Innately Good - Naked Relationships


Published
Articles and
Columns


Books, CDs
and Gifts


Talks and
Workshops
Available to
Your Group


Private
Consultation
and Tailor-Made
Retreats


Gleneden
Hosting Jan's
Events and Yours


Upcoming
Events


Jan Denise,
Bio


Thoughts
from Jan's
Journal


E-mail Jan


Home

Start With a Clean Slate ... and aim for perfect love
by Jan Denise
As seen in Jan's relationships column "Choosing Love"
in the June-July 2011 issue, Best of Summer, of In Jersey magazine

For the best summer — and relationship — ever, start with a clean slate. Wipe away the black marks and start fresh, aiming, once again, for perfect love. Only this time, do it with perfect love in clear view. Know what you're going for, and you have a better shot at it.

According to Robert J. Sternberg, a psychologist and psychometrician born in NJ, perfect love is a high level of intimacy, passion, and commitment.
  • Intimacy: Psychological knowledge shared, and connection based on that knowledge
  • Passion: Erotic attraction
  • Commitment: The decision that a person loves another person and the commitment to maintain that love
It's difficult to experience a high level of any one of the three if you focus on how you've been wronged or short-changed; and each one works to strengthen or weaken the others. Wiping the slate clean, on the other hand, allows you to immediately enjoy what you have and develop more of it.

I realize that a clean slate isn't exactly something you can order online or have somebody else deliver; but relationships are about giving what you have. So give YOURSELF a clean slate. When you wipe yours clean, you wipe his clean, too! If you thought he was alone in the relationship fumbles, take a closer look. Be honest about your role. Then forgive yourself. Having trouble with that part? Learn from your "mistakes," and resolve to apply what you've learned. Knowing that you're not about to make the same blunder is the key to forgiving yourself. And forgiving him is a byproduct of forgiving you!

Now, you can start fresh together, without any misconception of love. According to Sternberg, there are eight types of "love," and only one of them is perfect. Don't be fooled by the other seven (see sidebar below). They'll bring to mind romantic escapes and intellectualized commitments of your past; but look at what you have now. If you're honest with yourself, then you'll know exactly what you need more of.

Type of "Love"

Consummate/Perfect
Fatuous/Shallow
Companionate
Romantic
Empty
Infatuated
Liking
Non-love

Intimacy

high
low
high
high
low
low
high
low

Passion

high
high
low
high
low
high
low
low

Commitment

high
high
high
low
high
low
low
low

To get more intimacy, stop talking about the weather, and begin to talk nakedly about your deep feelings and dreams. What are you afraid to say out loud — in the context of work, the kids, money, retirement, sex, fitness? Talk more, do more together, touch more. You don't have to like the same things to try on each other's interests and gain a better understanding of what intrigues and stimulates. You grow intimacy by learning more about each other, which leads to placing more value on each other.

You can't feel loved without feeling truly known and valued; and you want to feel loved to the core. So, let your guard down to reveal all of you. No secrets.

Intimacy will lead to passion, but don't get stuck thinking that passion is synonymous with craving. "Remember that the best relationship is one in which your love for each other exceeds your need for each other," said The Dalai Lama. Be present with each other. Feel the kiss without leaping to, "I'm too tired." Enjoy what is, without being preoccupied with what comes next ... and what comes next just might surprise you. Passion is like magic. It can't be forced; it just happens when you let it.

When you have intimacy and passion, commitment follows. You don't have to be talked into staying with what satisfies your desire to be known and touched in deep places.

So, start fresh ... and then hold nothing back.