Why we love narcissists (at first)
Feb 05
Paradoxically we initially like narcissists more because of their exploitative, entitled behavior—but it doesn’t last long.
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Feb 05
Paradoxically we initially like narcissists more because of their exploitative, entitled behavior—but it doesn’t last long.
Dec 19
Found this article interesting coming from a male perspective.
Qustion “What does it take to sustain a happy and successful relationship/marriage?”
Deepak Chopra replies:
Relationship Is a Daily Rescue
Although the differences between men and women have been much emphasized, there’s one thing that both sexes must do in a relationship: rescue love. Relationships are happy where love is nurtured. They begin to fray around the edges when love is compromised, and they end when love is gone.
What causes love to go away?
Many answers have been offered — boredom, routine, various distractions, outside obligations, fixation on work, wandering libido, lack of trust. But instead of dealing with such a long list item by item, there might be a simpler way. If you can rescue love every day, bringing yourself back to the place where love is, all the other problems don’t have a chance to grow.
To rescue love, you first must understand what it is. Love includes affection but is more than affection. It associates itself with sexual desire, kindness, compassion, altruism, and mutual regard. With those things in mind, many couples turn love into loving acts and loving feelings. But such efforts are the effect of love, not love itself. You cannot turn an effect into a cause. For example, if you find out that your partner has cheated, you have a reason not to love him or her. Trying to be nice instead of nasty won’t revive your love.
If you can discover how love works as a cause, you can rescue it every day.
Love as a cause goes beyond the individual. It’s transpersonal or as spiritual teachers say, transcendent. That’s not the same as mystical. To transcend means to go beyond. In this case, we want to contact love that goes beyond the ego. The ego is often put in charge of love. When love becomes what “I” want, then relationship is a negotiation between two selfish points of view. There’s nothing wrong with negotiating the everyday details of your relationship – who does the dishes, when to have sex, how to have sex, etc. — but love isn’t about trade-offs and what happens in bed.
Love beyond the ego has to be on a new basis. It’s not about quid pro quo, giving as long as you get to take. It’s mutual. It exists in a space between two people. The only way to be deeply happy in a relationship is to find that space every time you lose it. In this way, love goes beyond affection and being nice. Loving acts blossom naturally once you find the place in your own awareness that is love. Needless to say, becoming aware is a process, in love as in everything.
Consider how relationships develop. We get along well with someone else who agrees with our point of view. We feel an intimate connection; we feel validated in their presence. Then the spell is broken. The other person turns out to have many opinions and beliefs where we don’t agree at all. At this point, the war between right and wrong starts and the road to unhappiness unwinds.
The very fact that you are intimately related makes it even more painful to find areas of disagreement. At the subtle emotional level you feel abandoned. The beautiful sense of merging with someone you love is shattered. At this point love is compromised. Both people feel the return of the ego, which says, “I am right. My way of doing things is the only way. If you really loved me, you’d give in.”
When the need to be right fades, we stop having so many grievances and resentments, which are the fallout of making someone else wrong. Instead of wasting time with the ego’s version of love, return to the place of love. To detach yourself from anger, resentment, and the sense of being a victim happens only in the space beyond ego. You can only find this space by devoting yourself to knowing who you really are. Leaving the ego behind is the same as the spiritual quest for the true self.
When two people are on this quest, they are on the journey to a kind of love that can never be taken away. The differences between a man and a woman fade in the light of a shared goal that is bigger than any ego need or desire. Every day becomes both a rescue and a surrender. Not a surrender to another person’s ego, which can only feel like defeat. Rather, both partners surrender to the larger goal.
The ego’s path is much easier to walk and far more familiar. I know that someone is on the path of love when they ask the following kinds of questions about their relationship every day:
These questions don’t have automatic answers. They serve instead to wake you up spiritually. They attune you to a process that is more than “me” and “you.” When you become devoted to that process together, you and your partner will accomplish what seems impossible: your happiness will be as full for each of you as it is for the two of you together.
Deepak Chopra is President of the Alliance for New Humanity (www.deepakchopra.com and www.anhglobal.org). Deepak Chopra’s new book, Jesus: A Story of Enlightenment is available at Amazon.com. Follow Deepak on Twitter: twitter.com/Deepak_Chopra.
Nov 06
Why we love and cheat.
Anthropologist Helen Fisher takes on a tricky topic — love –- and explains its evolution, its biochemical foundations and its social importance
Oct 16
I find this video hysterically funny and yet thought provoking.
Real value with nothing false added on top of it, is what we’re striving to do on Sense2Love.
Assessing value is both a talent and a learnt skill, hence why it’s taken me so long
For us it was always clear we’re here to make you wealthier with love in your life, and really excited about our re-launch.
Enjoy this great talk.
Oct 01
Sep 20
We’re seeing a rise of romantic love, 91% of American women and 86% of American men would not marry somebody who had every single quality they were looking for in a partner if they were not in love with that person. People around the world in a study of 37 societies want to be in love with the person that they marry. Indeed, arranged marriages are on their way off this braid of human life.
Sep 03
Just as someone who has never really experienced true happiness does not know where to look, someone who has never known love does not know where to find it. So, if you’re looking for love it’s hard when people try to reconcile you by saying, ‘oh it will happen some day, ’you just haven’t found the one yet’ without offering guidelines or a recipe of how to get there.
I fell in love for the first time at 31. It came leftfield as these things often do, a man I never even considered l had anything in common with. I used to have a mental tick box of what fitted my idea of a compatible match. This man ticked none of those boxes and barely even caught my eye when we first met. Familiar sounding story?
So, how did I get there…to that illustrious moment of knowing I was in love? For a year I had been in a mediocre relationship with someone who seemed a ‘paper perfect’ match, but in reality we made a very unconvincing pair. We split…and here’s the trick…I spent months trying to get to know myself better and work out what I did and didn’t like about myself, the impression I was giving out to others and the response I was getting in return. Living alone helped because I could read and think without distraction. When I finally got my confidence back, a man showed up in my life. We met at a party and he pursued me until one day I turned around to find a silent revolution had taken place inside me, barriers from my past broken down and the derelict space refilled with laughter and music. He was interested in me and I was interested in him and we were interested in what we both had to offer each other. The tick box was in the bin and I was truly open to the feelings I was experiencing. The affair lasted a few months until he had to return to his home country. It broke our hearts to say goodbye, but we built our hearts up again knowing that we had both enriched each other’s lives forever.
So, my perspective on making love work for you is very simply, ‘be interested in you’. Make discovering YOU a lifelong commitment and do this with feeling and compassion, not mental calculations or lists rating other people’s qualities. Trust your intuition by reinforcing it with knowledge of yourself – walk the full distance of what makes up your own parameters -create an internal tick box of the things that make you ‘feel’ good and not so good, in love and elsewhere. Demarcate a line around what is acceptable and what is not. Uncover the things that excite you and push you away.
It’s not that you must wait for love, but love is a symptom of the way you feel about yourself and that shows to other people even if you cannot see it yourself. What feeds love is interest, period. And being interested and interesting leads to attraction which glues a deeper and sustainable connection. Love is there and it is plentiful and it’s ready for the picking if you are!