Married Couples :
How to Know You're in Love
by Dr. James Dobson
Beliefs about Love
It has been of concern to me that many young people grow up with a very distorted
concept of romantic love. They are taught to confuse the real thing with infatuation
and to idealize marriage into something it can never be. To help remedy this situation,
I developed a brief true or false test for use in teaching groups of teen-agers.
But to my surprise, I found that adults do not score much higher on the quiz than
their adolescent offspring. The ten-item test is reproduced below for those who
would like to measure their understanding of romantic love:
Beliefs about Love — A Self Quiz
Please circle the correct answer, true or false:
- I believe "love at first sight" occurs between some people. True
False
- I believe it is easy to distinguish real love from infatuation. True False
- I believe people who sincerely love each other will not fight and argue.
True False
- I believe God selects one particular person for each of us to marry, and
he will guide us together. True False
- I believe if a man and woman genuinely love each other, then hardships
and troubles will have little or no effect on their relationship. True False
- I believe it is better to marry the wrong person than to remain single
and lonely throughout life. True False
- I believe it is not harmful to have sexual intercourse before marriage
if the couple has a meaningful relationship. True False
- I believe if a couple is genuinely in love, that condition is permanent
— lasting a lifetime. True False
- I believe short courtships (six months of less) are best. True False
- I believe teen-agers are more capable of genuine love than are older people.
True False
While there are undoubtedly some differences of opinion regarding the answers
for this quiz, I feel strongly about what I consider to be correct responses
to each item. In fact, I believe many of the common marital hang-ups develop
from a misunderstanding of these ten issues. The confusion begins when boy meets
girl and the entire sky lights up in romantic profusion. Smoke and fire are
followed by lightning and thunder, and alas, two trembly-voiced adolescents
find themselves knee deep in true love. Adrenaline and sixty-four other hormones
are dumped into the cardio-vascular system by the pint and every nerve is charged
with 110 volts of electricity. Then two little fellows go racing up the respective
backbones and blast their exhilarating message into each spinning head: "This
is it! The search is over! You've found the perfect human being! Hooray for
love!"
For our romantic young couple, it is simply too wonderful to behold. They want
to be together twenty-four hours a day ... to take walks in the rain and sit
by the fire and kiss and munch and cuddle. They get all choked up just thinking
about each other. And it doesn't take long for the subject of marriage to arise.
So they set the date and reserve the chapel and contact the minister and order
the flowers. The big night arrives, amidst mother's tears and dad's grins and
jealous bridesmaids and bratty little flower-girls. The candles are lit and
two beautiful songs are butchered by the bride's sister. Then the vows are muttered
and the rings are placed on trembling fingers, and the preacher tells the groom
to kiss his new wife. Then they sprint up the aisle, each flashing thirty-two
teeth, on the way to the reception room. Their friends and well-wishers hug
and kiss the bride and roll their eyes at the groom, and eat the awful cake
and follow the instructions of the perspiring photographer. Finally, the new
Mr. and Mrs. run form the church in a flurry of rice and confetti and strike
out on their honeymoon. So far the beautiful dream remains intact, but is living
on borrowed time.
The first night in the motel is not only less exciting than advertised ...
it turns into a comical disaster. She is exhausted and tense and he is self-conscious
and phony. From the beginning, sex is tinged with the threat of possible failure.
Their vast expectations about the marital bed lead to disappointment and frustration
and fear. Since most human beings have a neurotic desire to feel sexually adequate,
each partner tends to blame his mate for their orgasmic problems, which will
eventually add a note of anger and resentment to their relationship.
About three o'clock on the second afternoon, he gives ten minutes serious thought
to the fateful question, "Have I made an enormous mistake?" His silence
increases her anxieties, and the seeds of disenchantment are born. Each partner
has far too much time to think about the consequences of this new relationship,
and they both begin to feel trapped.
Their initial argument is a silly thing; they struggle momentarily over how
much money to spend for dinner on the third night of the honeymoon. She wants
to go someplace romantic to charge up the atmosphere, and he wants to eat with
Ronald McDonald. The flare-up only lasts a few moments and is followed by apologies,
but some harsh words have been exchanged which took the keen edge off the beautiful
dream. They will soon learn to hurt each other more effectively.
Somehow, they make it through the six-day trip and drive home to set up house
together. Then the world starts to splinter and disintegrate before their eyes.
The next fight is bigger and better than the first; he leaves home for two hours
and she calls her mother. Throughout the first year, they will be engaged in
an enormous contest of wills, each vying for power and leadership. And in the
midst of this tug of war, she staggers out of the obstetrician's office with
the word ringing in her ears, "I have some good news for you, Mrs. Jones!"
If there is anything on earth Mrs. Jones doesn't need at that time, it is "good
news" from an obstetrician.
From there to the final conflict, we see two disappointed, confused and deeply
hurt young people, wondering how it all came about. We also see a little towheaded
lad who will never enjoy the benefits of a stable home. He'll be raised by his
mother and will always wonder, "Why doesn't Dad live here anymore?"
The picture I have painted does not reflect every young marriage, obviously,
but it accurately represents far too many of them. The divorce rate is higher
in America than in any other civilized nation in the world, and it is rising.
In the case of our disillusioned young couple, what happened to their romantic
dream? How did the relationship that began with such enthusiasm turn so quickly
into hatred and hostility? They could not possibly have been more enamored with
each other at the beginning, but their "happiness" blew up in their
startled face. Why didn't it last? How can others avoid the same unpleasant
surprise?
First, we need to understand the true meaning of romantic love. Perhaps the
answers to our quiz will help accomplish that objective.
1. I believe love at first sight occurs between some people.
Though some readers will disagree with me, love at first sight is a physical
and emotional impossibility. Why? Because love is not simply a feeling of romantic
excitement; it is more than a desire to marry a potential partner; it goes beyond
intense sexual attraction; it exceeds the thrill at having "captured "
a highly desirable social prize. These are emotions that are unleashed at first
sight, but they do not constitute love. I wish the whole world knew
that fact. These temporary feelings differ from love in that they place the
spotlight on the one experiencing them. "What is happening to me?!
This is the most fantastic thing I've ever been through! I
think I am in love!" You see, these emotions are selfish in the
sense that they are motivated by our gratification. They have little to do with
the new lover. Such a person has not fallen in love with another person; he
has fallen in love with love! And there is an enormous difference between
the two.
The popular songs in the world of teen-age music reveal a vast ignorance of
the meaning of love. One immortal number asserts, "Before the dance was
throo, I knew I was in luv with yew!" I wonder if the crooner will be quite
so confident tomorrow morning. Another confesses, "I didn't know just what
to do, so I whispered, 'I luv yew!'" That one really gets to me, The idea
of basing a lifetime commitment on sheer confusion seems a bit shaky, at best.
The Partridge Family recorded a song a few years ago which also betrays a lack
of understanding of real love; it said, "I woke up in love today 'cause
I went to sleep with you on my mind." You see, love in this sense is nothing
more than a frame of mind — and it is just about that permanent. Finally,
a rock group of the sixties called The Doors takes the prize for the most ignorant
musical number of the century; it was called, "Hello, I Love You; Won't
You Tell Me Your Name!"
Did you know that the idea of marriage based on romantic affection is a very
recent development in human affairs? Prior to about 1200 A.D., weddings were
arranged by the families of the bride and groom, and it never occurred to anyone
that they were supposed to "fall in love." In fact, the concept of
romantic love was actually popularized by William Shakespeare. There are times
when I wish the old Englishman were here to help us straighten out the mess
he initiated!
Real love, in contrast to popular notions, is an expression of the deepest
appreciation for another human being; it is an intense awareness of his or her
needs and longings — past, present, and future. It is unselfish and giving
and caring. And believe me, friends, these are not attitudes one "falls"
into at first sight, as though we were tumbling into a ditch. I have developed
a lifelong love for my wife, but it is was not something I fell into. I grew
into it, and that process took time. I had to know her before I could appreciate
the depth and stability of her character — to become acquainted with the
nuances of her personality, which I now cherish. The familiarity from which
love has blossomed simply could not be generated on "Some enchanted evening,
across a crowed room." One cannot love an unknown object, regardless of
how attractive or sexy of nubile it is!
2. I believe it is easy to distinguish real love from infatuation.
The answer is, again false. That wild ride at the start of a romantic adventure
bears all the earmarks of a lifetime trip. Just try to tell a starry-eyed sixteen-year-old
dreamer that he is not really in love ... that he's merely infatuated. He'll
whip out his guitar and sing you a song. "Young luv, true luv, filled with
real emo-shun. Young luv, true luv, filled with true devo-shun!" He knows
what he feels, and he feels great. But he'd better enjoy the roller coaster
ride while it lasts, because it has a predictable end point.
I must stress this fact with the greatest emphases: The exhilaration of infatuation
is never a permanent condition. Period! If you expect to live on the top of
that mountain, year after year, you can forget it! As I discussed in the second
chapter, emotions swing from high to low to high in cyclical rhythm, and since
romantic excitement is an emotion, it too will certainly oscillate. Therefore,
if the thrill of sexual encounter is identified as genuine love, then disillusionment
and disappointment are already knocking at the door.
How many vulnerable young couples "fall in love" with love on the
first date ... and lock themselves in marriage before the natural swing of their
emotions has even progressed through the first dip? They then wake up one morning
without that neat feeling and conclude that love has died. In reality, it was
never there in the first place. They were fooled by an emotional "high."
I was trying to explain this up-and-down characteristic of our psychological
nature to a group of 100 young married couples to whom I was speaking. During
the discussion period, someone asked one young man in the group why he got married
so young, and he replied, "'Cause I didn't know 'bout that wiggly line
until it was too late!" Alas, 'tis true. That wiggly line has trapped more
than one young romanticist.
The "wiggly line" is manipulated up and down by the circumstances
of life. Even when a man and woman love each other deeply and genuinely, they
will fling themselves supercharged on one occasion and emotionally bland on
another! However, their love is not defined by the highs and lows, but is
dependent on a commitment of their will! I attempted to express this thought
to my wife on an anniversary card, written approximately six years ago. It is
reproduced below.
To My Darlin' Little Wife, Shirley,
on the Occasion of Our Eighth Anniversary
I'm sure you remember the many, many occasions during our eight years of
marriage when the tide of love and affection soared high above the crest...times
when our feeling for each other was almost limitless. This kind of intense emotion
can't be brought about voluntarily, but it often accompanies a time of particular
happiness. We felt it when I was offered my first professional position. We
felt it when the world's most precious child came home from the maternity ward
of Huntington Hospital. We felt it when the University of Southern California
chose to award a doctoral degree to me. But emotions are strange! We felt the
same closeness when the opposite kind of event took place; when threat and potential
disaster entered our lives. We felt an intense closeness when a medical problem
threatened to postpone our marriage plans. We felt it when you were hospitalized
last year. I felt it intensely when I knelt over your unconscious form after
a grinding automobile accident.
I'm trying to say this: both happiness and threat bring that overwhelming
appreciation and affection for our beloved sweethearts. But the fact is, most
of life is made up of neither disaster nor unusual hilarity. Rather, it is composed
of the routine, calm, everyday events in which we participate. And during these
times, I enjoy the quiet, serene love that actually surpasses the effervescent
display, in many ways. It is not as exuberant, perhaps, but it runs deep and
solid. I find myself firmly in that kind of love on this Eighth Anniversary.
Today I feel the steady and quiet affection that comes from a devoted heart.
I am committed to you and your happiness, more now than I've ever been. I want
to remain your "sweetheart."
When events throw us together emotionally, we will enjoy the thrill and
romantic excitement. But during life's routine, like today, my love stands undiminished.
Happy Anniversary to my wonderful wife.
Your Jim
The key phrase in my statements, "I am committed to you." You see,
my love for Shirley is not blown back and forth by the winds of change ... by
circumstances and environmental influences. Even though my fickle emotions jump
from one extreme to another, my commitment remains solidly anchored in place.
I have chosen to love my wife, and that choice is sustained by an uncompromising
will. "In sickness and in health; for richer or poorer for better or worse
from this day forward..." This essential commitment of the will is sorely
missing in so many modern marriages. I love you, they seem to say, as long as
I feel attracted to you ... or as long as someone else doesn't look better ...
or as long as it is to my advantage to continue the relationship. Sooner or
later, this uncommitted love will certainly vapourize.
How, then, can real love be distinguished from temporary infatuation? If the
feeling is unreliable, how can one assess the commitment of his will? There
is only one answer to that question: It takes time. The best advice I can give
a couple contemplating marriage (or any other important decision) is this: make
no important, lifeshaping decisions quickly or impulsively, and when in doubt,
stall for time. That's not a bad suggestion for all of us to apply.
3. I believe people who sincerely love each other will not fight
and argue.
I doubt if this third item actually requires an answer. Some marital conflict
is as inevitable as the sunrise, even in loving marriages. There is a difference,
however, between healthy and unhealthy combat, depending on the way the disagreement
is handled. In an unstable marriage, the hostility is usually hurled directly
at the partner: "You never do anything right; why did I ever marry you?
You are incredibly dumb and you're getting more like your mother every day."
These personal comments strike at the heart of one's self-worth and produce
an internal upheaval. They often cause the wounded partner to respond in like
manner, hurling back every unkind and hateful remark he can concoct, punctuated
with tears and profanity. The avowed purpose of this kind of in-fighting is
to hurt, and the woes will never be forgotten, even though uttered in a moment
of irrational anger. Obviously, such vicious combat is extremely damaging to
a marital relationship. Healthy conflict, on the other hand, remains focused
on the issue around which the disagreement began: "You are spending money
faster than I can earn it!" "It upsets me when you don't tell me you'll
be late for dinner." "I was embarrassed when you made me look foolish
at the party last might." These areas of struggle, though admittedly emotional
and tense, are much less damaging to the egos of the opposing forces. A healthy
couple can work through them by compromise and negotiation with few imbedded
barbs to pluck out the following morning.
The ability to fight properly may be the most important concept to
be learned by newlyweds. Those who never comprehend the technique are usually
left with two alternatives: (1) turn the anger and resentment inward in silence,
where it will fester and accumulate through the years, or (2) blast away at
the personhood of one's mate. The divorce courts are well represented by couples
in both categories.
4. I believe God selects one particular person for each of us to
marry, and he will guide us together.
A young man whom I was counselling once told me that he awoke in the middle
of the night with the strong impression that God wanted him to marry a young
lady whom he had only dated casually a few times. They were not even going out
together at that moment and hardly knew each other. The next morning he called
her and relayed the message which God had supposedly sent him during the night.
The girl figured she shouldn't argue with God, and she accepted the proposal.
They have now been married for seven years and have struggled for survival since
their wedding day!
Anyone who believes that God guarantees a successful marriage to every Christian
is in for a shock. This is not to say that he is disinterested in the choice
of a mate, or that he will not answer a specific request for guidance on this
all-important decision. Certainly, his will should be sought in such a critical
matter, and I consulted him repeatedly before proposing to my wife. However,
I do not believe that God performs a routine match-making service for everyone
who worships him. He has given us judgement, common sense, and discretionary
powers, and he expects us to exercise these abilities in matters matrimonial.
Those who believe otherwise are likely to enter marriage glibly, thinking, "God
would have blocked this development if he didn't approve of it." To such
confident people I can only say, "Lotsa luck."
5. I believe if a man and woman genuinely love each other, then
hardships and troubles will have little or no effect on their relationship.
Another common misconception about the meaning of "true love" is
that it inevitably stands like the rock of Gibraltar against the storms of life.
Many people apparently believe that love is destined to conquer all; the Beatles
endorsed this notion with their song, "All we need is love, love, love
is all we need." Unfortunately, we need a bit more.
Much of my professional life is currently being invested in the Division of
Child Development, Children's Hospital of Los Angeles. We see numerous genetic
and metabolic problems throughout the year, most of which involve mental retardation
in our young patients. The emotional impact of such a diagnoses on the families
involved is sometimes devastating; even in stable, loving marriages, the guilt
and disappointment of having produced a "broken" child often drive
a wedge of isolation between the distressed mother and father. In a similar
manner, the fibre of love can be weakened by financial hardships, disease, business
setbacks, or prolonged separation.
In short, we must conclude that love is vulnerable to pain and trauma, and
often wobbles when assaulted by life.
6. I believe it is better to marry the wrong person than to remain
single and lonely throughout life.
Again, the answer is false. Generally speaking, it is less painful to be searching
for an end to loneliness than to be embroiled in the emotional combat of a sour
marriage. Yet the threat of being an "old maid" (a term I detest)
causes many girls to grab the first train that rambles down the marital track.
And too often, it offers a one-way ticket to disaster.
7. I believe it is not harmful to have sexual intercourse before
marriage, if the couple has a meaningful relationship.
This item represents the most dangerous of the popular misconceptions about
romantic love, both for individuals and for our future as a nation. During the
past fifteen years we have witnessed the tragic disintegration of our sexual
morals and traditional concepts of morality. Responding to a steady onslaught
by the entertainment industry and by the media, our people have begun to believe
that premarital intercourse is a noble experience, and extramarital encounters
are healthy, and homosexuality is acceptable, and bisexuality is even better.
These views reflect the sexual stupidity of the age in which we live, yet they
are believed and applied by millions of American citizens. A recent study of
college students revealed that 25 percent of them have shared bedrooms with
a member of the opposite sex for at least three months. According to Life
Styles and Campus Communities, 66 percent of college students reportedly
believe premarital intercourse is acceptable between any two people who consent
or "when a couple has dated some and care a lot about each other."
I have never considered myself to be a prophet of doom, but I am admittedly
alarmed by statistical evidence of this nature. I view these trends with fear
and trepidation, seeing in them the potential death of our society and our way
of life.
Mankind has known intuitively for at least fifty centuries that indiscriminate
sexual activity represented both an individual and a corporate threat to survival.
The wisdom of those years has now been documented. Anthropologist J. D. Unwin
conducted an exhaustive study of the eighty-eight civilizations which have existed
in the history of the world. Each culture has reflected a similar life cycle,
beginning with a strict code of sexual conduct and ending with the demand for
complete "freedom" to express individual passion. Unwin reports that
every society which extended sexual permissiveness to its people was soon to
perish. There have been no exceptions.
Why do you suppose the reproductive urge within us is so relevant to cultural
survival? It is because the energy which holds a people together is sexual in
nature! The physical attraction between men and women causes them to establish
a family and invest themselves in its development. It is this force which encourages
them to work and save and toil to insure the survival of their families. This
sexual energy provides the impetus for the raising of healthy children and for
the transfer of values from one generation to the next. It urges a man to work
when he would rather play. It causes a woman to save when she would rather spend.
In short, the sexual aspect of our nature — produces stability and responsibility
that would not otherwise occur. And when a nation is composed of millions of
devoted, responsible family units, the entire society is stable and responsible
and resilient.
If sexual energy within the family is the key to a healthy society, then its
release outside those boundaries is potentially catastrophic. The very force
which binds a people together then becomes the agent for its own destruction.
Perhaps his point can be illustrated by an analogy between sexual energy in
the nuclear family and physical energy in the nucleus of a tiny atom. Electrons,
neutrons, and protons are held in delicate balance buy an electrical force within
each atom. But when that atom and its neighbours are split in nuclear fission
(as in an atomic bomb), the energy which provided the internal stability is
then released with unbelievable power and destruction. There is ample reason
to believe that this comparison between the atom and the family is more than
incidental.
Who can deny that a society is seriously weakened when the intense sexual urge
between men and women becomes an instrument for suspicion and intrigue within
millions of individual families ... when a woman never knows what her husband
is doing when away from home ... when a husband can't trust his wife in his
absence ... when half of the brides are pregnant at the altar ... when each
newlywed has slept with numerous partners, losing the exclusive wonder of the
marital bed ... when everyone is doing his own thing, particularly that which
brings him immediate sensual gratification! Unfortunately, the most devastated
victim of an immoral society of this nature is the vulnerable little child who
hears his parents scream and argue; their tension and frustrations spill over
into his world, and the instability of his home leaves its ugly scars on his
young mind. Then he watches his parents separate in anger, and he says, "good-bye"
to the father he needs and loves. Or perhaps we should speak of the thousands
of babies born to unmarried teenage mothers each year, many of whom will never
know the meaning of a warm, nurturing home. Or maybe we should discuss the rampant
scourge of venereal disease which has reached epidemic proportions among youth.
This is the true vomitus of the sexual revolution, and I am tired of hearing
it romanticized and glorified. God has clearly forbidden irresponsible sexual
behaviour, not to deprive us of fun and pleasure, but to spare us the disastrous
consequences of this festering way of life. Those individuals, and those nations,
which choose to defy his commandments on this issue will pay a dear price for
their folly. My views on this subject may be unpopular, but I believe them with
everything within me!
8. I believe if a couple is genuinely in love, that condition is
permanent, lasting a lifetime.
Love, even genuine love, is a fragile thing. Love can perish when a husband
works seven days a week...when there is no time for romantic activity...when
he and his wife forget how to talk to each other. The keen edge in a loving
relationship may be dulled through the routine pressures of living, as I experienced
during the early days of my marriage to Shirley. I was working full time and
trying to finish my doctorate at the University of Southern California. My wife
was teaching school and maintaining our small home. I remember clearly the evening
that I realized what this busy life was doing to our relationship. We still
loved each other, but it had been too long since we had felt a spirit of warmth
and closeness. My text books were pushed aside that night and we went for a
long walk together. The following semester I carried a very light load in school
and postponed my academic goals so as to preserve that which I valued more highly.
Where does your marriage rank on your hierarchy of values? Does it get the
leftovers and scraps from your busy schedule, or is it something of great worth
to be preserved and supported? It can die if left unattended.
9. I believe short courtships (six months or less) are best.
The answer to this question is incorporated in the reply to the second item
regarding infatuation. Short courtships require impulsive decisions about lifetime
commitments, and that is risky business, at best.
10. I believe teenagers are more capable of genuine love than are
older people.
If this item were true, then we would be hard pressed to explain why half the
teen-age marriages end in divorce in the first five years. To the contrary,
the kind of love I have been describing — unselfish, giving, caring commitment
— requires a sizable dose of maturity to make it work. And maturity is
a partial thing in most teen-agers. Adolescent romance is an exciting part of
growing up, but it seldom meets the criteria for the deeper relationships of
which successful marriages are composed.
Summary
All ten items on this brief questionnaire are false, for they represent the
ten most common misconceptions about the meaning of romantic love. I wish the
test could be used as a basis for issuing marriage licenses: those scoring 9
or 10 would qualify with honour; those getting 5-8 items right would be required
to wait an extra six months before marriage; those dummies answering four or
fewer items correctly would be recommended for permanent celibacy. To which
group would you be assigned?
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