WHEN YOU FALL IN LOVE
Debunking the Myths That Are Driving You Crazy
This is the third part in a series of ten life-changing articles written by Bo Sanchez on FILL YOUR LIFE WITH LOVE.
Taken from Kerygma No 191 Vol.16 – June 2006, page 12-15, by Bo Sanchez
This article isn’t for teenagers only.
Falling in love happens to the young and
the not-so-young. (Did you see 42-year-old Tom
Cruise jump up and down Oprah’s couch because
of Katie?)
It happens to everyone. Fat, thin, tall, short,
intelligent, uneducated, holy, not so holy, dark, white,
yellow, green… it really doesn’t matter.
All of us fall in love.
And we get stuck in myths that drive us absolutely
crazy.
My goal is to debunk these myths and convince
you not to believe in them.
Let’s begin…
(By the way, I got material from Barbara De
Angelis’ book, Are You the One? and “Christianized”
it for you.)
MYTH 1: “LOVE WILL CONQUER ALL.”
Let me qualify.
This is such a tricky myth. Because love — as
defined by the Bible — will conquer all. But love
— as defined by glazed-eyed lovers — will not.
If you believe in this myth, you might do the
following:
1. You overlook major obstacles in your relationship.
Everyone you know is wondering why you
chose that creature from outer space as your
boyfriend. Your best friends are telling you to get
rid of him. Your family is telling you to throw him
out of a running vehicle. Aling Rosa of the sarisari1
store across the street is telling you to lace his
drinks with poison.
But you won’t — because you’re in love.
That’s why there are songs entitled, “You and me
against the world.”
Your best buds comment, “But he’s been
jobless for the past three years!”
And you say, “He’s free-spirited. He feels
boxed in when he’s in the office.” (In other words,
he’s an undisciplined, lazy bum.)
Your officemates say, “He flirts with other
women constantly!” And you say, “No, he’s just
friendly.” (In other words, he’s a pervert.)
Your cousins say, “He’s taking drugs. He’s
Got needle marks all over his arm.” And you say, “No,
he’s into cross stitching.” (Ouch.)
2. You overstay in toxic relationships, believing
that your love will change him.
The wedding doesn’t transform anyone.
Even if three Popes officiate the wedding.
The person you’ll march with into the
church will be the same person you’ll march
with out of the church. He doesn’t change one
tiny bit.
In fact, the marriage makes the hidden
more obvious.
If he was selfish before he got married, he
will be even more selfish after the wedding.
If he was hypercritical before he got married,
he’ll even be more vile and prolific with his
criticisms after the wedding.
Here’s the truth: You need more than
feelings of love to make a relationship work.
You need mature character, total commitment
and a minimum level of compatibility.
Especially compatibility in the area of
values and life mission. I hear people say,
“We’re compatible. Our names begin with the
same letter J. My name is Julie and his name is
Julio. We’re both born in July.”
Wow. That’s so deep, I want to cry.
MYTH 2: “WHEN IT’S TRUE LOVE,
YOU WILL KNOW IT THE MOMENT
YOU MEET THE OTHER PERSON.”
I’m sure you’ve had this experience before.
You’re in a crowded room. You’re surrounded
by boring, noisy chatter when, suddenly,
this gorgeous guy enters the door.
Your eyes meet.
Instantly, time stands still. The universe
grinds to a halt. Except for this attractive
man in front of you, everything in your vision
becomes a giant blur. The hubbub of the
crowd becomes a soft muffle and, from out of
nowhere, you hear gentle violin music from
the background.
One week later, he’s your boyfriend.
A few weeks later, you discover that your
boyfriend’s a pathological liar, buried in credit
card debt, borrows money from all his girlfriends
(you’re his eighth in six months).
Your mind says, “Dump him.”
Your heart says, “But it was love at first
sight!”
Here are the consequences…
1. You become so focused on the magical
first moment, you become blind to the dark sides
of the relationship.
Six out of seven days, you’re fighting with
your boyfriend.
But you can’t give him up because you met
each other in such a magical moment. Your car
keys fell and he picked it up, and then your eyes
met, you smelled his deodorant, and you dropped
your keys again… How can you not be meant for
each other?
2. You become a love-at-first-sight junkie that
you could miss out on the “real thing.”
One intelligent woman told me, “Bo, there’s this
guy who’s courting me. He’s okay. He’s kind, he’s
responsible, he has a good job…”
“I could hear a ‘but’ coming,” I said.
“But there are no sparks!” she bit her lip.
“No violin music playing in the background,
huh.”
“None. When I see him, the background music
I hear is lululalu-lalulalulalei…”
“Listen. You don’t need a magical first moment
to meet your potential husband. The important
things are mature character, financial responsibility,
ability for commitment, compatible mission and values…”
I actually met this girl again on her wedding,
and before she marched down the aisle, she
whispered to me, “Do you hear the violin music,
Bo? It’s loud and clear.”
It doesn’t have to be love at first sight.
In fact, marriages with the least adjustments
are those between friends who’ve known each other for
years before they realize that they’re good marriage material.
What is love at first sight?
Many times, it’s lust at first sight. Or infatuation
at first sight.
Don’t give it too much weight.
Here’s the truth: It takes a moment to experience
infatuation but true love takes a lifetime.
MYTH 3: “IF IT’S TRUE LOVE, YOU
WILL FEEL THIS WAY FOR EACH
OTHER FOREVER.”
No, you won’t. Here are the consequences for
believing this myth.
1. You panic when the feelings wane, and wonder
whether the marriage is over and whether
you really loved one another in the first place.
Imagine the night of your honeymoon.
Your new bride is sleeping. The cotton curtains are gently
swaying in the cool breeze. You gaze at her lovely face.
You study her soft cheeks. Her long eyelashes.
Her beautiful nose. Her parted red lips.
And all of a sudden, she snores.
“Ngggggoork.”
How do you react?
Because it’s your honeymoon, you say, “How cute.”
Six months down the road, the same scene transpires.
Your wife is sleeping. And the same cotton curtains are
gently swaying in the cool breeze.
And you hear her snore.
“Nggggoork.”
What do you say?
“Sssssheeesh, Honey! You sound like a boat!”
What has happened? The feelings have gone.
Let me say this: That’s normal. It happens to
everyone. But it doesn’t mean your love is gone.
So don’t panic!
You can make a decision to love the snoring
boat.
2. You start blaming your partner for the loss of
love.
This is nutty.
But many people do it: When we don’t feel in
love, we think it’s the fault of the other person. And
so we fight him.
Again, we fall out of love because we’re human
beings.
It’s nobody’s fault.
The moment you fall out of love, the real work
begins.
Let me explain.
This is the most important point I’m going to make.
(I got this from Scott Peck in his bestselling book,
The Road Less Travelled.)
Falling in love isn’t love.
Here’s why. When you fall in love…
a. No decision is required. Falling in love just happens.
b. No effort is required. Falling in love is like… well, falling.
c. No hard work is required. Falling in love is being bitten by
the love bug.
On the other hand, true love requires all three: Decision, Effort and lots of hard work. In the Bible, love is a command. You make it happen.
So true love can only happen after you’ve fallen out of
love.
When you begin choosing to love, even if you don’t feel
like doing it — that’s true love. And that’s the foundation of a
lasting marriage.
MYTH 4: “YOUR PARTNER WILL FULFILL
YOU COMPLETELY.”
Again, because falling in love satisfied you completely
— you want that same satisfaction to last. No it won’t.
Consequence? You might fail to recognize a
good relationship because your partner isn’t fulfilling the
needs you should be fulfilling yourself.
Here’s the truth: The right partner will fulfill many of
your needs but not all of them. There are just some things your
husband can’t give you: Yourself-worth. Your spirituality.
Your inner happiness. These are things you have to work on your
own.
I’ve met lots of people who think they’re dissatisfied with
their marriage. In reality, they’re dissatisfied with themselves.
I’ve met lots of people who think they’re bored with their
marriages. And they complain to the high heavens how boring
their husband or wife is — when in truth, they’re really bored
with life.
Meet your own needs. Find your happiness in God. Find
your niche, your calling, your destiny. And then share your joy
with your spouse.
MYTH 5: “IF IT’S TRUE LOVE, YOU WON’T BE
ATTRACTED TO ANYONE ELSE.”
If you believe in this myth, you panic when you get attracted
to someone else, questioning the authenticity of your
love for your spouse.
One man told me, “Bo, I love my wife. Or I thought I did.
But then I met this woman at work. She has nice makeup. She
smells nice. She wears a pencil-cut skirt. When I go home, my
wife is wearing a drab rag. Her hair is undone. She smells of
vinegar. Gosh, am I attracted to this girl at work.”
Being attracted to someone else is normal — even if you
have a happy marriage. But being attracted doesn’t mean falling
into adultery.
Every time you think of the other woman, discipline your
heart and say, “Home, boy! Home!” and escort your heart back
to your wife. Because if you feed your attraction with fantasies
and constantly think about the other woman, it grows. But if you
starve your attraction, it dies a natural death.
Let me end by sharing with a special prayer for those still
single.
Pray this prayer with all your heart.
PRAYER OF THE SINGLE PERSON
Lord, you made me to love.
You created me to be a lover.
Whether to be a lover as a married person
or as a happy celibate is up to you.
But I shall be a lover every day of my life.
And I shall do everything
from my decision to love from the heart.
Amen. K
BO’S ACTION STEPS:
1. Look at your past “falling in love” experiences. Did you act
wisely or foolishly? Why? What lessons did you learn?
2. If you are currently engaged or in a steady relationship, do you
feel that you are responding well to your “in love” experience
now? Why?
3. If you are married, are you guarding your marriage and your
heart with your life? How do you do this?
Taken from Kerygma No 191 Vol.16 – June 2006, page 12-15, by Bo Sanchez