But in the way that I realized that if I want to be an honest person, I have to make sure I don’t deceive myself… I noticed that if I am honest with life, life is honest with me. When I tell myself that I want to be joyful, I become aware of the things in my life that don’t bring me joy... And then I have to take responsibility for dealing with them. And so when we are in relationships where we feel like we can’t tell the truth or are being deceived, not addressing it directly is corrosive to the foundation if that foundation has anything to do with trust.
If you have ever witnessed or been party to a codependent relationship, with a parent perhaps, you likely understand. Walking on eggshells can be exhausting because of how much extra processing one has to do. This can become incredibly toxic to our nervous system and bleed into other areas of life. The erosion of boundaries in one place can cause us subconsciously to prime ourselves to accept it in other places... or even to build elements of our existence around maintaining the connection at unreasonable costs... becoming what they want and need from you, to survive. We may, on a conscious level, not realize we’re doing this because fear is fear. And fear originated to keep living beings alive. It is primal and base. But it is necessary and beautiful. When shameful behavior could lead to exile, which could be a death sentence, it was of deathly importance to know the rules and be accepted. Now we might focus on acceptance at all costs as if our life depends on it, even when it most certainly doesn’t. This is the experience of having unconditional relationships with conditional love (where love might be care or provision). An example would be a thought like, “she’s always going to be my mother, so she has to be part of my life whether or not it’s healthy for either of us.”
But
Consider that love is unconditional.
That all “relationship” in and of itself is conditional. Even being strangers is a conditional relationship. Consider that if love could exist unconditionally for any one thing in your heart, then in order for that to be true, all things must be loved unconditionally.
If this isn’t immediately clear, or even something you can accept, that’s ok. It’s a thing that some people seem to have been born knowing, some believe after a visit to a shaman, and honestly– some find on drugs, which are sometimes bad, m’kay? Some find it between the sheets or in the eyes of a child. Some find it meditating or in a therapist’s chair.
And some never find it. And that’s ok.
But it follows a logic that requires opting into certain beliefs about the nature of reality, namely those that support that all things are unified as part of a greater thing. As all-encompassing as you can fathom. And once you get there, you likely recognize, sometimes immediately, sometimes not... that if they are, all your hatred is on some level a form of self-rejection.
And this is why discernment is key:
Recognizing that sometimes love is closeness and intimacy... and sometimes love is space for the other to grow, make their own mistakes, and learn their own lessons...
Recognizing that sometimes love is even making peace with the need for violence. Embracing, appreciating, and honoring every single thing that dies so that you can persist. That suffered at your hands so that you could learn. And trying to do better on behalf of the sacrifices they may not have willingly made. To respect what you take by being generous to everything else. And perhaps in this way life has woven into us a need for humility and grace.
I know this started with the concept of the "love fantasy,"
But the gift I hope you’ve walked away with is a fuller connection to your capacity for love as a reality.
If this helped you at all, I’d be honored if you shared it. And if you have any thoughts, I’d love to hear them. I hope the questions offered find you as a timeless gift. They have sweetened, deepened, and healed the love in my life, and I hope they will forever do that for you.