I've been married for 41
years. People sometimes ask for the secret to ensure a lasting relationship. I tell
them to watch the movie, "High Fidelity." The answers are in that
movie.
It may seem more than a
little strange to suggest "High Fidelity" as a template for having a
lasting relationship given that the protagonist, Rob (John Cusack), is not able
to sustain a relationship for longer than a few months. But by the time the
movie has ended, we have learned, along with Rob, the secret to creating a
relationship that lasts.
Near the end of the movie,
Rob invites Laura to meet him at a restaurant. Laura had dumped Rob early in
the movie and he has spent the rest of the movie reviewing his past
relationships to see why he has been unable to sustain any of them.
Shortly after Laura sits
down, Rob asks Laura to marry him. She is startled to say the least, especially
since she has recently seen him flirting with a woman he has just met. She asks
his reasons for wanting to get married. Rob now reveals to Laura and to all of
us how to sustain a relationship:
"That other girl...woman...whatever.
I was thinking they're just fantasies. And they always seem really great
because there's never any problems. If there are, they're cute problems like we
bought each other the same Christmas present or she wants to go see a movie I've
already seen. And then I come home and you and I have real problems and you
don't want to see the movie I want to see period. I'm tired of the fantasy
because it doesn't really exist."
In other words, the grass
always appears greener on the other side until we realize that the grass on the
other side needs the hard work of mowing, just like the grass on this side.
Relationships are most
vulnerable when we pine for the grass on the other side of the fence. We
imagine we'll be much happier with the attractive woman/man at work, at the gym,
standing in line in front of us buying coffee because, we're sure, the problems
we'll have with that person will be "cute" problems and not
"real" problems. We're tired of real problems and long for the cute ones.
Rob's plaintive statement
that "...the fantasy doesn't really exist" is a brilliant insight.
Fantasies don't exist in reality. In reality, there are real problems that
require real work and a real commitment.
So, in a nutshell, what's
the secret to a lasting relationship? Stop mistaking fantasy for reality. After
all, the person you're currently in a real relationship with and with whom you
are having real problems, was at one time the fantasy person with whom, you
imagined, you would share only cute problems. Fantasies are exciting precisely
because they are fantasies. Keep them there.
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