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wisewords


Intimate Relationships and the Spiritual Path


by Marianne Williamson T


he common wisdom goes like this: that


the myth of “some enchanted evening,” when all is awash with the thrill of connec- tion and the aliveness of new romance, is actually a delusion… a hormonally manu- factured lie. That soon enough, reality will set in and lovers will awaken from their mutual projections, discover the psycho- logical work involved in two people trying to reach across the chasm of real-life sep- arateness, and come to terms at last with the mundane sorrows of human existence and intimate love.


In this case, the common wisdom


is a lie. From a spiritual perspective, the


scenario above is upside down. From a spiritual perspective, the original high of a romantic connection is thrilling because it is true. It is in fact the oppo- site of delusion. For in a quick moment, a gift from the gods, we are likely to suspend our judgment of the other, not because we are temporarily insane, but because we are temporarily sane. We are having what you might call a mini- enlightenment experience. Enlighten- ment is not unreal; enlightenment—or pure love—is all that is real. Enlighten- ment is when we see not as through a glass darkly, but truly face-to-face. What is unreal is what comes after the initial high, when the personal- ity self reasserts itself and the wounds and triggers of our human ego form a veil across the face of love. The ini- tial romantic high is not something to


outgrow, so much as something to earn admittance back into—this time not as an unearned gift of Cupid’s arrows, but as a consequence of the real work of the psychological and spiritual journey. The romantic relationship is a spiritual assign- ment, presenting an opportunity for lovers and would-be lovers to burn through our own issues and forgive the other theirs, so together we can gain


re-entrance to the joyful realms of our initial contact that turn out to have been real love after all.


Our problem is that most of us rarely have a psychic container strong


enough to stand the amount of light that pours into us when we have truly seen, if even for a moment, the deep beauty of another. The problem we have is not that in our romantic fervor we fall into a delusion of oneness; the problem is that we then fall into the delusion of separateness. And those are the romantic mysteries: the almost blinding light when we truly see each other, the desperate darkness of the ego’s blindness, and the sacred work of choosing the light of mutual innocence when the darkness of anger and guilt descend.


Marianne Williamson is an internation- ally noted speaker, author of 10 books, Unity Church minister and a teacher and student of A Course in Miracles. Her most recent workshops focus on the topic of Enchanted Love: Building the Inner Temple of the Sacred and the Romantic.


www.Earth-Thrive.com natural awakenings May 2012 11


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