During my 25 years as a marital therapist, I have seen hundreds of
people disappointed over unfulfilling relationships. I have seen passion
turn to poison. I have grieved with patients for the love they lost or
never found.
"We seemed to love so much, but now it's gone," one woman lamented to
me. "Why do I feel so lonely every night even when he is right there
beside me? Why can't marriage be more than this?"
I know we can love deeply, tenderly and lastingly. I have seen such
love, and I have felt such love myself. Here are the law I have
discovered for such lasting and loving relationships---put time where
love is.
A fulfilling marriage begins when two people make time together their
No.1 priority. If we hope to find love, we must first find time for
loving.
Unfortunately, current psychology rests on the model of the
independent ego. To make a lasting marriage we have to overcome
self-centeredness. We must go beyond what psychologist Abraham Maslow
called "self-actualization" to "us-actualization". We have to learn to
put time where love is.
Many couples have experienced a tragic moment that taught them to
value their time together. One husband related how he sat trapped in his
car after a crash. His wife was outside, crying and banging on the
window. "I thought I was going to die before we had enough time
together." He told me. "Right then I promised to make the time to love
my wife. Our time is our own now, and those hours are sacred."
没有评论:
发表评论