Passionate
and Romantic Love
Bring Passion and Romance back into your Relationship
Romantic love is a form of love that is often regarded
as different from mere needs driven by sexual desire, or
lust. Romantic love generally involves a mix of
emotional and sexual desire, as opposed to Platonic
love. There is often, initially, more emphasis on the
emotions than on physical pleasure.
Romantic love can be returned or unrequited. In the
former case the mutual expressions of love can lead to
marriage or to the establishment of a permanent
relationship, which in most cases will include
passionate sexual love. Where the love is one-sided
(unrequited) damage to the esteem and/or the
psychological welfare of the spurned lover can result.
One aspect of romantic love is the randomness of the
encounters which lead to love. It may be for this reason
that some in Western society have historically
emphasized romantic love far more than other cultures in
which arranged marriages are the rule. However, the
globalization of Western culture has spread Western
ideas about love and romance. Romantic love became a
recognized passion in the Middle Ages, when in some
cases insurmountable barriers of morality or convention
separated the lovers. The effect of physical attraction
and impossibility of intimacy resulted in an excessive
regard of the beloved as extremely precious. Winning the
love, or at least the attention, of the beloved,
motivated great efforts of many kinds, such as poetry,
song or feats of arms.
In more modern times romantic love has been the theme of
art and entertainment in all its forms. Some of the
greatest poetry (e.g. Shakespeare's sonnets), opera
(e.g. La Boheme), and literature (e.g. Pride and
Prejudice) have romantic love as the main theme.
Similarly much of more popular culture from theatre to
film to popular music has romantic love at its heart.
Properties of romantic love purported by Western culture
that might or might not appear elsewhere include:
It must take you by surprise (the result of a random
encounter).
It cannot be easily controlled.
It is not overtly (initially at least) predicated on a
desire for sex as a physical act.
If requited it may be the basis for a lifelong
commitment.
It is the highest form of self-fulfillment.
While romantic love as discussed above is a dream of
many, some claim that such love as is depicted in books
and movies rarely, if ever, occurs. They point to the
modern practice of dating, where often the goal is to
have sexual intercourse as soon as possible instead of
building a lasting relationship. Often, the rigorous
demands of careers in the modern world rob people of the
time to find such ideal companions, and mental disorders
such as social anxiety disorder prevent people from
approaching others.
A different type of romance is found in the modern-day
seduction community, which consists of heterosexual men
who practice and refine ways to emotionally and
physically seduce women. Practitioners such as David
DeAngelo, Ross Jeffries, and Neil Strauss have
commercialized the community's idea of seduction,
selling books and DVDs on the topic. While the community
defends its practices as building genuine relationships,
others have criticized it as destroying the traditional
concept of romantic love. |