I really enjoy a good love ballad.
Any good, sappy love song actually.
Believe
it or not James Brown has a beautiful ballad titled, "Try Me" that just gets me
every time.
Perhaps you've heard it.
But there's one group of love songs that
trouble me every time I hear them.
They usually have lyrics along these lines;
"Please release me... / let me go.. / 'cause you don't love me.. anymore";
"..unchain my heart", you get the idea.
Now if these were just songs we enjoyed and it went no further, then fine.
But
unfortunately they either reflect or reinforce the idea that in order to break up
with someone we need their cooperation, or even permission in some way.
What
troubles me about this is hearing women say how unhappy they are in a relationship
yet, when I ask them, "Have you considered breaking up with him?" Their response
is not always a simple 'Yes' or 'No'.
Instead it's considered a rationale response
to simply say, "He won't hear of it." or "He doesn't want to talk about it."
Now, just to clarify a bit, I don't believe in just casually disappearing out of
someone's life either.
The primary recourse in an unhappy relationship to be to
discuss out the problems involved and work together to be more giving and considerate
of each other.
But when the very issue of communication, cooperation or consideration
are lacking to begin with, trying to talk out the problem becomes a problem in
itself.
But when a person has finally reached the end of their rope and things just don't
show any promise of getting better due to the unwillingness of the other partner
I believe it's then time to make one final, clear statement of things and, if there
is still no genuine effort to make things better, simply inform the person there
is no longer an exclusive status to the relationship.
"It's over, I hope we can
stay friends.
I'm informing you, not asking you."
I say this because I've seen too many good-hearted men and women wait and stew
for an agreement from their uncooperative, unloving mate that it's time to break
up.
Unlike beginning a relationship, ending one does not require mutual effort.
In the meanwhile time passes and the unhappy member learns to simply lower their
expectations of what they originally wanted in a relationship.
Here is where I'd like to back-track a bit and look at part of what makes a
relationship an attractive idea to begin with.
It is in our nature to have two
specific needs fulfilled.
The need to give love and the need to receive love.
Mother Teresa once said, "Leprosy is not the greatest plague of mankind.. it is
instead to go through life unloved." So when we meet someone with hopes of a
healthy relationship, it is these two things; giving love and receiving love; that
we hope to find available.
If, as time passes, it is discovered that this person we've met has the willingness
to receive all the love we are willing to give, but is lackluster in their own
enthusiasm to give any love back.. I believe it's perfectly proper to stop and
say, "I love you, but your behavior is unacceptable for this deep a relationship."
With acquaintances, friends, family it's easier to give once in a while in a
much less intimate way even if they do not reciprocate.
We may not like it when
they don't, but the relationship is not as close as the exclusive one between one
man and one woman.
If stopping the show with our beloved and making our unhappiness
clear to them isn't enough to stir them from losing us, it's quite possible thiers
is only an endeared affection they have for us.. but not sacrificial love that
seeks the pleasure of the beloved.
In love, it is our joy and responsibility to give in the way we relate to our beloved.
But love is not -all- a matter of us giving.
In seeking the best for our loved one
we must take the initiative to let them know that they do this love an injustice
by living with a selfish stance.
And so it is that we must not only give love, but
also accountably require it of the one that would stand so near to us and whisper,
"I love you." We must do it to keep love balanced, to maintain our self-respect
and for the betterment of the one we love.