Love Ain't Moulin Rouge
I ironed my bed skirt this weekend. I got out the can of spray starch and
lovingly pressed that thing for an hour in the sauna-like atmosphere of my
tiny kitchen.
That's how much I didn't want to read "Why Can't I Fall in Love? A
12-Step Program."
The book, by best-selling "Kosher Sex" author and Michael Jackson buddy,
Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, was my designated weekend reading. I thought it would
make a good column topic. Instead, it sat on my living room floor like
something the cat dragged in, inspiring any home improvement project that
would justify my leaving it there.
As I pondered a quick trip to Target for some grout, a thought popped
into my brain as clear and shiny as the tub I had just scrubbed: when it
comes to relationships, the only thing I know is that I know nothing.ÝÝ
I know nothing.
With that liberating thought, I flipped open the rabbi's 292-page book,
randomly came across a quote from Lisa Simpson, and was lured in enough to
read the whole tome in one sitting.
"Mom, romance is dead. It was acquired in a hostile takeover by Hallmark
and Disney, homogenized, and sold off piece by piece."
The rabbi seconds Lisa's notion that our concept of love has been warped.
He contends that we have unrealistic expectations of being swept off our feet
instantly, of eternal romance, of finding that one "soulmate" that will make
us overcome our fears of vulnerability and commitment. We expect to meet Ewan
McGregor and have him singing us a medley of popular love songs on a Paris
rooftop four seconds into our all-consuming union.
Boteach points out what he calls some "hard, cold truths."
About 40 percent of adult men and women are divorced or unmarried, he
writes. Marriage rates have plummeted by a third since 1970 while the divorce
rate now exceeds 60 percent. Not surprisingly, a whopping 80 percent of us
are holding out for the "perfect mate," a mindset that Boteach effectively
deconstructs.
"Instead of taking the leap of faith required to nurture a relationship
from potential to reality, we are clinging to the notion that perfection will
fall into our laps ‚ no work, no worry ‚ if only we have the patience to wait
for it," he writes.
Yes.
According to the rabbi, this process of looking for "the one," of
continually trading up, looking for someone better, is what's keeping some of
us in what he calls "that desolate corner of the earth known as the singles
scene."
I don't know if it's all that desolate, or if being single is the
affliction the rabbi makes it out to be, but he may have a point that flies
in the face of current conventional wisdom.
In a section called, "Commit first, fall in love later," the rabbi kind
of shocked me with his axiom, "True love is what comes from commitment, not
the other way around."
Sure, you want to argue with the guy, you want to tell him the days of
arranged marriages and learning to "love the one you're with" are over, but
it's hard for me to argue with anyone when I've already concluded I know
nothing.
If love is something that grows out of commitment, if it's a cumulative
process, as the rabbi posits, maybe we're all ruling out potential soulmates
with a wee bit too much haste.
I took a quick break from reading Boteach's book to check my e-mail.
There I found an ominous note from a reader warning me that my
"lifestyle" was a fast track to becoming a woman who had been around the
block. Too late, I thought. My own eChicken Little told me I better change my
ways, "stop dating urban professionals, date a do-gooder, an ordinary guy,
even a goy." If not, I was sure to "recycle the same old schmuck."
Right. I should just find one schmuck and stick with him, darn it. That
doesn't sound right, but I think I get the idea.
The rabbi, the e-mailer, they're suggesting I find Mr. Good Enough and
make it work, accept his flaws as cute idiosyncrasies.
I don't think this is a bad idea. The problem is that I have so many
flaws of my own I'd have to find someone who had already read and digested
Boteach's book and decided I could be Ms. She'll Do.ÝÝÝ
The whole idea brings me back to Lisa Simpson's point. If we've been
convinced that love is "Moulin Rouge" and Hallmark-hued sunsets and men with
square jaws bearing fistfuls of poetry, how can we recognize the real face of
love?
And with the use of the phrase "the real face of love" I could swear
someone, somewhere has just revoked my poetic license or at least taken some
extra insulin.
If you can stomach the metaphor, bear with me. I think the rabbi's point
is that love isn't just a pretty face, it's a face with quirks, one that
grows on you, one that isn't always smiling and singing, one you might not
recognize at first glance.
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