Connecting Love, Passion, and Our Relationships 

 June 1, 2013

By  Jed Diamond

This post is the second in a series of keeping passion alive in your relationship – here is part one.

We are drawn together because something is missing in each of us.

“We are all angels with one wing,” says Luciano De Crescenzo.  “We can only fly embracing one another.”  Part of the reason we fall so deeply in love with our partner is that we feel fully alive in their presence.  Although we are not always conscious of the fact, we feel so alive because some part of us feels complete in the presence of our loved one and we feel incomplete when they are not around. 

I’ve long believed that all of us have experienced some degree of trauma growing up.  As a result some part of our being is damaged.  Subconsciously, we seek out a partner who gives off a certain emotional “vibration” that resonates deep inside.  Carlin and I met and fell in love.  It took us both some time to recognize that I felt in her someone who could love and accept me in a way my father never could and she was looking for someone she could count on not to abandon her as her mother had done.

Like Bruce Lipton, my background is in the physical sciences.  I was a biology major in college before going on to medical school.  Though I dropped out of medicine, I’ve continued by professional training and now have a Ph.D. in International Health.  Lipton uses the analogy of chemistry to show how most of us connect. 

There are 118 elements in the periodic table and 112 of them (more about the other 6 in a moment) readily form chemical bonds with one another to create the physical molecules that make up the stars, the planets, and all of us.  You may remember something about the structure of an atom from chemistry class.  In the structure of an atom, the protons have positive charges and the electrons have an equal, but opposite negative charge.  All 112 elements have shells of electrons that “want to bond” in order to balance the atom.  For instance the element sodium has one electron in its outer shell while the element chlorine is missing one electron in its outer shell.  “Neither sodium’s nor chlorine’s outer electron shell is complete,” says Lipton.  “But when sodium and chlorine atoms get together, they ‘make chemistry.’”

Like the 112 elements that make up the physical universe, we are all incomplete in some ways and seek out each other to fill our unmet needs.  The problem arises when we hide our wounds from our partner or ourselves or try and change the partner in order to get them to give us what we lack.  One of the paradoxes of love is that we are drawn together because we are incomplete.  We can be there for each other emotionally, but ultimately we must each complete ourselves.  Passion will eventually fail if we don’t learn to love ourselves fully and completely. 

But, one of the hardest things in life is to love ourselves, unconditionally and completely, just the way we are with all our excesses and deficits.  As Bruce Lipton recognizes we can learn great wisdom from looking at the way the universe is constructed.  Just as the 112 elements have an excess of electrons in their outer shells or a deficit of electrons, so all of us humans have too much of some ingredients or not enough of others.  Just as the elements bond with other elements to make them more stable, humans bond with each other to stabilize our lives. 

But even when we’re bonded and emotionally supportive of each other’s insecurities and fears, we still must learn to accept ourselves.  Ultimately we can’t rely on the qualities of another to fill the void within each of us.  We all are missing some of the mother love or father love we didn’t get growing up.  We all have a hole in the soul in the shape of our mother or our father.  Some of us try to fill the void with alcohol, drugs, gambling, food, or pornography.  Others try to fill it with the love of that special someone. 

The bonding which brings us together can give us the support we need to heal our old wounds, but we can’t ever fill the hole in our soul with another person.  We have to fill it with our own love and acceptance.  Bruce Lipton again draws on science to illustrate the need to be a complete person, not one who is only alive and happy if we are connected to someone else.  He says, “Once you’ve aligned your conscious and subconscious minds, you are no longer a sodium atom desperately looking for a chlorine atom; you become a noble gas spinning in perfect balance—you don’t ‘need’ another element to be balanced.”

What are the “noble gases?”  They are the six elements on the right column of the periodic table and include Helium, Neon, Argon, Krypton, Xenon, and Radon.  “The most significant aspect of these odorless and colorless gases is that noble gases are the only elements in the periodic table that don’t (except under very special circumstances) form chemical compounds.”  Their outer shells of electrons don’t have an excess or deficit.  They’re not seeking another in order to balance or complete them.  Like well-integrated humans they have a life and vitality all their own.  Though they aren’t reactive, they do connect under special circumstances. 

When a noble gas atom is hit by a photon of light, it becomes excited.  “A noble gas atom in an excited state will seek bonding with another noble gas atom so it can share that excitement,” says Lipton.  Humans who love themselves and feel complete are like noble gas atoms.  “Unlike conventional ‘chemistry,’ which is based on codependent bonding to produce spin-balance and stability,” says Lipton, “energized noble gas atoms are like people primed and ready for selfless love, a world of sharing and caring.”  As Carlin and I have worked on our own healing, we deepen our experience as of love.  Life becomes a gas, a noble gas, where we come together to give to each other rather than to take.  When two people love themselves deeply, feel whole and complete, they naturally want to continue to grow and to give love to others, particularly their mate. 

What has been your experience?

Image Credit

 

Best Wishes,

Jed Diamond


Founder and VHS (Visionary Healer Scholar) of MenAlive

  1. I have learned the hard way about filling the void left by our parents, but with help I have found forgiveness and peace at last and can now enjoy a much better relationship with them, that I feel in control of.
    Though my husband will not entertain the idea of IMS or indeed that any of his current problems could be down to anything else apart from me, I know he has this void to fill too. I wish he could see that, recognise the difficult journey I have been on instead of punishing me for it. His father was abusive and punishing and and his mother extremely controlling – I can see him punishing me for their short givings. Is it possible to reflect the subconscious anger you feel towards your parents on to your wife.? Is this all part of the IMS mix? How will I ever get him to see that the years he has been on this downward spiral isn’t all because of me?
    I have tried to get him to understand that one of the mistakes we both may have unknowingly made is to try and fill the gaps left by our parents with unrealistic expectations for each other, which in turn only sets us up to fail as a couple. I can see now that I expected to get the love and affirmation from him that I always yearned for from my father….is it possible he’s punishing me because I can’t give him what he wanted from his parents? From your blog it most definitely is – but how do I get him to consider the wider picture?
    I am trying desperately to keep my family intact through the horror of all of this. He seems to be doing everything in his power to smash it to pieces…I want him to be the wonderful father and husband he’s been in the past…not the angry, withdrawn caged animal he seems to have become. Can I do anything more? Please?

  2. Karen, Thanks for the response. I know how difficult this can be. I’ve found that many men get locked into old patters and don’t realize they are blaming and shaming. As you recognize they are often replaying trauma that occurred to them in the past. At times it can seem like you’re powerless to do anything. But that is not the case. Just as you are influenced by what he says and does, so he is influenced by you as well. That’s why its important for you to take care of yourself, learn everything you can, and keep your hope alive. You may also need support and guidance. Most of the couples I see began with the wife reaching out for help, both for herself, her husband, and their family. With the proper guidance she can help everyone involved.

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