Love is a funny thing.
We long for it from the moment we are born. At first, our longing is a matter of
survival. Or so it seems. However, according to the Early Childhood
Department at the University of Washington, babies are born with a desire to
feel “wanted, warm, and safe from harm”.
Well, duh!?! Isn’t that what we
all want???
So much of what we do is really based in this longing that
each of us is born with. We want to be
wanted…what was that Cheap Trick song?
I want you to want me.
I need you to need me.
I’d love you to love me.
I’m begging you to beg me.
Courtesy
of LyricsFreak.com
And, so it goes.
We go through life looking for someone to love us. First, our parents. And hopefully our siblings. And then some friends. And maybe a boyfriend or girlfriend. Someday a spouse. We just want them to love us. But what happens when they don’t? What happens to us when we aren’t shown
love? Where does that leave us?
I’ve had several opportunities this week to ponder
these questions as I’ve watched people react in various situations, watch their interactions, reflected on my own interactions with others,
and I’ve wondered. What makes some
people find ways to cope and move forward and continue seeking love, and what
causes some people to become withdrawn and bitter and choose instead to
manipulate and attack others, still deep-down desiring to be loved, but
choosing to spoil the possibility before it can be taken away from them?
If you know me well, you probably know that I didn’t
have a Norman Rockwell childhood. Oh, it
appeared that way to outsiders, but that was by design. What went on when no outsiders were around
was unpleasant at best, and downright awful at times. I have spent much of my adult life wondering
what caused things to be the way that they were…what thing happened to
individuals to cause them to react the way that they did. To make the choices they made. The truth is, it doesn’t truly matter what it
is that happened at some point in history because we all have a choice to
make. We can choose to let our past
color our future. And if our past is
good, that is a good thing. Or, we can
choose a new future. We can choose to be
different. To blaze a new trail. To do better.
Or at least the best we can.
I chose the latter…I chose to do the best I
could. I chose to love with all of me,
hoping for that love to be returned, and I have been blessed by love. I have a wonderful husband who loves me
unconditionally. Sometimes he’s not so
nice. But sometimes neither am I. At the end of the day, though, we still love
each other fiercely. And that love has
blessed us with these five pieces of our hearts that walk around living and
breathing and being…loving our children and being loved by them in return is
truly life’s greatest gift. I may not have had a perfect model of love in
my home as a child, but I was blessed with the knowledge that I DID have a
perfect model of love in my God, and for that I will forever be grateful.
So, on to my crazy observations of those around me…I
had the strangest, almost out-of-body experience this weekend when I met my
father’s girlfriend. It still seems
crazy weird to even say those three words together. But
she was here. In my house. I met her.
I talked to her. I hugged
her. I cried with her. She is real, and so is this thing that is
happening that is almost surreal to me.
My father has found love. The
kind of love we all long for. The kind
of love where when you see someone, your face lights up. The kind of love where the second you leave
each other, you start to miss one another.
The kind of love that causes you to seek out ways to take care of the
other person because they truly are an extension of you. And it is awesome. My father had one of those challenging
childhoods. He reacted by becoming a
caretaker. He took care and he took care
and he took care until I worried it would kill him. He long ago gave up truly being loved and
accepted that it wasn’t for him. And
then, God opened a door so wide for him that he would have had to run the other
direction not to walk through it, and so here he is. He is in love. He is happy.
He is wanted, warm, and safe from harm.
And that safe from harm part is the one that chokes me up. Because I have worried. Oh, have I worried about him. I have wanted him to be well, to be happy, to
be content…but he hasn’t been.
A few months ago, though, I saw a change in my dad. I saw him light up when he talked about
her. I saw him want to tell me about
her, and about her life and her home and what she said. I saw peace, because he found the one who
will love him. So, even though this love
will take him far from us as he makes a move to be closer to her, I feel such
joy that I could do nothing more than thank her when I met her. Thank her for loving my dad, for giving him
his safe place, his place to be wanted.
Because when you have that yourself, you want nothing less than that for
those you love. I have prayed for that
for him. She truly was an answer to a
prayer and so to God, I say, thank you, thank you, thank you because THIS is a
very good thing.
University
of Washington Department of Early Childhood, The first relationship:
parent-infant attachment is key to child’s development, http://www.washington.edu/earlychildhood/articles/the-first-relationship-parent-infant-attachment-is-key-to-child2019s-development
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