When
I was in high school, Erich Fromm was all the rage. A serious
psychologist and philosopher, he did, for a short time, enter popular
culture and become the man to read for “relationship” advice.
Girls were delving into his book, The
Art of Loving,
seeking some affirmation of their feelings. Boys could also
occasionally be found paging through the book, but clearly because
they were misled by the title into thinking the book might be some
modern Kama
Sutra.
I
was grateful for the book because it was the only writing I ever
found that articulated my distaste for all the assumptions that
people were bringing to the dating/marriage scene. Unfortunately,
Fromm didn't seem to have much impact on how people actually behaved
when seeking a mate. And now, his wisdom seems to have been forgotten
altogether.
I never hear any modern relationship gurus even remotely
acknowledging his insights. In fact, most of the advice currently
being dispensed on how to find a man, a woman, a soul-mate, etc. -
actually ends up flying in the face of all of Fromm's
recommendations.
Current
relationship counsel is often based on how to more effectively act on
attraction. Most
of our discourse seems to legitimate
attraction as the primary motive force in establishing a
relationship. But
it was precisely
this kind of involuntary
attraction that Fromm made a case against.
When
I was a child, I
was
fascinated
by a set of magnetic dogs my aunt had on her knick-knack shelf. When
you positioned the
dogs
a few inches apart, facing each other, you could feel the space
between them taking on a strength of its own. As you brought the dogs
closer – WHOOSH! Their pull towards each other overcame my feeble
attempts at keeping them apart. They mashed together, nose-to-nose.
However,
when you
turned one of the dogs around, you got the opposite feeling. It was
as if there was an invisible fluffy pillow between the dogs, rounding
them, spilling them away from each other.
It's
just that sort of force that people use as a criterion for engaging
romantically with someone else. If that feeling of attraction is
there – they approach. If it's not “Don't waste my time.” They
feel attraction as something pushing them from the outside. It
happens to them. They have nothing to say about it. “I can't help
it. I like bad boys.” “And there she was. I saw here across the
room in that tight red mini-skirt – and I was gone.”
People
declare these reactions proudly, as if it were laudable to be out of
control. They entertain, encourage, and lose themselves to these
transports. They are driven and are not the drivers. They revel in
being relieved of all responsibility for the outcome. They “fall
in;” they “fall for” - as if love were a ditch they skidded
into.
But
that kind
of compulsive, addictive response
was the very thing that Fromm fought against our using as the basis
for long-lasting relationships, for real love.
Yes,
it's
true that we
perhaps can't really help whom we are initially attracted to – for
whom we feel
a frisson of excitement, whether it's
sexual excitement or the excitement of inspiration
– or just a plain feeling of WOW! But
then after that first moment of involuntary thrill, something more
wholly at our discretion should operate. Contrary to the often-heard
powerlessness
of the statement, “Well, you can't help who you fall in love with”
- there should come the empowerment of a recognition that you CAN
help whom you love. Even more to the point, you CAN help with whom
you maintain a loving relationship.
I
never had much patience with the “I couldn't help myself”
approach. I was especially puzzled by the kind of involuntary
abandonment I heard people idly
effecting
in
the wake of their pronouncements that, “I'm sorry. I just don't
love you any more. I'm sorry, I've just fallen out of love with you.”
I have even gone so far as to be puzzled by people of one sexual
orientation leaving a partner in order to “hook up” with people
who match some newly liberated sexual quest.
So
what if you're not sexually attracted to someone? That doesn't mean
you can't thrillingly, profoundly love that person. That's because
love, according to Erich Fromm and according to my sense of things,
is not a
compelled
response to sexual excitement or to the excitement generated by a
charismatic character. It's
not a response to any kind of compulsive force acting outside
ourselves and beyond our control. It's
the opposite of the kind of involuntary action featured in romantic
fiction and
assumed in TV/Internet counseling sessions.
It's not being swept off your feet. It's
not getting hooked or having your
attention grabbed. It shouldn't be like the plot of one of those
horror movies in which a hanged criminal's hand is transplanted onto
a good man's arm and
then takes over the man's personality
– maniacally pulling its new possessor into frenzied displays of
genius and diabolism – pulling him to commit murder.
Along
with Fromm, I revolt at the notion that love is a switch – snap it
on – snap it off. I
rebel
against justifications such as,
“I just wasn't that into her” - “He just didn't turn me on” -
“He just didn't grab me” - “She
just wasn't my
type.”
In
other contexts, being a type is recognized as something undesirable.
Actors bemoan their fate when they have been typecast. Once that
happens to them, they can't any longer portray a full range of
emotions. They are forever confined to producing duplicates of the
man you love to hate, of the sex kitten, of the smart-Alec, of the
ditzy blonde, of the loner – of
whatever type
brought them to their first fame. Similarly, it's recognized that
being stereotyped or, in turn, of stereotyping people is a bad thing.
But strip these words of their prefixes and suffixes and you are left
with “type.” Then somehow it becomes, not only acceptable, but
understandable, and even advisable, to operate on the basis of types.
But
having such specifications is not only superficial, it can actually
be the perverse of love. When you look beneath the assembly line
surface of these specifications, you often find what are in fact, not
only prejudices, but the even more confining strains of fetishes.
When I read the love-match ad of a man looking for that “sassy
brunette who will challenge me and put me in my place” I catch a
whiff of someone who is bound to bondage. The woman who writes “I'm
looking for an exciting, take-charge guy” seems bound to be someone
who won't have the freedom to walk away from abusive, demeaning
treatment. She'll be stuck there, pegged to the excitement,
unpredictability, and drama, of whatever awaits her.
However,
having
said all this, I
do have to acknowledge that there can be an argument made for
following one's impulsive, compulsive attraction to someone. A study
done years ago found that marriages triggered by some instant
attraction to some superficial feature – lasted as long or longer
and were as happy or happier than marriages that had followed long,
laborious explorations of compatibility.
I
hear about marriages that resulted from that sort of instant Romeo
and Juliet attraction all the time. These types of relationships are
most often instigated by men who, as the cliché goes, fall in love
with their eyes (while women fall in love with their ears). For men,
it's often a mere glimpse at a distance that does it. It's the sight
of a Bo Derek 10 that captures them. So I hear over and over again
some version of, “I saw her walk by wearing one of those fuzzy Lana
Turner sweaters that were so popular back in the day – and I knew
she was the one for me.”
My
own grandfather was launched into marriage by just such an
attraction. He owned a market in Chicago and would look out his big
plate glass window at the people on the street. Once, twice, he saw a
girl walk by on her way to work. (As it turned out, she was going to
her job as an assistant to Oscar Meyer, who was just then starting up
the ladder of success to what became his meat processing empire.)
This was well before the era of Lana Turner sweaters. My grandmother
was walking along in an ankle-length dress with a foundation of
crinoline. She was always starched and laced and frilly. My
grandfather saw this vision of “the perfect lady” wafting by his
store window. Without ever having said a word to her, he pointed and
declared to his workers, “That's the girl I'm going to marry!”
And
so it was. Their way of getting together is considered a romantic
idyll, an allowing of an instant, fated moment to take hold.
In
actuality, while I think they had a happy enough marriage, I sense it
was one of separate lives. My grandmother fulfilled her role, cooking
and cleaning. My grandfather came home from his meat market and sat
in the parlor smoking his cigar.
There
was a certain prescribed estrangement to their relationship. However,
one could call it a “good” marriage.
Many
couples have gotten together based on such instant presumptive
decisions. There are famous couples whose lives together clicked in
one such moment of initiating attraction. One
example
that stands out in my mind is that of Will and Ariel Durant, the
couple who “made” history together, collaborating on writing
prize-winning history books for almost five decades. On a talk show
late in his life, Will Durant confessed that it had been love at
first sight for him. He was a teacher in a New York middle school
when he'd been taken by one of his students. She was fourteen, he was
twenty-seven. She sat in the front row of his class looking up
adoringly at him. But it wasn't so much her adoring presence in his
class that had first attracted him. He had seen her walking across
campus, lithe and long-legged, like the “Ariel” he eventually
re-named her – and wearing a fetching little red cap. It was those
legs, that cap that had snagged him.
The
two were married the following year, with the
girl's mother
standing by to attest that
she'd given permission for “her child” to
be wed. Today of course that sort of relationship would be deemed
highly inappropriate, tantamount to pedophilia.
But the union became one of the most enduring and inspiring ones on
record. Will and Ariel collaborated on their writing and on making a
life together for over sixty years.
So
yes, I have to admit, such involuntary attractions can be successful
– if the one to whom a person is attracted turns out to be
relatively sane and congenial, and if the one who was attracted is
similarly on an even keel, and if both have the ability to stick by
that initial attraction and make it the spark that lights an eternal
flame (if I might be allowed a bit of purple prose).
One
of the positive aspects of acting on and sticking to some such
initial
attraction is that it isn't the result of a chain of assessments that
then drags on into the indefinite future. It isn't judicial, causing
the person to sit on high and issue an unending series of opinions
about the case the person is presenting as a potential mate. Someone
who has truly been ignited by some detail of another person doesn't
behave like the people in the Seinfeld
sitcom.
I
enjoyed the Seinfeld series more than anything, but it's true that
most of the time, the Seinfeld gang were assessors. They would
constantly register the pros amd
cons they were finding about people they dated, delivering a ticker
tape update on their findings. “Well, she's pretty, but she eats
her peas one a time! I can't be with someone like that.” “Or,
she's smart, but she has such big man-hands!.” Or “Can you
imagine? She actually likes
the Docker commercials!”
By
contrast, the Will Durants of the world are all-in from the start.
Will
had
been instantly, irresistibly taken with that little girl with the red
cap, and that was it. Case closed. What's appealing and positive
about that approach is that it's unconditional. It can come closest
to being like a mother's love – a love that says you're mine, and
therefore I love you, no matter what – forever.
Ariel
Durant's legs surely stopped being so long and unblemished as she
approached her nineties. And she likely never wore a red cap again in
her later years. But it didn't matter. That first image of her
walking to her classes was indelible in Will. It was the lighthouse
that stood over all the cragginess of decades of marriage, shining
out over the waters, calm and rough. (A
bit more purple prose.)
The
Durants' way of getting together was more like Joe E. Brown's
unconditional enthusiasm in the movie Some
Like It Hot.
The classic last line of that film illustrates
the appeal of instant attraction. There's nothing Jack Lemon could do
to kill Brown's ardor for him. Even after Jack Lemon said that he
smoked all the time, smoked like a chimney, Joe
E. Brown wasn't fazed. Even after Lemon sighed that he “could never
have children – Joe E. Brown wasn't dissuaded. Finally, when Lemon
delivered what he considered would
be the coup de gras to Brown's ardor, when Lemon revealed that he was
actually a man – Joe
E. remained breezily, blithely committed, because after all,
“Nobody's perfect.”
How
wonderful to be married to someone like that – someone who couldn't
be moved
off the mark of
their affection, no matter what - someone whose first impression had
locked them in. So, I guess like a proper Oxford debater, I have
prepared a case for both sides of the issue. Conscious decision
versus chemistry. That instant chemistry side of the debate is
certainly appealing, with all of Hollywood backing it as the way
people should get together.
And
yet, and yet, my heart still sides with Fromm – with
self-determination. I want the freedom of nurture to win out over the
force of nature. I want a slow growth of affection to win out over
the unreasoning rush of Romeo
and Juliet.
As
per the title of Fromm's book, I
feel love
should truly be an art.
It
should be a decision we consciously make, not
a reflexive reaction.
Take the example of a painter. We wouldn't want his works to be the
result of uncontrollable spasms of his arm. We want and assume his
creations to be the result of some thoughtful, controlled
expression
of himself.
Through training, skill, practice, and talent – we want him to give
tangible form to some emotion or thought that was profoundly personal
but previously inchoate.
So
like Fromm,
I want love
to
be
an active process, not passive
submission
to some
impersonal force such as
magnetism, propulsion, or gravity. I
agree with Fromm that true love is
a decision that is
within the power of each of us to make and to maintain.
Without
meaning to sound too Nietzsche-like about it – I
want love to be
a supreme act of the will.
I
want
love to be based on an
art we develop rather than on
an
artifact that arrests our development by
snagging our
attention – an artifact such as
a red cap on a passing teenager. Loving
is
best when it's a
matter of listening, taking
an interest, discovering
a
person
anew each day, taking
pains with her
when she
needs
help, affiliating
with him
because of a reasoned, whole-hearted
commitment to his
essential goodness and to the goodness the two of us
can build together.
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