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Episode 2231:
Dr. Lisa Firestone explores the concept of love by highlighting what love is not, providing practical insights to help couples avoid common relationship pitfalls. By understanding that love is not selfish, manipulative, or a means to deny aloneness, individuals can foster healthier, more fulfilling romantic connections.
Read along with the original article(s) here: https://www.psychalive.org/what-love-is-not-a-proven-method-to-make-love-last/
Quotes to ponder:
"Love is not selfish, demanding, or a proprietary right over the other."
"Love is never submission or dominance, emotional coercion or manipulation."
"Love is not the desperate attempt to deny aloneness or a desire for fused identity."
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[00:00:00] Now before we start, you might want to check out our other podcasts covering topics like personal development and minimalism, money, health, relationships, and more. So to optimize your life in other areas, just search for Optimal Living Daily in your podcast app. Now onto the show.
[00:00:43] This is Optimal Relationships Daily, Episode 2231 – What Love is Not? A Proven Method to Make Love Last by Dr. Lisa Firestone of PsychAlive.org. Hello everybody! I'm Greg Audino, your host and narrator here on Optimal Relationships Daily.
[00:01:02] Thank you so much for joining today as I have a really thoughtful post to share that I know will get all of us thinking. Let's get right to it as we optimize your life. What Love is Not?
[00:01:16] A Proven Method to Make Love Last by Dr. Lisa Firestone of PsychAlive.org. Long have poets and scholars, romantics and intellects, teenagers and grandparents pondered the question, what is love? Yet as we repeatedly find ourselves in the same relationship pitfalls, brokenhearted
[00:01:38] or fervently reseeking that initial spark, perhaps a more beneficial question is, what isn't love? As much as we as a species are capable of involuntarily plummeting ourselves into the magical glow of being in love, keeping ourselves in that carefree, heartfelt romantic space is tricky.
[00:01:59] Getting out of love and into routine, out of kindness into irritability, and out of respect into annoyance is all too easy. So why does this shift occur and how can we evade it? By identifying what love is not, we can avoid the relationship don'ts that lead to our
[00:02:19] romantic demise. Love is not selfish, demanding, or a proprietary right over the other. When we first date someone, rarely do we find ourselves saying things like, they're going out to meet your friends again, but I thought you were going to stay in and rent a movie with me.
[00:02:38] Or why do you take so long to get ready, you always keep me waiting forever. The minute we start treating our partners as an extension of ourselves, criticizing their uniqueness and commanding their conformity, we not only damage their attraction to us,
[00:02:54] we pretty much obliterate our own attraction to them. Treating our partners as independent and separate individuals may force us to face our own insecurities, jealousy, and self-critical thoughts, but it will help us grow stronger, which in turn leads to a more real, more solid connection with our partner.
[00:03:15] Love is never submission or dominance, emotional coercion or manipulation. Emotional game-playing is a defense mechanism formed to protect ourselves from the hurts, rejections, and uncertainties that come with feeling vulnerable to, invested in, and wanting something from a completely separate human being.
[00:03:35] Playing the victim to a dominant personality or the boss to someone who's easy to influence is a destructive process that is all too easy to lose track of. Because many of these manipulative behaviors are unconscious and not intended to be malicious,
[00:03:51] we should always pay attention to what our actions are based on. Are we falling silent when we don't get what we want, so our partners will notice and feel sorry for us? Are we feigning flexibility while covertly setting terms and restrictions to which our partner must comply?
[00:04:07] By becoming aware of these patterns, we are able to pinpoint and alter damaging behaviors and take a chance on expressing real wanting directly, asking for what we want and need from our partner. This allows us to feel our partner's real feelings toward us.
[00:04:24] Getting something from our partner through manipulation keeps us from experiencing his or her real feelings toward us. Love is not the desperate attempt to deny aloneness or a desire for fused identity.
[00:04:38] When you find yourself thinking of love as a means of being taken care of or not winding up alone, you may be entering dangerous territory. Love is a feeling you have for someone else, as well as an appreciation of a feeling directed toward you.
[00:04:53] As much as we revel in the joy of a shared life, that joy can only be preserved when we recognize that a healthy relationship consists of two lives being led in harmony, and not a single life being led by two people.
[00:05:06] Sharing activities, stories, friends, and children are all meaningful elements of a relationship, but denying the fact that every human and experience is unique is denying ourselves and our loved ones a partnership based on equality, reality, and genuine affection for one another.
[00:05:26] When we merge our identity with our partners, we lose attraction to them. They become no more interesting to us than our right arm. Yet if the relationship ends, we feel devastated as though we have lost our right arm. Love is not to be confused with emotional hunger.
[00:05:45] Feeding off of another person is not love. Many people are left with a feeling of emotional emptiness from their childhoods. Often as adults, we still see ourselves as these empty children and turn to our partner to fill that emotional void.
[00:06:00] When we allow a lack of maturity to weigh on our partners, we drain them of their vitality and the esteem they once had for the developed individuals that we are truly capable of being. It's important to avoid looking to our partners for an unhealthy dose of definition, praise,
[00:06:16] reassurance or approval. These are attributes we must develop within ourselves in order to realize a full and satisfying relationship with another person. Love is not an inner state of mind that has no recognizable outward manifestations.
[00:06:32] How many times have we found ourselves bickering, scowling, snapping at, and exhausting our partners, then casually declaring how in love we are? Often we have formed a fantasy bond, an illusion of connection with our partner.
[00:06:48] We relate to them in fantasy, but we don't treat them with kindness and love in reality. Love is an action as much as it is a state of being. If we purport to love someone, there should be actual manifestations of that love and
[00:07:01] behavior that is observable to others. When we find ourselves mistreating our loved ones, it's important to understand that the inner critic we all possess in our minds that encourages us to fear and destroy true intimacy can be just as savage to our partners as they are to us.
[00:07:20] Thoughts about ourselves such as, I'm not lovable, she will never care for me the way I care for her, can just as easily turn on our partners, suggesting things like, he's so selfish, why doesn't he ever think of me?
[00:07:34] These thoughts dictate our behaviors, allowing us to treat our partners with the same scrutiny and unkindness with which we treat ourselves. Hitting the brakes on these behaviors, no matter how compelled we are to act them out,
[00:07:47] can help us stand up to these critical inner voices and have more compassion and love toward our partners as well as toward ourselves. You just listened to the post titled, What Love Is Not, A Proven Method To Make Love by Dr. Lisa Firestone of Psychalive.org.
[00:08:09] And stay tuned for my comments right after this. Terrific post from Dr. Lisa today, many thanks to her for sharing it with us. Her first bullet point interested me, the one about love not being demanding or a proprietary right over another.
[00:08:24] I encourage you to pay extra attention to this one because oftentimes we might say things like the examples Dr. Lisa offered, yet also maintain true love for our partners. And this is because love can coexist with the inability to communicate well or make realistic asks of our partners.
[00:08:46] For example, in saying, why do you take so long to get ready? You always keep me waiting forever. This may not be a loving act or statement, but it could be a poor effort to express oneself.
[00:08:58] It's normal to want to speak up and it's great to be in a relationship that makes us feel safe to do so, but it can still be difficult to know what's a reasonable ask, what's a need, what's a desire, and where the compromise lies.
[00:09:13] So I encourage you to think about where that line is for you and your partner, where you can compromise and how the compromise can be asked for respectfully. But for now it's time to get going everyone.
[00:09:24] Thank you as always for being here and helping to keep this show going. Have a great rest of your day and I'll talk with you again tomorrow, where your optimal life awaits.




