Interceptor said:
PS I do feel that
oneself is the most important person in one's life. But one' SELF cannot be realized without the other.
Due consideration, appreciation, affection, and attention is needed. Healthy romantic love is shared, not just taken......
But one must be FULL of One SELF in order to Give.
One must be secure in one's own Self, in order to give in a healthy manner.
True, healthy relationships succeed when both partners are FULL, and want to share this with the other.
True romantic love is about sharing, about
Giving.
xoxoLL
Well said, Interceptor. :flowers: And with the thought of self-love comes self-care. A woman who truly loves herself (and respects herself, as I believe that without respect there can be no love), she would not do that to her own body.
...Unless she somehow welcomes the consequence. Some questions worth exploring may be: How does her fat "serve" her? Why is she choosing to behave in a way that will result in not having intimate relations with her Man?
I see this as a way she physically abandoned the marriage before he physically did. It is easy to place judgement on them both - her for setting up a lose-lose scenerio, and him for being the one to actually OVERTLY do what she had already done by her weight gain.
I agree she has desexualized herself :yes: She
has buried her sexual, feminine self under all that fat. What occured for her that she decided she did not want to be that sex kitten with him anymore? what is she getting from her fat that she prefers more than what she got from taking care of herself (a Dr. Phil question LOl What is her payoff? Well, those are the questions a good girlfriend would be asking her, anyway, but I digress.)
As a key role model in her family: She has set an example that it is okay to live a lifestyle that is unhealthy - that can result in diabetes, heart disease, and the loss of the attraction of her Husband the death of her marriage. Her ACTIONS are telling her children this is what a good wife and mother does - what a good woman is.
If she loves this man, would she truly want him to be with a woman for the rest of his life who he cannot feel desire for because she has
chosen to poison her body with 100 pounds of toxicity? How could this be the loving thing for her - to offer up such an ill kept body for him to touch - and treat him as failed partner when he cannot feel desire for her body any longer.
Marriage is a particular agreement of loving that includes the gift of sexual exclusivity. And with that comes a
responsibilty to
give your mate the best of yourself. And to receive his/her best with appreciation. If your marriage partner takes every action to be certain their body is clearly the worst they can make it - where is the loving? Where is the gift to appreciate?
Thoughts on unspoken agreements... I want to share two conversations I had with two women just last week where I had them focus on this issue/phenomena of unspoken agreements:
1. This woman is 52 and is 157 pounds overweight. She has not had sex with her husband in about three years. She is angry with him because he has driven them into financial ruin that they will never get out of - ever, (except with lottery winnings, maybe LOL).
I asked her how she goes about communicating with him about how angry she is with what has happened re: the debt. She said "I can't really say anything because then he will get on me about my weight".
She doesn't want to be sexual with him, she is angry with him about the debt. The weight "punishes" him with no sex, his financial irresponsibility punishes her for the fat and lack of sex. Their first unspoken agreement when they met/married was he was a responsible business owner - modest means - but responsible. She was a size 6 and cuter than a button.
Who abandonded the unspoken agreement first? She doesn't remember.... babies came, debts built up that were not discussed - but the unspoken agreement CHANGED and now it is: She will continue to let him debt, and he will continue to let her be/and get fatter.
2. 49 yr old good friend of mine. She met her husband when she was 20. She was a size 4, impeccably groomed, jogged and took care of herself, non-smoker. He was 22, lifted weights, jogged, non-smoker. Things were like electricity between them.
Now, two kids later, both grown and on their own, and she is seriously considering leaving him. He is morbidly obese and smokes. She is still a size 4 impeccably groomed, still jogs, smoke-free. She is so angry. Her exact words were: "I am so angry with him, I kept up my end of the deal and he didn't. I feel like he abandonded
us."
What I have learned about unspoken agreements is that partners often feel paralyzed about confronting their spouses when they feel the agreements are broken. The underlying feelings of being betrayed, misled, disrespected, hurt and even somehow that the partner breaking the agreement is abandoning the relationship - that is pretty heavy stuff.
(Maybe a good topic for a Sunday SS chat would be: Is romantic love truly unconditional: should it be?)