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Chances
are you never thought you needed to be rescued from romance. In
fact, you probably feel you need more romance in your life, not
less. The truth is that most hearts are broken in the painful
difference between the possibility of real romance and the
insistence on the fantasy of romance -- with the real thing taking
the loss.
Recovering from romantic fantasy is based on your willingness to
accept who you and your partner are -- without deceit, without
drama, without all of the false puffery so many of us put around our
images of love, relationship and intimacy. Recovering from romantic
fantasy does not mean living without it. It means you will have,
perhaps for the first time in your life, the chance to experience
reality-based romance that is meaningful, fulfilling, passionate and
can actually help create a relationship you can trust and delight
in. This kind of romance -- real romance -- can fill your soul with
the feeling and knowledge that you are loved for who you are, just
as you are, and it can inspire you to love deeply and fully in
return.
What can you expect should you decide to recover from swept-away
romantic fantasy? Here's an example.
Judith: One evening, we bought a special pie for a friend, to thank
him for a favor he'd done for us. It was a strawberry-banana cream
pie with a collar of sculpted whip cream around
the top. Careful not to tip it, Jim set it on the floor of the car
behind the driver's seat and we made our way home.
The day had been particularly difficult for Jim, and he was feeling
raw and vulnerable. When we got home, he picked up the pie and the
box caught on the edge of the seat, tumbled over and landed top
down. It was that kind of day. He looked to me and timidly said,
"Maybe it'll
be okay." He opened the box and the pie, of course, was
demolished, more like strawberry-banana-cream porridge. Jim slumped.
I was angry that the pie had fallen and shocked when Jim announced
it might have survived intact. I knew better. How could he not have?
But, more importantly, I knew Jim was
suffering. I understood what he was going through. So, I put my arm
around him and told him, "It's a mess, isn't it? I'm so
sorry..... Let's get another one later."
It was a moment of real romance that left both of us feeling whole
and human, compassionate and connected, loved and loving. In
contrast to the grandiosity of romantic fantasy, we were just in our
garage with a fallen pie, and yet we both experienced a sense of
grace and beauty and a special bond of intimacy.
Can you picture yourself sitting around dreaming up a romantic
fantasy where a dropped pie leads to heartfelt love? Most people,
being honest, would have to say, "No." That's just not how
romance is thought of in our culture. Besides, romantic fantasy
always ends up being punitive. It is contemptuous of "fallen
pies." It's dismissive of human imperfection, derisive of
anything that doesn't reach the lofty heights of romantic bliss.
Real romance comes from beyond what you already know. It's
spontaneous, unrehearsed and open-hearted. It's about what's
happening in the moment, about the attention and affection between
two people.
When you're open to the heightened awareness of real romance, a
vivid, even ecstatic experience can spring from any unexpected
moment. If you try to hold onto it, you cancel your invitation for
life to catch you off guard and take you into the deepest places of
your heart and soul.
(Excerpted from The New Intimacy, Health Communications Inc.)
About The Author:
Judith Sherven and James Sniechowski share the secret of life-long
romance. Be sure to get your copy of their Free 1 hour teleseminar
"Keeping Romance Alive," and find out how. Just go to: http://www.judithandjim.com
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