Saturday, November 21, 2009

The Love Chronicles - PART III - relationship drama anyone?


It was over coffee with a male friend that started it, followed by a great first date that amplified it, but over the last few days I've once again pondered the nature of love.

My friend asked me: "Can a romantic relationship exist without drama"?

Without so much as a moment's hesitation, I answered him in my most pshaw-ing, know-it-all voice:

"Of course it can".

And considering my love life has been anything but exemplary of such a statement over the last say, THIRTY YEARS... I had to stop and ask myself, what gives?

So here's my take on it.

Just because I think a relationship can exist without drama doesn't mean that it does.

(Small homage to the ones I've had)

Ah yes. 'Tis true. I am no stranger to patterns reminiscent of Shakespearean tragedies that have consistently followed me like a pack of unrelenting bloodhounds for the better part of my ENTIRE adult life...

So far...

So why the certainty that true love can exist without drama? Because it can. And more so - it SHOULD.

Anything less is not true love.

Oh shush, all you naysayers with your passionate embraces who cling woefully over the pendulum swing of pangs and ecstacies steeped in your negative relationship patterns.

If your feverish fantasies do not transform into the steady flame of consistent feelings of love, honesty and respect, then all you're getting is a little somethin' somethin' that will burn out as quickly as it flared up in the first place.

And if they don't and your pendulum keeps swinging in both directions, then I guarantee you will be relegated to an unhealthy emotional life whose imbalance may just cause you a heart condition for real.

But sadly, most people are addicted to their drama the way Canadians are to Tim Horton's coffee.

The question is... WHY?

Personally, I think it's because most people are bored.

They equate drama with excitement, the excitement eventually produces challenges (what comes up must come down), and this gives them a 'raison d'etre' - a reason for being. It occupies their mind, they keep 'busy' with fabricated problems, and nobody has to confront the meaning of their existence and do the work required to understand themselves and lead a healthier, more fruitful life.

I once dated a guy who, when he could not find drama in our relationship would create it out of habit. When I finally caught on to what he was doing during one of his tantrum-like obsessive tendencies, I turned to him and said:

me: "What are you doing"?

him: "What"?

me: "Do you realize how perfectly well we get along? We don't fight, we see eye to eye on most things and most of all, it's effortless. Do you agree how easy this relationship has been"?

him: "Yeah".

me: "Then why are you creating problems where none exist? You understand don't you, that you're unconciously sabottaging it"?

Silence

me: "If you keep it up, I guarantee it'll be over before you know it".

And sure enough, six months later, it was.

The same was true of the guy before him, who never felt as alive as when we were fighting, so would create uncomfortable situations that would eventually send me into a frenzy and when I was at my most exasperated, would sit there with a smug, satisfied look on his face as if something in him had just been appeased.

It took me a year to figure that one out.

A good relationship is one that is drama-free. Not problem-free as those are two completely different things, but drama-free.

Where one person does not throw things against the wall, where the fights are not like all-out wars based on mistrust and jealousies, followed by reassurances of absolute devotion that make Jonestown pale in comparison, and then topped off with make-up session of matching passions.

You can keep your drama. I don't care how good the sex is.

Next - redefining chemistry

3 comments:

  1. "It occupies their mind, they keep 'busy' with fabricated problems, and nobody has to confront the meaning of their existence and do the work required to understand themselves and lead a healthier, more fruitful life."

    you seemingly have difficulty in accepting that the majority of men are NOT into esoteric trends reflecting true spirituality. (from which only true love can flourish and sustain)

    been to any self help seminars lately? - mostly WOMEN.
    maybe reality TV needs a series like 'queer eye for the non-spiritual guy'...lol

    sounds like you 'been shopping in pre-packaged goods, instead of exotic produce... :)

    seinfeld had an episode entitled 'the invitation'.

    george gets to kill off the perfect woman for him with poison glue on cheap envelopes, and jerry breaks his engagement to the only woman who was an exact 'clone' personality of himself...(the marriage made in heaven)

    many men certainly have issues with the 'perfect' relationship-you can't fix or save something that isn't broken.

    call it the 'hero' complex - they simply fail to realize that at the end of the day, even bruce wayne takes his 'mask' off...

    cool stuff... keep it coming... :)

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  2. I don't think it was an all-out attack on men (I'm one) it just happens to be a point of drama in her life and it just so happens to be a man, that's all. Nic's explanation was pretty much right, the guy was a drama-queen, women don't have a lock on drama.

    And true love can happen without drama, but you need two reasonably wise people who can see outside themselves now and then and not be caught up by selfish, egotistical needs.

    Someone once said that to be truly in love, you have to give all of yourself first without expectations. How many of us want to do that, or can do that? I think there's more than you can imagine.

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  3. greetings o.p.
    my contribution was merely meant as a playful 'poke' at the muse maiden herself - (it's intent validated in a private e-mail which followed from nic shortly afterwards.) :)

    i most certainly have no issues with the content being explored herein - i am a firsthand believer in ALL ideologies being expressed within this blog actually.

    cetainly, drama within a relationship can rapidly lead to the final act, and a curtain call...

    ...within open internet forum environments however, a little selective 'drama' will ignite channels of communication which can develop thought processes far beyond the very parameters of the blog's initial intent.

    yes, to give all of oneself un-requited
    could certainly be perceived as co-dependent and dysfunctional in nature - within the parameters of nicole's ideas however, one becomes more energized and empowered with each and every unconditional act...

    without kissing some toads, one could never come to find their real frog prince - the hurdles along the way, merly reminders that all is not lost - we're still in the race...

    ReplyDelete