Last
week I went to a couple’s event. Given that I went without my husband, I sat in
the back, which provided a great view to make some observations about all the couples who were present. I noticed one couple
sat cozily in the arms of each other on the second row, the husband’s arm was around his
wife’s shoulder, and the wife’s hand on her husband’s lap listened attentively
to everything that was said. They laugh at every joke, and from time to time
shared intimate look with each other. Further back on the fifth row sat another couple who
seemed to have an invisible person between them, that’s how far apart they were
sitting. They were so serious and rigid in their look almost to the point of
sadness. They looked as if the event was their last effort to rekindle whatever
that was left between them. They listened with a different kind of attentiveness,
barely looked at each other, and not even shared a quick smile. As
I scanned through the room looking at different couples, their reactions and
body languages, it saddens me to see such a difference in “love” expression.
All
of us who are in a serious relationship can remember the first time we met the “one”.
Each of us could describe the clothes, the food, the place, or whatever that created
an impact during that time and made that moment so special. However, it seems as time
goes on, each of us experiences different setbacks that either slow down the
train or drive it too rapidly. For some of us, we do not even remember what happened;
we simply become the couple with the invisible third party sitting in the
middle.
Everyone
seems to have a recipe to maintain a relationship: communication, laughter, honesty,
truth, money… to name a few. But no matter what the recipe may be, one should
remember the ingredients that made it work in the first place. So I was
thinking about the couples at my event. What made them different from each
other? Sure the hardship of life can play a major role in our relationship, but
could it be that one couple simply keeps their recipe going as a tradition and not
the other?
When
we are in a relationship, we pledge something to each other. I believe what
makes us different from others is the grateful heart attitude. It is not that
we do not endure hardship, or that we do not want to call it quit at some point,
or that we do not become tired, but to be grateful toward each other can
overcome many mountains and chase away the invisible person sitting in the
middle.
©2012 Natacha Michel
1 comment:
We have to keep that invisible intruder away...by whatever means or better yet by applying your prescribed ingredients in our daily interactions. Very interesting article sis. Loved it.
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