MUST LOVE MAKE SENSE? LET SEE FROM THIS WRITER'S PERSPECTIVE
Ever since we started dating, my life
has gotten better. That’s not
hyperbole, by the way. And yet, a big
part of me knows that we almost
missed each other. You see, I wasn’t
her type and she wasn’t mine.
Years
before LB and I got married, I’d dated
a number of awesome women with
impressive and contradictory creds.
My list of desired qualities for my
type could—and did—go on and on,
and yet this list ultimately failed me.
Yes, I met amazing women, but I
didn’t fall in love the way I did with
my wife. Not even close.
Conventional wisdom encourages us
to find people who are scrambled
images of ourselves. The standard
paradigm for relationships claims we
date people who make us feel a
certain way about ourselves. And
popular culture pushes the construct
of the “perfect partner.” Our type,
that person who is supposedly
hidden somewhere in the ether,
waiting to unlock the latent
happiness inside us with a
mysterious skeleton key, is treated
like our great savior. The perfect
partner is supposed to save us from
our drab, familiar life.
But this notion
of the perfect partner, what we
commonly refer to as our type, is
actually a narcissistic invention of
personal entitlement. When we say
someone is our type, we’re not
actually saying that person is gonna
make us happy, we’re just
articulating a specific set of qualities
that we find uniquely attractive in
the abstract. In fact, happiness is only
implied in this articulation because
we assume that we’ll be happy once
we find the person we want.
Counterintuitively, though, the
people we seek out may not even be
the people we fall in love with.
They’re often just the people we
think we deserve, the people we
like the idea of. Our romantic
instincts can mislead us even though
everything about them makes
sense. Maybe that’s the problem.
When you get down to it, love
doesn’t make any damn sense at all.
When people list all the reasons
they love someone, they’re usually
the reasons they like someone. With
love, you find yourself loving things
about that person you don’t even
like in the abstract, things you don’t
even want sometimes. Love is like a
secret passageway that goes
through places you’re completely
familiar with and other places you’ve
never seen before, some of which
you’re afraid of and others you
simply avoided. Like, on the other
hand is like a browsing history of all
the places you’ve already seen, all
the pages you’ve read before, things
you find comforting and reassuring
because you know exactly where
you are. There’s something
intrinsically irrational about love. We
can’t fake love or force love, we can’t
persuade love or build a case for
love. We can’t write out a big list and
say: see, these are all the reasons
you should love her. If you do love
her, much of it has nothing to do
with that list. And if you don’t love
him, that list won’t make you change
your mind either.
Contrary to the false epistemology of
social conservatives, people just
love because they can’t fucking help
it. Sometimes, we even love people
we don’t wanna love, which shows
that volition and reasoning can’t
prevent or create love. Love is fluid
and difficult to control. It’s hard to
manipulate and even harder to
predict. It’s no one’s fault that love is
this way. At the same time, you’ll
never bully love. It’s always the
other way around.
In the alternative world of being in
love, things that usually annoy the
shit out of us suddenly delight us.
Things we swore to our friends we
would never do, we end up doing
(often by accident) with the people
we’re in love with, and even
stranger, we’re happy doing them
too because being crazy in love feels
better than being cool (or just crazy).
Of course, it’s extremely important
for couples to have things in
common with each other. It’s
important for them to be able to
share and communicate common
interests and experiences together.
That’s crucial.
But love is like a big,
clumsy rocket detonating inside us
without any warning.
If my wife and I had joined OK Cupid
or Match.com instead of signing up
for MySpace (both of us were peer-
pressurized, by the way), we would
never have found each other. The
truth is, we weren’t looking for each
other, we were looking for people
more like us, or at least, more like
our type. In other words, we were
both looking for people we wanted
because we assumed the people we
wanted would make us happy. But a
big part of being human includes a
deficient knowledge of true
happiness, not because humans are
delusional but because they can
never be omniscient.
As humans, we
know what we want, but what we
want doesn’t necessarily make us
happy.
Even though I would never have
asked for these things, I love it when
LB invents new words or combines
two languages together. I love the
way she yells at me in telenovela
Spanish when she’s pissed off. I love
the way she sighs in her sleep when
I kiss her forehead. I love that when
she’s stressed out, she asks me to
play with her hair. I love the way she
takes care of sick and wounded
children at the hospital, risking her
own health each and every day to
make the world a better place. I love
that she makes me dance to crappy
top-40 music in our underwear, cry
to sentimental love ballads in
Spanish, and give her a million hugs
a day. I love that I now watch TV
shows I didn’t even know I liked (e.g.
CSI, Bones, ANTM). I love that she eats
arroz con palta between paychecks,
gives me pathophysiology lectures
against my will and always wants to
“detangle” my shaved head and
groom my eyebrows like I’m a
bonobo. I love that sometimes we
play Supermario Brothers together
on our Wii and we’re both obsessed
with traveling. I love that my wife
went through a phase where she
sent me videos of baby elephants for
a whole month. I love that she brings
me home beanie babies I don’t
want, blueberry muffins I didn’t ask
for and threatens me when I pretend
to eat all the chocolate. I even love
the fact she cleverly talked (bribed)
me into leaving Argentina in 2009
because we ended up traveling
through Western Europe and
Morocco instead.
In so many ways, LB is different than
what I was looking for and I know for
a fact that she wasn’t looking for a
hapa fiction writer with a shaved
head and a Buddha tat. But instead of
traveling to the emotional places
we’ve already known, LB and I have
opened up entirely new worlds to
each other we didn’t even know we
loved. For me, that’s what love is
supposed to do, if in fact love is
supposed to do anything at all.
Ultimately, joy isn’t an equation and
love isn’t a set of rules. With LB, I
found love in the last place I
expected. And though our friendship
is a crucial part of our love (always
and forever), friendship and
rationality aren’t a substitute for our
madcrazybeautiful love. Friendship
and rationality don’t even come
close, man.
Written by Jackson Bliss
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