funny,
isn't it?
by jeanne charters
So,
here it is March, 2004. Matt and I have survived the millennium without
much incident, survived a relocation from New York to North Carolina,
survived the loss of our dear friend, Harry and survived, at least to
this moment, the inauguration of George W. Bush. However, that last
item of survival remains under scrutiny.
What gets us through these changes? I think I will call it love. What
the devil is love anyway?
When
I was a girl, I thought it was something that I would fall into and
never fall out of. I knew that it would be love at first sight.
My mother defined it as you cant keep your hands off him.
She also felt that love must involve tremendous jealousy and drama in
order to be legitimate. That was her experience from living with my
high-maintenance father. She said, You must be CRAZY about him!!!
And crazy she was. And crazy was I for many, many years.
You
see, we follow our scripts like obedient little children until all of
a sudden, one day, we wake up and realize that the script written for
us will inevitably and inexorably drive us to drugs or drink or an asylum
if we continue to follow it.
So,
we put the script in the drawer of the nightstand and pick up a self
help book and begin to figure out how to love in a way that will not
hurt us. For me, there was some counseling involved. Liz was my counselor
and she was really a good one. One day, she said to me, Jeanne,
the kind of love youve been involved in is symbiotic love. What
that means is that youre one half a person and the men you choose
are all one half persons as well. You both believe that if you join
together, you will make a whole. Love will never work that way. It takes
two wholes, complete and total within themselves, to make a relationship
work in the long term.
Holy
smokes! I was 40 years old, and that had never occurred to me.
I
was also the mother of 4 daughters. Oh, my God, I worried.
What if my convoluted sense of the male-female equation has infected
them in exactly the same way my mothers beliefs had affected me?
Somehow, God must have intervened on that one. My daughters werent,
and arent, like I used to be. Dont know why
perhaps
they come from a more highly evolved generation or maybe we all just
lucked out. They were smart about selecting partners
well, at least
2 of them were. And the two who chose poorly figured it out quickly
and dumped the losers.
The
most perfect love is the one a mother feels for her children. Men may
come and men may go, but your children stay in your heart and soul forever.
This is the one love that just does not diminish. When a mate acts weak
or stupid or has one too many cocktails one night, a person might feel
like leaving, at least for the moment. No matter what your child does,
you dont want to leave them
ever. Well, thats not literally
true, I guess. I remember times when all 4 of them were under 6 years
old when I wanted to leave, big time. But once they grow up to be the
beautiful, intelligent people they do eventually become, nothing on
earth or in heaven can lessen the affection, the joy and the pure love
a mother feels for her children. Once a year, my daughters travel from
California, Maine, New York and Raleigh for a just girls
visit. When, after 4 or 5 days, I have to take them back to the airport,
my heart sinks at the distance that will again separate us. I never
leave that airport without tears in my eyes. Yes, a mothers love
is the purest kind, I think.
But
there is one other love I wish to tell you about. While few would call
this kind of love illicit, it is so incredibly satisfying that it almost
feels wicked.
All
my life, I waited for a male to worship me unconditionally. No matter
what I did, how I smelled, how my belly stuck out or how badly my roots
needed color, I wanted him to keep on looking at me with loving eyes.
I wanted somebody who would be thrilled to see me and would feel just
as sad at my taking leave of him as I always feel about my daughters
departures. I wanted him to kiss me and want to be near me always.
Although
I feel well loved in my marriage to Matt, I have never felt that he
would sustain his ardor if I neglected to brush, shave or shower for
a week at a time. Call me silly, but I just dont think so.
So,
I found Poncho. He is beautiful and young and fit. His physique thrills
me as he climbs these Western Carolina mountains effortlessly, his golden
hair rippling in the breeze. Poncho and I do absolutely everything together
and we never tire of each others company. Sometimes, I feel that
I am being unfaithful to my marriage vows as I lie on the floor and
let him wrap his arms and legs around me, but I cant help myself.
I melt as his limpid brown eyes devour me with total and unflagging
devotion. Yes, this is what love should feel like.
Sometimes,
I think Matt resents my love affair with Poncho. But he recognizes that
its bigger than both of us and that no one can separate the two
of us in this lifetime.
If you want this kind of love affair in your life, I can tell you where
to find it. Its really very easy. Simply visit your local Humane
Society and look in the cages until you find the eyes meant for you
alone. Funny, isnt it
somehow, I know youll know your
true love when you see him. Love at first sight does exist, you see.
Jeanne Charters
is a former V.P. of Marketing for Viacom Television. She started her own
award-winning broadcast advertising agency in 1990. Jeanne lives in Fairview
with her husband, Matt Restivo. [ charmkt@juno.com;828-628-0023
]