Irony Of Marriage

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Hand-drawn art by Rupali Bhuva
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Largely, marriage has been used by those societies, religions, and families as a mini-prison, as kind of a contractual arrangement that says: "Everything will be, now and forevermore, the way it is in just this moment." [...]  And so the very thing which should unlimit people and release the spirit within them, works against that and limits people and closes that spirit down.

That's the irony of marriage as we've created it.  We say, "I do," and from the moment we say, "I do," we can't do the things that we would really love to do in life, in largest measure.  Now, very few people would admit this in the first throes of romance and in the first moments after their wedding.  They would only come to these conclusions three, or five, or--what's the famous phrase, the seven-year itch--seven years later, when they suddenly realize that, in fact, their experience of themselves in the world at large has been reduced, and not enlarged, by the institution of marriage.

That's not true, of course, in all marriages, naturally.  But it's true in enough of them -- I'm going to say, in the majority of them. And that is why we have such a high divorce rate, because it isn't so much that people have gotten tired of each other, not nearly so often as they've gotten tired of the restrictions and the limitations that marriage seems to have imposed upon them.  The human heart knows when it's being asked to be less.

Now love, on the other hand, is all about freedom.  The very definition of love is freedom itself.  Love is that which is free and knows no limitation, restriction, or condition of any kind.  And so I would think that what we have done here is that we have created an artificial construction around that which is least artificial.  Love is the most authentic experience within the framework of the human adventure.  And yet in the midst of this grand authenticity, we have created these artificial constrictions.  And that makes it very difficult for people to stay in love.

And so what we have to do is reconstruct marriage, if we're going to have marriage at all, in a way that says:  "I do not limit you.  There is no condition that makes it okay for us to remain together.  I do not have any desire to cause you to be less in your expression of yourself, in any way.  Indeed, what this marriage is intended to do, this new form of marriage, is to fuel the engine of your experience--the experience of who you really are and who you choose to be."

And one last thing that the New Marriage does:  it says, "I recognize that even you, yourself, will change.  Your ideas will change, your tastes will change, your desires will change.  Your whole understanding of Who You Are had better change, because if it doesn't change, you've become a very static personality over a great many years, and nothing would displease me more.  And I recognize that the process of evolution will produce changes in you."

This new form of marriage not only allows for such changes, but it encourages them.

Seed Questions for Reflection

How do you relate to the notion that love is all about freedom? Can you share a personal story of a time love inspired you to remove restrictions on someone? What helps you create a relationship with someone that fuels the engine of their experience?

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25 Past Reflections
CH
Jan 25, 2024
{whatsapp}+[1267]332]4746] hello everyone .in love and marriage there comes a time when i almost give up heading for divorce because of infidelity and infertility problems until i met priest jaja who solve my problems just in seven days and get my lover back to me, ever since my partner i had two kids.any one going through similar problem i mentioned can connect to him with the up info.
TG
Tarsa Gold
Sep 26, 2023
It takes two to participate in freedom, not just one for a marriage.
PA
Jun 4, 2023
This happened when my wife "allowed" me to leave a job and go into filmmaking. But I take issue with your freedom idea. In a relationship it requires responsibilities, accountability and honesty.
BO
Jun 1, 2023
My primary partner and I have been together for 45 years. We have been married for 44. The description of the relationship cannot be captured by a handful of words - good - bad - challenging, supportive, etc. It is neither a success or a failure that we are still together. Whatever challenges or problems we have arise from our inability to bridge certain differences, and not the constraints of our marriage contract. Neither of us seeks freedom or personal fulfillment. For some of us, perhaps many of us, finding deep intimacy and deep connection is elusive and challenging. Creating a new marriage contract is unlikely to make much difference. Focusing on personal freedom and fulfillment may make us less free and fulfilled. Connecting with beauty, abundance, joy, playfulness and delight might help, but I certainly do not have much wisdom in these matters.
AB
May 30, 2023
I must admit that I felt a little lost going through the first two paragraphs but appreciate the way the reading took the flow to the conclusion. I am unmarried and when I saw the theme, the first thought the came to my mind was to just scribble “No comments” but curiosity got the better of me and I read through the whole passage. My thoughts are solely based on my understanding of marriage and I may be completely wrong since I don’t talk from experience. This particular sentence resonates with my thoughts- That's the irony of marriage as we've created it. Per me, marriage is between two individuals and what they make out of it. Within the constructs of being good, just, humane and responsible, it is solely the resolve of two people on how they want to embark on this beautiful journey of marriage, love and companionship. I don’t think any society or family or friends can define this bond. I think marriage is an interesting aspect of life to be a... View full comment
PE
May 30, 2023
I’ve been married to the same person for nearly 40 years in our mid 60s and never had that experience…….we do and did something’s together and more than not most on our own. I think it’s a disservice to make sweeping assumptions
AN
May 30, 2023
I agree 100% of what is said above and then there is more. The more as I see it is why/how marriage was created in the first place. It came out of patriarchy which caused women to be/become economically/financially dependent on men and marriage thereby giving women some security in said areas..not much in the long... run without a great deal of cost as was also indicated above. It is my deep hope that in the future women's dependency on men or for that matter any person of "power" in a relationship for love and money will decrease as we all wake up from a deep patriarchial (power) slumber.
RI
May 30, 2023
Love for me is not always about freedom. It is so much more. It can be about suffering. It can be about serving. It can be about Being there for someone. . .honor and cherish are big concepts that ideally can be associated with marriage/ Love. Sharing and growing together through fifty years of Life has certainly had its ups and downs: times of feeling the Love and times of not. Times of giving/being the Love and times of not. I have friends who are married and friends who are not and we all experience fulfillment as well as loneliness. I feel it is in the giving as well as the receiving that Love grows in us ... within and without marriage ... Marriage for me means giving each other room to grow into our best selves.
SG
Steve Goyer
May 30, 2023
This is the usual individuistic dribble of the modern age- the egoistic pursuit of the material over the spiritual; the immanent over the transcendent, the me over the we. The fulcrum of his argument hinges on his definition of love: “ Now love, on the other hand, is all about freedom. The very definition of love is freedom itself. Love is that which is free and knows no limitation, restriction, or condition of any kind. “ Love is “free from any limitation, condition, or restriction”? Isn’t it the opposite? Love is free FOR any limitation, condition, or restriction” for the sake of the object or one being loved. “ An artist in love with nature has no freedom from articulating it in some manner which takes conditions limitations and responsible self giving. Only in giving herself over to the art does she find the true freedom of love’s demand for commitment and responsibility toward the other. Ironically, only In losing our “selves” for loves sake do... View full comment
TW
Tammy Wurm
May 30, 2023
I am currently on a 6 month separation from my spouse of 42 years. I am 61 yrs old and have changed drastically from the 19 yr old me that said " I do ".
I have certainly felt imprisoned and limited in my ability to simply be me.
I am one month into my six month trial separation and feel more joy than I have felt in many many years. I don't believe I will be going back to the way things were. I am free.
MA
Marie May 30, 2023
I not only feel controlled in marriage but seemingly by the entire world. I am currently dazed, confused, and listless.
AN
Annemarie May 30, 2023
Tammy Wurm, Congratulations!
AB
Abhaya May 31, 2023
Tammy, kudos to you for realising what you want and making an attempt to make it tight! All the very best!
NA
May 30, 2023
Yes, this is quite an unfortunate perspective of marriage.
There’s a Latin word, consonantia, defined musically as: all notes in their perfect distinctness are yet blended in one…
I find this definition befitting in marriage, as well.
There is harmony and beauty in creating something more than merely the sum of two parts.
JA
Javi May 31, 2023
I couldn't agree more, you can't clap with one hand. Our personal experience (like that of the writer) is not the most accurate of all, only his.
If you have a friend from 40 years (that's useful for wives/husbands too), what's the point of leaving him:
You have to have some commitment with him/her, you like to be with him/her... that does not limit my world, it expands it. I can clap then.
If you cannot applaud, find a way to do it, do not mix personal, political or other inclinations... this makes your world smaller.
"You come to love not by finding the perfect person, but by seeing an imperfect person perfectly." – Sam Keen
that needs compomise and time,that finaly is the same.
BW
Brent Williams
May 30, 2023
"New" marriage? That's been mine for 28 years. And I'm sure it's existed for generations before little old me.
LP
May 30, 2023
My last partner, Rory and I created being 100% for each others fulfilment in the world. After 1.5 years, I was ready to simplify life, grow food and take care of things well here and he wanted an adventure. I supported him in going to Northern Thailand to live and work in an addictions centre. I experienced the heartbreak of his leaving; and there were some messy moments where I was given by my thoughts and feelings, not my word. It was not what I wanted! However, we were complete and I expanded mightily in this relationship. We talked until everything was said. This level of intimacy was new for me. And our love for one another is profound :] He died 3 years ago having made a difference to many, many peoples lives, married a beautiful woman, made a coffee plantation and built an incredible home. Love life! I don't think this keeping one another small for our own comfort, safety or gratification is con... View full comment
MA
May 28, 2023
I'm disappointed by this reading. The author (and the people who chose to republish it) seem to be limiting marriage to its legal contract and have missed its essence, its spiritual transmutation. We choose the lens through which we experience our world and, while there clearly is a limitation in marriage when seen in the eyes of the world, there is a multiplication, an infinity that opens up when entered and experienced spiritually. That is my experience and that of the people with whom I speak of marriage. And I humbly believe we're not different than anyone else, we simply made a choice. To open ourselves up to the spiritual transformation instead of limiting ourselves to the legal contract, to experience it through a lens of wholeness and love instead of limitation and constraint. Enjoy exploring your choice.
HA
May 27, 2023
In order to really explore the subject of ‘love and marriage’ OR ‘love vs. marriage’ in all its subtle nuances of meaning and implication, we must first ask some fundamental questions: i) Is love a search of happiness or basically sharing of one’s happiness with others? ii) If it is a search for happiness, doesn’t this mean that one is unhappy right now and hopes to become happy or happier in a relationship? iii) An unhappy person seeking happiness is like a beggar begging for something. Can a beggar love? Or is it the privilege or gift of an ‘affluent’ person blessed with ‘abundance’? To my mind, a person with a mind or heart brimming with joy is an ‘affluent’ person—living in a state of perennial ‘abundance’. iv) Isn’t freedom actually one of the dimensions of this joy—or isn’t joy simply one of the expressions of freedom? (Not freedom FROM something but freedom per... View full comment
NI
Nithya May 31, 2023
Lovely :)
DD
May 27, 2023
Love isn't all about freedom. Freedom is a factor in love without which there is not love, but love isn't only freedom. Love is oneness that includes freedom. If there isn't freedom, the connection or relationship isn't love. It's a bond that binds. Love didn't inspire me to remove restrictions, love includes not having restrictions. To the extent there are restrictions or conditions, wherever they come from, there is not love. What helps me create a relationship that fuels the engine of the other's experience is my wanting for the other to have and be all that he or she is, and for us to have a relationship that allows and fosters that for the other and for me. It helps to be clear about that from first meeting, including however much discussion is necessary. Love including freedom is worth insisting on. Hold onto freedom for there to be love.
BA
May 27, 2023
I am in a second marriage after my first ended having gotten married at 21 thinking this is what I am supposed to do. It only lasted 3 years or so and I felt so very stifled and felt I couldn't breathe with this person under the same roof. I have now been remarried for 33 years and cannot be happier as we allow each other to grow and expand individually but also walk this journey together. We both were talking just yesterday about how we feel the need to be near each other energetically, emotionally, physically. This article points out the fact that we need to grow as individuals or we become static. That is exactly right and what we've done. We are retired and spend most of our time together but also realize when we need time to ourselves. I love to journal and meditate each day as he does his own spiritual care. It is the greatest gift to walk this earth with someone who inspires you to be a better person. I am blessed and so very grateful.
JP
May 26, 2023
Marriage which takes away freedom to be oneself, to be an aithentic loving self creates imprisonsnment for both the man and the woman. Such marraiges make each other's life miserable and breaks up intimate relationships. Addording to my experience undondiotional love enriches and deepens relationships. Sadly many marriages have caused heart aches and head aches and theyresult in separation and divorce. According to me marraige helps each other blossom and makes life fragrant. I also believe that freedom without responsibility is conducive to failure and unhappiness. I remember Carl Ung's prononcement when he came to America,. He said,," America needs two statues: Statutue of Liberty on the East coast and statue of Rsponsibility on the West coast. Freedom without responsibilty is license to do whatever one wants to do. It is a sign of self-will and immaturity. Namaste. I married Vanleela who showed true love and courage to marry me born in a poor family. She married... View full comment
AB
Abhaya May 31, 2023
Jagdish, Thank you for sharing your beautiful story. It is very uplifting!
Also totally agree that being responsible is the way of life! :)
CW
May 26, 2023
In a society where many people are severely limited by social pressure including what they do for a living, what kind of car they drive, the kind of language they use, their clothing, and their friends, many people have a limited concept of self because the self is defined by what others have told it to be. I have concluded that I chose my marriage, which happily ended in divorce, to protect myself from freedom because my husband was confident about telling me who to be, what to say, what to wear, etc. I was afraid that if I practiced freedom by expressing my authentic self, I would be alienated and ostracized for being too weird. Ultimately I realized that maybe my husband could make me be a person that was "successful" and looked good at his side, but my soul was not going to survive. Now I practice freedom by meditating, journaling, painting, and doing other practices that help me connect with my authentic self or my soul. I then do my best to honour my soul by standing my ground a... View full comment