ABSTRACT

Loving relationships are developed with the expectation that they will continue. The threat of losing the love of one’s mate is so great as to cause feelings of dread. The manner in which a couple characteristically cope with this fear will determine the longevity and quality of their relationship. The behavioral options at the prospect of such a loss are fourfold; viz., changing one’s partner, changing oneself, living with the fear or divorcing. Long term, loving relationships can be sustained if each substitutes the illusion of who their partner is for the reality of the personhood of that mate.

Long term, loving relationships can be sustained if each substitutes the illusion of who their partner is for the reality of the personhood of that mate. The threat of losing the love of one’s mate is so great as to cause feelings of dread. The manner in which a couple characteristically cope with this fear will determine the longevity and quality of their relationship. In over 40 years of marriage and treating couples, the authors have found that both broken relationships and permanent couplings have a similar underlying dynamic. Separations most often follow from the reactions and counter reactions that occur in response to the fear of loss of the loving relationship. Relationships can be long-lasting but deadened by the fear of separation and a focus on changing one’s partner. There is no real confrontation between the couple because the Pain of being together is less then the anticipated pain of separation.