The Truth of LOVE¡@(for female~)
Every year as February 14 approaches, we are bombarded with images of hearts
and flowers, diamonds and chocolates, and with treacly musings on romance
and love. This aggressively peddled vision of love has a tendency to
heighten our expectations and cause us to lose sight of the complicated
realities of entering into and sustaining intimate relationships. As a
counterpoint to the fairy-tale depictions of love so dominant at this time
of year we offer a sampling of Atlantic articles that take a more
penetrating look at the dynamics of love so confusing and difficult.
In "Some Differences Between Men and Women" (March 1988) Ethel Person
considers how childhood experiences manifest themselves many years later in
adult relationships. Person explains that one of the most important
processes in one's life is the consolidation of his or her gender identity.
For a girl, the process of securing her feminine identity is more
straightforward because her primary caretaker is usually the same-sex
parent, who hence becomes the daughter's model. Person explains that "Most
women feel the pull to duplicate the maternal identity by falling in love,
pair-bonding, and literally becoming mothers." Achieving an ideal love
relationship forms "the cornerstone of [a girl's] feminine identity." A
girl's identification with her mother does cause some internal conflict,
however, because during the Oedipal period the daughter rejects her mother
in favor of her father. This means that not only does she give up her first
love object, but that love object becomes her sexual rival as well. Person
explains the consequences of this conflict:
One could say that all heterosexual women have experienced the loss of their
first love object without the hope of ultimately replacing her with someone
similar (unlike the situation for men). This early loss (and fear of
retribution), along with the threat of the loss of the new love object,
appears to be at the core of the female's pervasive dread of losing love. In
some women the fear is activated not by any slight on the part of a husband
or a lover but by an adulterous impulse of her own. This dynamic, of an
adulterous impulse leading to the fear of losing love occurs so regularly
among women that it seems to recapitulate some earlier confusion: did the
girl renounce her mother, or was she rejected by her? For women, the
lifelong problem seems to be uncertainty about achieving and conserving a
love relationship.
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