

- Navigation
- Hot
- New
- Recent Comments
- Activity Feed
- Marketplace
- Members Directory
- Producer's Lounge
- Producer's Vault
- The Gulch: Live! (New)
- Ask the Gulch!
- Going Galt
- Books
- Business
- Classifieds
- Culture
- Economics
- Education
- Entertainment
- Government
- History
- Humor
- Legislation
- Movies
- News
- Philosophy
- Pics
- Politics
- Science
- Technology
- Video
- The Gulch: Best of
- The Gulch: Bugs
- The Gulch: Feature Requests
- The Gulch: Featured Producers
- The Gulch: General
- The Gulch: Introductions
- The Gulch: Local
- The Gulch: Promotions
Previous comments... You are currently on page 2.
And you have a hero-wife for 60 years... Makes you a hero then in my book.
Initially it's physical attraction - like when you see this person from across the room and your sneakers melt onto the floor. Something I think people miss is that in addition to all of the physical beauty elements - individuality, facial symmetry, that all-important 0.7 hip/waist ratio (if you're talking about a man observing a woman,) muscles or boobage, etc. - every person expresses a part of their personality in a physical way, some more so than others: the way a person carries him/herself, the way they move, can convey an amazing amount of information about a person's personality, even in the first split second of seeing someone new.
In the second half of that split second, the mind (or mine, at any rate,) does a lightning-fast go / no-go correlation with one's own values. It's still just an initial, visual appraisal, but people generally short-change the value of, and the mind's ability to make, that split-second appraisal. I remember David Kelley talking about people having a "love at first sight" experience with Rand's philosophy, remarking that (I paraphrase,) "Generally you have to learn a little more about... the beloved, before knowing whether it's the real thing."
I've had both the experience of meeting someone whose physical appearance, mannerisms and body language were incredibly accurate indicators of that lady's personality, validated thoroughly after-the-fact, and the experience of meeting someone who projects a personality that turns out to be nothing like the actual fact as evaluated later. The former is far more the case than the latter, but the latter is also possible. So "love at first sight" is generally accurate, but still a crapshoot.
Something I came to realize just a couple of years ago - from a television show, of all things - is that more than anything else I am in love with: goodness. That begs the question of defining the "good," but there is a projection of benevolence - or lack of it - that every person does, whether they try to or not, and which can be neither faked nor concealed. It's something that shows up, invariably, in the eyes.
.
Congratulations on staying with your wife for 60 years! I'm very glad to hear it.
Thank you.
Jan
Possessiveness raises it head and jealousy burns holes through our matrix and we know we will start to unravel...
There is an absolute need to enter the mind of the beloved, (what do you believe, what do you want from life, what do you need, etc.), and the all encompassing urgency to possess the body of the beloved because only this, this need to crawl inside that which we have identified as the counterpart of ourselves, then and only then do we know that we are not alone. This ancient elemental force that pulls us into this union of mind and body where we are at once magnified and multiplied by the bonding of the 'two', life affirming, where we are made whole but not wholly by the other.
you living in?!!!
Attraction can start in an instant, but almost always fades over time (maybe 7 yrs? to coin a stereotype).
Real love usually grows over time, as we learn more about someone, and the values we see in them grow.
Keeping the two concepts separate helps prevent the apparent conflict of "love" for relatives and friends, including friends on the same gender.
In studies of limerence, too, it's found that mutual infatuation is relatively rare. It's usually one partner in that DUHHHH state and the other partner willing to be party to it, because they like the person enough to be willing to mate with them, but from much more of a "loyal friends with benefits" perspective.
For your offspring, your scoring of the best mate means they have higher chance of survival, better access to resources, better access to the best mates when they grow up, and better resources for nurturing offspring produced with their chosen mates. In other words, for you, this confers a level of immortality at a genetic level.
This is what underlies jealousy behaviour - trying to control one's mate and preventing others from getting access to him/her, even that most extreme criminal behaviour of killing a mate if it tries to escape. It's all a genetic strategy aimed at giving one's own line the best advantage. "If I can't have him, nobody else will!"
Sadly, the subconscious is not very good at factoring in more recent factors relating to the species. For example, killing a mate rather than letting them escape will most likely extinguish one's own further reproductive opportunities - there aren't a lot of mating options in maximum security prison.
The annoying thing is that something in our being tends to withhold our best creative energies until or unless we fall into that stupid gah-gah state. Then, we seem to have a muse inspiring us to create the most amazing things. All for the opportunity to pee into the gene pool and transcend the limited span of one's own mortal coil.
I'm dusting off the rust, since I've been with my hero-wife 60 years. We've been high, low, at each other's throats but living without one another is absolutely unimaginable.
Anyway, I couldn't help laughing at your "for worse" comment! Humor, alleviates so many of the tribulations of the day-to-day, long term relationships. Those who have this gift are fortunate indeed.
I have read (and can recommend) the book Blink (I think I got a lead to this book here in the Gulch). It talks about fast decision making and how accurate such decisions are. Going with your 'first 10 sec impression' is actually a functional plan.
Jan
Load more comments...