What makes people fall in love?
written by Joe Beam
Several years
ago I developed a model that explains the process of falling in and out of
love. Its simple, practical, and extremely valid to the human experience. An amazing
serendipity about the model is that when one understands the process of love, the person
also learns how to fall in love all over again. Weve used this model to help people
fall in love again even after they had reached a point in their relationship where they
were disinterested in each other, tired of each other, didnt like each other any
more, or outright hated each other.
I intend to share parts of the model
with you over the next several weeks so that no matter how good or bad your relationship,
you can be in love with each other again.
Lets start where we should, at the
beginning of every relationship. In our Love, Sex & Marriage
seminar we ask people what first attracts them to another. Men tend to mention certain
anatomical features. Interestingly, women do too. They talk about noticing a mans
height, the width of his shoulders, the flatness of his stomach, or the shape of his
buttocks. Yes, even in church audiences!
So whats my point?
Simply this: The first thing attracting
any human to another is ALWAYS sensual.
When we first meet another human, we
mentally register what we see, hear, or smell and instantly find ourselves attracted,
neutral, or repulsed by that person. Since each of us is unique in our tastes, what one
person finds alluring, another may find repelling, and another may not register as worthy
of notice at all.
How does what we find physically
attractive affect our falling in love? The chances of developing or
maintaining love decrease proportionately with the degree of unattractiveness we perceive
in another. For example, if you perceive a person as very unattractive, you likely
arent going to be open to pursuing a relationship unless there is something else
attracting you more strongly than their appearance is repelling you. That just makes sense
doesnt it?
When we were single, we accepted that
truth. We kept our bodies trim, carefully coifed our hair, and wore only the most
fashionable clothes. We knew that the people we met would immediately react either
positively or negatively to our fragrance, voice, and appearance. We kept ourselves as
attractive to the opposite sex as possible.
So why should it be any different after
marriage?
So why should it be any different
after marriage?
A very common
complaint we hear from both husbands and wives is the loss of their desire for a spouse
who has forgotten the lure of the sensual. As one man said, My wife is a beautiful
woman when she wants to be. But she seems more focused on enjoying rich foods than being
attractive to me. When I say anything about it, she just cries and tells me I dont
love her. Ive learned to live with the fact that my wife will never be beautiful
again because she doesnt care to be. I guess Im not as important to her as
chocolate cake.
I understand
his dilemma. Ive heard people reject loudly the idea that they should continue to be
attractive to their spouses. When I probe their anger, I usually discover that the person
objecting doesnt feel attractive any more because of aging or some other factor.
Because of that negative personal perception, he or she wants the mate to no longer be
affected by physical attractiveness. They say things like, A spiritual person
wouldnt care what I looked like!
Interesting
that they didnt feel that way when they were looking for a mate. I often ask,
Were you spiritual when you first noticed the person you married? Did you question
your spirituality when you were attracted by his/her physical beauty and
attractiveness?
God made us as
we arebeings that are both physical and spiritual. We have needs to be fulfilled in
both those dimensions of ourselves. He didnt make all of us gorgeous, but He
designed into the human race the ability for us to make ourselves attractive to others.
Think of it
this way. Beauty is made, not born. No one has to match what he or she was during the
early 20s. But none of us have the right to say, Well, you married me. Now you have
to blithely accept whatever I want to be like or look like!
Whether you
like it or not, you will be either attracted or repelled by what your senses register as
long as you live. So will your spouse. Do you want your mate to be attracted to you? If
so, you cannot demand his or her passion and desire just because you want it to exist. You
have to understand the way God made us and make yourself as desirable as you can as long
as you live together.
Its the
most basic step of falling in love. Or falling in love again.
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