Tonight, I re-read Judy Blume’s classic novel Forever. 17 year old Girl meets Boy, falls in love “Forever” and then falls out of love. It’s right up there with Love Story
as far as sappiness goes. I last read this book when I was 14, and at
the time I was more interested in the explicit “dirty” parts than in
any plot or deeper meaning. But, when I was selling books back today
and getting a few new ones, I saw it on the shelf and it seemed to beg
me to take it home.
I read somewhere
recently that if we remembered how much love hurts, we’d never do it
again. How incredibly true this is. In fact, I think many people stay
together long past the relationship expiration date to avoid the pain
and heartache. When you are “in love,” the love feels invincible, and
you’re certain it’s a once in a lifetime occurrence. And so like the
heroine in the book, we rail against ourselves, fight the end, and even
when we’re the one who leaves, we still grieve.
Everyone loves to
fall in love. It’s the staying that’s hard. Love is such a fragile
thing. What appears to be a hardy plant can die quickly, while what
appears to be a puny little plant incapable of bearing fruit can
surprise you and thrive. And in order to fall in love, we must succumb
to temporary amnesia about the pain. Spur of the moment declarations of
ever lasting love decorate the bridges, restrooms, building sides, and
tabletops of America, testaments to the hope inherent in young love.
In the book, in the
end when they break up, she must decide what to do with a necklace that
has their names and “forever” inscribed on it. She drops it in her
purse in a scene that perfectly captures the awkwardness of such
partings. The deeper message here I think is that its very easy to
become cynical when we loose forever. The stages of grief are akin to
that over the death of a loved one.
Books like Forever
don’t come along very often. We are conditioned to expect to see true
love, first love triumph, to see our hero whisk the heroine off into
the sunset. It’s easy to crave first kisses, and electric glances when
you are surrounded by the pressures of daily life, the laundry, the
work, the bills. My brother is in love for the first time right now—and
I see the power of love to transform a person, to bring us however
temporarily out of deep depression with its powerful rush of
endorphins. But what do we do when the depression returns? When simply
being together is no longer enough to make a crisis go away?
I’m far from a cynic.
In fact, it’s the fact that I’m such a romantic that gets me into
trouble. I want to believe in forever, I want the white picket fence,
the kids, the happy home. I want to be a part of a little old couple on
a bench. Even as I mock suburbia and soccer moms, I believe in the
power of love. I believe in the power of the union of two.
The fear that Forever
leaves unaddressed is the fear of your own fallibility, your own
fickleness. It’s not like a diet where all you need is willpower to
sustain the relationship. Fear of yourself is powerful barrier to fully
being there in a new relationship. It’s that same all or nothing
thinking that paralyzes from accepting our half-full world. We feel
that we will never again trust completely. It's not fear of
committment--it's fear of letting ourselves down. But the human spirit
is such an amazing thing. At the end of Forever, when she
runs into her former beloved, there is sadness at what is lost, but
hope at what may come. That forever is not impossible, it’s just a
matter of timing. And luck.
Forever is like any
other journey—it begins with the first step. And I think I often forget
this. You don’t get the happy ending if you don’t leap, if you don’t
believe, if you don’t trust, if you don’t risk the pain. And it begins
with forgiving yourself for having dreamed and believed before. I’m not
sure I’m there yet, but I’m working on it. Forever can be right now.
And the funny thing about perfectionism is that we don’t want to start a task if we can’t do it “right” or finish it. Flylady with her 15-minutes at a time mantra has helped to stop such negative thinking. It’s enough to do what I can, even if I’d like it to be more. One of her testimonials this week asked what we are hiding from when we give into this defeatism. I think another good question is what are we afraid of?
There is so much good in my life right now that focusing on the negative is holding me back from truly enjoying. Sometimes half full has to be good enough for right now. And if half full makes us truly happy, we have to brave enough to admit that instead of apologizing for not doing “more.” In order to unconditionally love myself, I think letting go of such thinking will be a major step forward. Drink up!