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Anne Morrow Lindbergh, Kahlil Gibran, Love, Marriage, memoir, poetry, relationship, Romance, Soul Mates
They say opposites attract. That was true when my husband and I first met. I found in him everything I felt missing in myself—he was strong and brave, adventurous, self-confident, practical, capable, a man of the world. I was shy, timid, uncertain of myself, a romantic, an idealist, inexperienced. I was a senior in High School. He was a marine returning home from two years in Viet Nam. I thought I had found my soul mate, we seemed to complement each other so well, like two halves of a whole, yin and yang.
The truth is, we were just what we needed at the time. This dark, moody often angry young man who could also be so sweet and loving fulfilled a romantic yearning in me to sooth the savaged soul—Beauty and the Beast, after all, had always been my favorite fairy tale. And he was sorely needing the sweetness and innocence he saw in me, after the things he had witnessed in war. We fit together perfectly in each other’s arms. We still do.
But now I no longer believe in soul mates. I discovered that all the things I was attracted to in him, that seemed to be missing pieces of me, were really undeveloped parts of myself, and a sense of “completion” could not come from outside me but from within. Once I realized that and began to discover that I too was strong and brave, adventurous, self-confident and capable, I no longer yearned for a soul mate. I could stand upright and free even while fully committed to our marriage. We did not need each other, but we chose to be together. We were committed to creating a life that we both could love and enjoy together.
I had always loved what Kahlil Gibran in The Prophet had written about marriage, and came to see the wisdom of his words:
“Let there be spaces in your togetherness. And let the winds of the heavens dance between you. Love one another but make not a bond of love: Let it rather be a moving sea between the shores of your souls. Fill each other’s cup but drink not from one cup. Give one another of your bread but eat not from the same loaf. Sing and dance together and be joyous, but let each one of you be alone, Even as the strings of a lute are alone though they quiver with the same music. Give your hearts, but not into each other’s keeping. For only the hand of Life can contain your hearts. And stand together, yet not too near together: For the pillars of the temple stand apart. And the oak tree and the cypress grow not in each other’s shadow.” ― Kahlil Gibran, The Prophet
I also came to realize what Anne Morrow Lindbergh in Gift From The Sea” wrote:
“When you love someone, you do not love them all the time, in exactly the same way, from moment to moment. It is an impossibility. It is even a lie to pretend to. And yet this is exactly what most of us demand. We have so little faith in the ebb and flow of life, of love, of relationships. We leap at the flow of the tide and resist in terror its ebb. We are afraid it will never return. We insist on permanency, on duration, on continuity; when the only continuity possible, in life as in love, is in growth, in fluidity – in freedom, in the sense that the dancers are free, barely touching as they pass, but partners in the same pattern.
The only real security is not in owning or possessing, not in demanding or expecting, not in hoping, even. Security in a relationship lies neither in looking back to what was in nostalgia, nor forward to what it might be in dread or anticipation, but living in the present relationship and accepting it as it is now. Relationships must be like islands, one must accept them for what they are here and now, within their limits – islands, surrounded and interrupted by the sea, and continually visited and abandoned by the tides.”
And finally, I whole-heartedly embraced what Madeleine L’Engle in “The Irrational Season” wrote:
“To marry is the biggest risk in human relations that a person can take . . . . If we commit ourselves to one person for life this is not, as many people think, a rejection of freedom; rather it demands the courage to move into all the risks of freedom, and the risk of love which is permanent; into that love which is not possession, but participation… It takes a lifetime to learn another person… When love is not possession, but participation, then it is part of that co-creation which is our human calling, and which implies such risk that it is often rejected.”
My husband and I celebrated our 43rd anniversary last week. Here’s what I’ve learned about lasting love:
That marriage is a journey, not a destination, and the way will be hard, and filled with obstacles and challenges and heartache. That real love is not “true love.” It’s not a given. It doesn’t come ready-made. You have to fight for it, you have to work for it, you have to shake it out from time to time, and mend it and keep adding stitch after stitch, row after row, if you want to make it big enough and strong enough to last a lifetime.
Our marriage quilt is a tattered thing, but beautiful in its homeliness, in the places where its obvious rips and tears have been mended over and over again, the places where it’s grown thin and threadbare and had to be reinforced, as well as the places where it’s warm and soft and scented with memories that bring deep pleasure.
Loveliest of all are the stitches we are still sowing day by day, moment by moment, hand in hand, together.
I will end this series of posts on love and marriage with the last love poem I wrote my husband, a few years after our marriage had almost ended.
It is a simple, playful poem, meant to please a man who is not a lover of poetry, but loves the woman who writes it.
To Dale, On Our Twelfth Wedding Anniversary
Sometimes you ask me if I really love you,
Like the answers hid behind a lock and key
You are my love and all the world must know it
For it’s scattered ‘cross the land and half the sea.
There are winds and waves much sweetened by our pleasure,
Rocks and sand well smoothed by hips and thighs,
Grass that grows much greener from our nearness,
And trees that rustle still with sated sighs.
If you climb a certain stream that flows near Big Sur
You’ll find a rock well made for lying on,
It knew our love before it was made sacred
And longs to feel our lover’s urge again.
While high along the rugged spine of Baja,
Where boney cliffs fall far to find the sea,
We saw the world stripped bare of all but beauty
And we alone like Adam and his Eve.
The moon once tipped the hills beyond Coyote
And laced Conception Bay with fluorescent light,
We swam out naked through those silken waters
Where you wound me round your hips and held me tight.
And cupped within the palm of Virgin Gorda
Lies an island and a secret, sandy cove,
Where we waded from the sea like mating mermen
And stretched upon the sand to prove our love.
The wind once made an early morning visit
As we rolled upon a hook in Carib Bight,
While sweeping down the hatch it caught us naked
And added its cool breath to our delight.
Now wind and sea and rock and tree can tell you
The answer that you say you do not know,
You are my love and all the world’s a witness
For its sung wherever winds and waves do blow.
NOTE: This ends a series of posts that originally were supposed to be part of a series of love poems to celebrate April as National Poetry Month. Eventually it morphed into something else–a memoir of our marriage, or an anatomy of love as it evolves over time. Below are the first four posts in the series, which seem to cover married love in all of its manifestations: Innocent love, erotic love, disappointed love, love lost, love renewed, and love that lasts.
Silly Little Love Poems, Unloosed at Last
I am finding there is a last challenge at 84 and 75. – when one person is frail, confused and ailing, pessimistic, in pain and and untouched by any form of personal growth ..while the other still feels young, is active, full of life, and no longer co-dependent, which you described so beautifully.
There are few choices at this stage – just committment….
No doubt you are right. We haven’t reached that stage ourselves yet, but I helped my mom through her difficult passage, and Dale nursed his father through his final days just last month, so we know what to expect at least.
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Another wonderful post. It gave me much to learn, much to go by. Thank you for these posts, they’ve opened me up to many new notions on love. It’s funny, I have “Gift of the Sea” in my bookshelf. When I graduated high school, my favorite English teacher gave it to me as a parting gift. I was too young to appreciate it at the time, but I’ve always held onto it. I’m thinking now is a good time to really read it and try and make something of its contents.
Thank you, Katie–yes, Gift of the Sea is well worth reading.
Loved the quotes you included; I’d forgotten about The Prophet. My husband and I have been together for 16 years (married for almost 9) and I have traveled the same path as you and have also found real love to be much more satisfying than true love.
Congrats on your years together–it is a long and winding road, but worth the trip! That’s not to say that some marriages should not be ended, just that sometimes it can be renewed and saved. The Prophet was a favorite of mine long ago–was fun going back and rereading parts–still as beautiful and wise as ever, I believe.
I just finished The Paris Wife last night and I think this is the perfect post to have read today. I cant help but think that if Hadley and Hemingway had been able to find their way as the two of you did, Hemingway, at least, would have been much better off.
I write this in Key West, where I just visited Hemingway`s home. There are pictures of all four of his wives on the dining room wall. Hadley was the Paris Wife.
I read The Paris Wife too, and agree that Hemingway would have been better off if he had stayed with Hadley. I’d love to visit Key West sometimes–hope you are taking some photos to show on your blog! 🙂
A beautiful tribute to the ever-lasting bond of love and marriage plus the unconditional love we hold in our hearts that holds the glue for our love. Yours is the first blog I read this morning. What a wonderful gift of words you have shared.
Thank you! So glad you enjoyed it. Means a lot to me.
I hope to learn what you have about love and marriage over the years and apply to my marriage, if I marry in the future (which I hope to!)
Thank you! It’s so nice to be able to pass down advice that may be of help to others, especially people like you just starting out. An exciting time!
I really enjoyed reading this post. I am young, and was running from my marriage but after a “wake up call” I am reinvesting in it. Your words have rang true for me at this moment and I really enjoyed the quotes you have added. I started blogging about my own journey of redefining my life and in that my marriage. Congratulations for your successful marriage – it doesnt come without hard work.
I’m glad you enjoyed this and are reinvesting in your marriage. It does take a lot of work, but it’s worth it when it works. I’ll have to check out your blog and see how it goes. Good luck!.
This is great. And so true. When you are young and still developing into the person you’re going to be, you are attracted to qualities in other people that you feel you lack yourself. That’s when the feeling of desparation often sets in because you feel incomplete without that person. But when you are complete within yourself as a person, you are free to just be with people you want to be with.
Yes, finding that completeness in yourself is so important. Thank you so much for reading and leaving a comment.
Nice to see how your love has grown over the years. I wish more people would have everlasting love, don’t you?
I do indeed!
Hi Deborah,
Thanks for sharing. http://www.segmation.com
Wow all I can say is that your writing is very heartfelt and the way real love should be in a marriage. I enjoyed your story very much. Thanks
Thank you so much!
I hope you know
how lucky
you are
🙂
I do know! We talk about it all the time, how lucky we are to have each other, even though there’s been lots of rips and tears we’ve had to patch up.
This is an excellent post, Deborah! It’s great to see you on Freshly Pressed! I stopped posting to wordpress for a few months so it was a nice surprise to see you there now that I’m back 🙂
I love your take on marriage and lasting love. Couldn’t agree more!
Thank you! It was such a nice surprise to be featured!
Very well deserved, Deborah. Your posts are great!
Awesome site !
Thank you!
Beautiful.
Thank you for saying so!
What a beautiful post. And so true. I am almost tempted to say: you are very lucky. But luck has got nothing to do with it, I suppose. Hard work does. And having the right partner who is willing to share in the work.
A great read at seven o’clock in the morning :-). This post made my day!
Thank you! I’m so glad you enjoyed this. Having the right partner is essential!
Ill stay single
Happiness comes in all forms–marriage isn’t for everyone.
“Our marriage quilt is a tattered thing, but beautiful in its homeliness, in the places where its obvious rips and tears have been mended over and over again, the places where it’s grown thin and threadbare and had to be reinforced, as well as the places where it’s warm and soft and scented with memories that bring deep pleasure.”
Absolutely the best part of that post. Your writing is so complex in its cadence and fluidity, yet seems effortless for you to write. Being younger, I really enjoyed the words of wisdom. Especially mentioning that at the time, he was what you needed, but once you grew on your own, you realized you could stand on your own. Thank you, just what I needed! Hope to read more!
Jac
I am touched by your comment. Thank you so much.
this is so powerful and so true. you have shown me a gorgeous perspective on marriage and what it means to make it work – my mum has spoken to me often about it but there was something in the way you wrote, that the image was clearer than it has been ever before. loved your blogs and your poems. remarkable, all of them. congratulations on being freshly pressed and many more wishes on your 43rd.
I am so glad this spoke to you, and so appreciate your leaving this comment.
Beautiful post
Thank you!
Don’t You love him very much?
I do. Very much.
like yr blog–
following you 🙂
I absolutely love this. Your description of the two of you being so different and the growing to understand why you looked for that, mirrors my own experience.
So glad you enjoyed this. I love it when I read of others who have had common experiences.
Enjoyed reading your thoughts on love & life in love..Glad you were F.P.’ed or I’d have missed out. Always refreshing to read a F.P.’er that I actually like..This was a fabulous read/write! As a child that just celebrated my parents 51st wedding anniversary with them; I can personally attest that real LOVE lasts. For a lifetime..I recall many years back when my own Daddy said he didn’t have a soulmate in my Mom..I didn’t understand it then; I was alot younger & a hopeless romantic..I still am! I love frilly, girly pretty things all wrapped UP in pretty gift wrap..and LOVE doesn’t always fit in that box. What Daddy said instead he’d found in my Mom was/IS a lifemate..WOW . What I’ve seen first hand in my parents LOVE is something I not only yearn for; but I simply refuse! to settle for anything less. It can make seeking a real lifelong love a hard task indeed …But I look at it as a lofty & rewarding goal to strive for. I’ve got a feeling its right around the corner. And in the meantime? I can see, daily, what a real lifelong LOVE looks like. And it is beautiful. How blessed I was/am to have been born from such a LOVE. Congrats on your real lifelong LOVE. Stay UPlifted & blessed
I love that–a lifemate! Your daddy was wise. You truly are blessed to have such parents. Thank you so much for sharing.
I absolutely loved this post!!How beautiful and how inspiring.
I am so glad. Thank you!
Very moving and real, beautiful x
Thank you!
I really enjoyed your post. The Anne Morrow quote really hits it on the nail.
I loved finding and sharing those quotes. So glad you enjoyed.
I found this very thoughtful. I never really thought about love in that certain way, but by the way you described it, it feels like the way I show my love for people (and yes, I’ve written my lovers poems before). Congratulations on your 43rd anniversary too!
Thank you! I so appreciate your comment.
I agree with Jacqueline – the description of the quilt is awesome! It demonstrates that marriage is a labor of love (like a quilt) and can be work but it’s worthiness in the whole scheme of life can be quite lovely.
I’m glad you liked the part about the quilt–it is a labor of love. Thank you!
I just joined this blog site…first-time blogger… And your blog was the first I fell upon…what an inspiration and joy to read. Thank you for the perspective!
Congrats on being a first-time blogger. Hope you enjoy it as much as I do.
Beautifully written! It was so moving and touching to read. Especially the part about how one has to work at a marriage. I always find that one goes through ebbs& flows. As long as the love is there though, anything is possible. If it is worth fighting for then one finds the way. Thanks for sharing!
Thank you! I am so glad you enjoyed this. It was worth fighting for.
A wonderful post, thanks for sharing. I too, believe, that real love is a choice not a given and in that there is so much more strength in a relationship. 🙂
Yes, that was a real eye-opener for me, to learn that love is a choice. The same for happiness. We must chose to be happy–it’s not a given or something we can wait for when conditions are perfect. Something I am only now really becoming aware of. Such a relief when we realize it. Anyway, thank you so much for writing.
Beautifully written and quite insightful. I would love to have long journey with my wife. Its just 5 years now and I can understand how you have to make amendments in your life and shake out the true love. Just loved it.
What a treat to hear you say that, and to think of you and your wife early in that lifelong journey. Thank you for sharing this.
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love
thanks
You’re so welcome.
Your story is very inspiring. Love is an everyday choice and it takes a lot of courage to do it everyday. Thank you for sharing this.
Thank you! Love and happiness are choices we make everyday. Some days are harder than others, but it is a choice.
Gibran’s piece was one of the readings at our wedding over 22 years ago, and I just finished re-reading Lindbergh’s little gem again earlier this week. I was reminded to dust off Madeleine L’Engle’s “Two-Part Invention” book which I last read before I was married, and I know I would have a greater appreciation for it now. Thank you for this beautiful, honest post.
So glad you enjoyed it. I read the L ‘Engle piece at my daughters wedding recently. I was standing literally at the edge of that ebb and flow she writes about on a beach in California when I read it with the setting sun behind us—one of the proudest and happiest moments in my life. And Gibran was an early influence on me as a young woman–so many memories there. We stand on the shoulders of giants–the great thinkers and writers have contributed so much good to this world.
I don’t think you understand how much I needed to read this post today.
This is so true, and eloquently, beautifully written to boot. I feel as if my relationship is in that transition now, and it’s difficult when one person feels that this transition is wrong and the other is okay with it. That’s not to say that either of us don’t have things to work on (I feel like I have a boatload of it), but that’s the whole point of a relationship, is working and growing together. I loved the analogy of how pillars holding up a surface don’t stand close together.
Thank you, so much for putting this out there.
Wow. You made my day to think something I wrote helped someone else who is perhaps going through something in the early days of their marriage. It took me a while to learn to allow that space between us and then to enjoy it and now see how much stronger we are because of it. I know this isn’t a model for every marriage. Some couples are naturally very close, and that’s so sweet and special to see. But those who stand apart and still love and value the one on the other end of that structure as you put it, can comprise a marriage just as sweet. I’m copying here what a friend on FB told me in response to this post:
“Before my Dad died, I asked him if there was a secret to a long marriage. His gaze never wavered from the television set. He sighed, clapped his hands together, then slowly moved them apart. “You go this way, she goes that way,” he said. And that was all he said. Over the years, I’ve realized just how profound his advice was.”
I just loved that and had to pass on.
wow, what a beautiful article and thanks for sharing your personal experiences 🙂
Happy to do it. So appreciate your comment.
So beautiful. Congratulations to you and your husband. May you celebrate many more years together.
Thank you so much!
This was a beautiful article, very inspirational to me.. thank you for sharing! 🙂
So glad you liked it!
I couldn’t have stumbled upon your article at a better time. My fiance and I are living in different countries and trying to learn how to understand and move forward with our current situation. Your writing has been therapeutic and calming, I will be subscribing.
I love that–therapeutic and calming–I am so glad reading this helped, and so glad you let me know.
This is beautiful. Love is important. You learn things from the one you love. As for soul mates, I agree with you and I even have other reason. Maybe one day I’ll share. I love this. Thanks for sharing
You do learn things as you grow, and I’d love to hear what you learned when you are ready to share. Thanks so much for coming here and leaving your comment.
Reblogged this on stevensa2013 and commented:
I love honesty like this.
Thank you for the reblog! I enjoyed your site too.
Beautiful writing is a force of change to bring humanity back to its senses, physical and spiritual.
That is such a lovely thing to say! And something I truly believe. Thank you for that.
I really enjoy this. I also believe love is a choice- congrats on your continuing marriage and thank you for your honesty!
http://stepstochangetheworld.wordpress.com/
Thank you! I like the title of your blog and will check it out.
I got married about 5 years ago. My marriage is about to break up and I can’t seem to understand my wife anymore. But your post is inspiring. After reading it, I feel like I should go back and mend my relationship with my wife. Well I’ll keep thinking about this. Thanks for your inspiring words
I’m glad if this post has been has been of some help. Marriage is so hard! It really is. I am not so naïve as to believe that all marriages should be saved, but I do believe a lot that end could have been saved, and I hope that is true for you and your wife. Hang in there for as long as you can. Wishing you all the best.
Deborah,
Thank you indeed –
for your honesty, and for sharing your thoughts, your experience and your learning. This is a beautiful post. Relationships are the most precious things that we humans have. Congratulations on yours, and your insight that helps hold it together.
Best wishes to you,
Emma x.
Thank you Emma. I so appreciate that.
This is beautiful. You remind me of my parents, the Eternal Honeymooners. 🙂
Congratulations on being Freshly Pressed! It’s FP-worthy. 🙂
Wow! The Honeymooners! That’s a blast from the past. I’m assuming you are referring to the TV classic with Jackie Gleeson? How fun. I love that. And thank you. Being FP was such a surprise and so nice to get that recognition.
i’m not sure how i got here, but this is one of the most beautiful pieces i’ve read all year. Wish i could show it to someone i used to know. 😦 Thanks for sharing.
What a lovely thing to say! I’m so glad you found your way here.
sweet