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Staying Together, Apart
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Staying Together, Apart
K. Develos
�Constant togetherness is fine� but only for
Siamese twins.�
Victoria Billings The Womansbook,
�A Love to
Believe In� (1974).
Long distance relationships don�t, can�t, and won�t
work. Love needs to be nurtured in closeness. Even fundamental
physical laws tell us that the force of attraction between two bodies
decreases as the square of the distance between them. It�s the same
thing with people.� Thus said my friend, with that sadness in his
eyes that tells all too well of a love lost to the distance
parameter. And he didn�t even have to invoke physics in order for me
to understand what he meant. I�ve heard of many couples who have found
themselves separated from one another by circumstances, and their
relationships were soon crushed to pieces. What is it about distance
that drives the hearts cold? Is it the lack of closeness?
Nevertheless, this is not a fail-proof rule at all.
I know accounts of other couples who not only survived being separated
from one another, but also found themselves eventually deciding to
spend a lifetime together. What distinguishes these couples from the
others? What did they have that the others didn�t? Are there any
simple rules for staying together inspite of the distance?
Clearly, there is more to just a simple physical
equation which governs human relationships and distance. While
distance does inhibit physical proximity and thus may affect the way
two people feel about each other, it does not necessarily have to be
defined as the actual physical displacement from one another. For it
is true that couples can stay together in the same house and yet feel
so �distant� from one another. Years of togetherness may find
two individuals �drifting apart� from one another, not
physically, but somehow losing that emotional connection that binds
one to the other. Hence the eventual breakup. Distance per se,
therefore, is not the key factor that determines whether attraction
will be sustained over a long period of time. At best it is necessary
to redefine the concept of distance as not just being limited to
physical distance, but also to the growth and sustenance of feelings
with respect to time. Hence, while couples may find themselves being
physically separated from one another, they could learn to compensate
for it by bridging the gap through communication and other means of
reaching out to one another. The good news is that long-distance
relationships do not necessarily have to be crushed because attraction
is dependent on the distance. The relationship can survive and grow
over time, given the sustained effort of both parties involved to work
as a team. The best option is to work towards the transformation of
the relationship into something flexible and adaptive, something that
can evolve and cope with circumstances such as being separated from
one another.
With the advent of state-of-the-art technology, the
world is virtually getting smaller as people find many different means
and ways of reaching out to one another. Distance, which separates
people, is becoming a thing of the past as we �connect� to other
people located from us miles away. Indeed, the couples of this decade
are actually more fortunate than those of the previous times. One
never has to wait for weeks for the mailman to deliver that precious
letter to his/her loved one. Or spend those countless days of agony
waiting for a reply. Today, it is just a matter of clicking away to
send electronic mail messages to any part of the world connected to
the cyberworld. Or chatting and teleconferencing in real time over
the Internet. Mobile phones have increased our accessibility, and
there is almost no reason why we can not be reached at any point in
time. Communication has never been so easy, staying in touch at the
tip of our hands. Why, cyberrelationships have actually been built on
just plain chat talks, and these couples have never even gotten to see
each other in person. That is how strong the connection can be, if we
allow it. Somehow human relationships have evolved into something
more flexible and at tune with the changing times.
Perhaps it can be argued that nothing could be
compared to physical togetherness, and all these electronic media
cannot quench that longing in your heart to be physically with the one
you love. Yes, loneliness is such a hideous hollow thing in your
heart, such that not even all the telephone calls in the world nor all
the emails in your mailbox could ever hope to fill. But focusing on
the emotion will not change anything, given that the separation is
going to be around for a considerable time. Sometimes the root of our
frustration is in thinking that the telephone conversation, or the
chatting over the net, would be able to solve the distance problem.
These are all short-term emotional balms, not meant to substitute for
the physical presence of the person we would like to be with. The
most we could do is to make these moments of contact meaningful and
strive to keep the feelings alive by sharing with one another.
Instead of ruminating on the situation, we should utilize the time to
grow individually, something that we cannot do when we are overly
dependent on someone else. Take the time to develop other skills,
stay productive, learn how to cope with the situation. Easier said
than done, but at the end the rewards will be very fulfilling.
Ultimately, it all depends upon a couple�s mutual
effort as a team to work out the relationship inspite of the distance.
Rather than considering it as an obstacle, they can look at it as a
means towards achieving other goals, or a test from which they will
emerge successful. Antoine St. Exupery wisely quipped, �Love does
not consist of gazing at each other but in looking together in the
same direction.� Having a common goal that both could work for is
a vital key to staying committed.
It is a good thing that unlike heavenly bodies
which follow the gravitational law, we humans can make the conscious
decision to stay �attracted� to a person and remain with him/her
for the rest of our lives. Wouldn�t the world be in certain chaos if
we just randomly feel this force of �attraction� to the next
mass of flesh dangerously gravitating nearby? And by the way,
whoever said that the heart could ever be ruled by anything, much less
physical laws?
 
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