Love is as critical for your mind
and body as oxygen. It's not negotiable. The more connected you are, the
healthier you will be both physically and emotionally. The less connected you
are, the more you are at risk.
It is also true that the less
love you have, the more depression you are likely to experience in your life.
Love is probably the best antidepressant there is
because one of the most common sources of depression is feeling unloved. Most
depressed people don't love themselves and they do not feel loved by others.
They also are very self-focused, making them less attractive to others and
depriving them of opportunities to learn the skills of love.
There is
a mythology in our culture that love just happens. As a result, the depressed
often sit around passively waiting for someone to love them. But love doesn't
work that way. To get love and keep love you have to go out and be active and
learn a variety of specific skills. Most of us get our ideas of love from
popular culture. We come to believe that love is something that sweeps us off
our feet. But the pop-culture ideal of love consists of unrealistic images
created for entertainment, which is one reason so many of us are set up to be
depressed. It's part of our national vulnerability, like eating junk food,
constantly stimulated by images of instant gratification. We think it is love
when it's simply distraction and infatuation.
One consequence is that
when we hit real love we become upset and disappointed because there are many
things that do not fit the cultural ideal. Some of us get demanding and
controlling, wanting someone else to do what we think our ideal of romance
should be, without realizing our ideal is misplaced.
It is not only possible
but necessary to change one's approach to love to ward off depression. Follow
these action strategies to get more of what you want out of life—to love and be
loved.
- Recognize the difference
between limerance and love. Limerance is the psychological state of deep
infatuation. It feels good but rarely lasts. Limerance is that first stage
of mad attraction whereby all thehormones are
flowing and things feel so right. Limerance lasts, on average, six months.
It can progress to love. Love mostly starts out as limerance, but
limerance doesn't always evolve into love.
- Know that love is a learned
skill, not something that comes from hormones or emotion particularly.
Erich Fromm called it "an act of will." If you don't learn the
skills of love you virtually guarantee that you will be depressed, not
only because you will not be connected enough but because you will have
many failure experiences.
- Learn good communication
skills. They are a means by which you develop trust and intensify connection.
The more you can communicate the less depressed you will be because you
will feel known and understood.
There are always core
differences between two people, no matter how good or close you are, and if the
relationship is going right those differences surface. The issue then is to
identify the differences and negotiate them so that they don't distance you or
kill the relationship.
You do that by understanding where the other
person is coming from, who that person is, and by being able to represent
yourself. When the differences are known you must be able to negotiate and
compromise on them until you find a common ground that works for both.
- Focus on the other person.
Rather than focus on what you are getting and how you are being treated,
read your partner's need. What does this person really need for his/her
own well-being? This is a very tough skill for people to learn in our
narcissistic culture. Of course, you don't lose yourself in the process;
you make sure you're also doing enough self-care.
- Help someone else. Depression
keeps people so focused on themselves they don't get outside themselves
enough to be able to learn to love. The more you can focus on others and
learn to respond and meet their needs, the better you are going to do in
love.
- Develop the ability to
accommodate simultaneous reality. The loved one's reality is as important
as your own, and you need to be as aware of it as of your own. What are
they really saying, what are they really needing? Depressed people think
the only reality is their own depressed reality.
- Actively dispute your internal
messages of inadequacy. Sensitivity to rejection is a cardinal feature of
depression. As a consequence of low self-esteem,
every relationship blip is interpreted far too personally as evidence of
inadequacy. Quick to feel rejected by a partner, you then believe it is
the treatment you fundamentally deserve. But the rejection really
originates in you, and the feelings of inadequacy are the depression
speaking.
Recognize that the
internal voice is strong but it's not real. Talk back to it. "I'm not
really being rejected; this isn't really evidence of inadequacy. I made a
mistake." Or "this isn't about me, this is something I just didn't
know how to do and now I'll learn." When you re-frame the situation to
something more adequate, you can act again in an effective way and you can find
and keep the love that you need.
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