| sex and intimacy
What Is Intimacy and
Being Intimate?
We all want to be around people we can
relate to and be intimate with. This is most important in the areas we are most
interested in. The more obscure and unusual your shared interest, the more
valuable your bonds. Anyone can share sexual intimacies but only you offer that
unique intimacy.
Step into your favorite time warp,
and take a look into the "Leave It To Beaver" family.
Wally and the Beef are in their rooms doing
their homework. Ward (Dad) comes home, and June (his loving Wife) asks him
about his day.
He tells her about work as she listens
attentively. She then proceeds to tell him what went on around the house and
updates him on some neighborhood gossip as he listens attentively. They talk
about the boys for a while, and after dinner they set aside a little intimate
time alone.
Now, let's step back into reality and
re-examine the Cleavers and this intimacy thing. Their bedroom intimacy is the
only kind of intimacy some people can relate to. That's a shame, because life
should offer a lot more intimacy than that!
In the bedroom Ward and June were sharing,
aware of and meeting each other's needs. There was an interdependency and some
history there.
The same thing was also true of their
conversation about the boys. They shared a desire that the boys would not grow
up to be Eddie Haskell, they new things about the boys no one else new, they
had mutually sacrificed for the boys, .....they were intimate.
That work-related conversation was not
intimate. June listened out of duty or maybe respect, but not because she was
truly interested. Ward's work was his world, and she didn't share it with him.
She didn't know the "players in the game", she couldn't truly
appreciate his worry about small defeats or really share his thrill over daily
victories because all of that happened in a world that she only viewed from the
outside, as an observer. His work was not an area of intimacy.
Ward tried to look interested in the gossip,
but could not have cared less. After all, he didn't even know the names of
those neighbors, much less care about their petty fight. Another area of
non-intimacy.
So the Cleavers were partially intimate,
sharing some parts of their lives but not others.
No couple is likely to be completely intimate,
but the non-intimate areas are the ones where risk exists.
If Ward was really a Type A, work-driven guy,
it would make their relationship more intimate if June better understood how he
spent his day and what his challenges were all about. Don't forget, most of us
spend a lot more waking hours at work than any other place, and so that can be
a dangerous area in which to leave an intimacy void. Fortunately for the
Cleaver household, Ward was not likely to have an affair (even one of those
fully clothed intimacies) with a coworker, because work was just something he
did to earn a living.
Ward's passion was golf! Of course, his time on
the links was something June put up with, and could hardly understand, again as
an outside observer. The intimacy was with other guys, but it was still an area
of intimacy.
The bottom line is that intimacy occurs in an
area both people are involved in and share some interdependency. We all seek
intimacy, and if you don't meet someone's intimacy needs, someone else will,
and the one with the most intimacy wins.
Work environments, sporting interests,
religious involvements, and political movements are all common areas that we
get involved in and want to share with another. Our relationships are more
intimate when we share more interests than the bedroom. The most intimate
relationships, those more intricately intertwined, are the most stable and long
lasting.
A fake interest, one conjured up in order to
appeal to another person to get them interested in you, conveys the illusion of
an opportunity for intimacy. No wonder your partner is disappointed to find out
they were deceived.
On the other hand, a real interest (and the
resulting intimacy) can be developed.
I am amazed at how interesting virtually
everything is when I know more about it. On the surface, most things appear
pretty dull. When you dig deeper and gain an understanding of the players, the
tactics, the intrigue (in sports, work, church, you name it), those formerly
dull areas become exciting.
If you want to be more intimate, be more
involved. Don't fake it, if you do, you are not only lying, you are missing out
on the fun! Take the time to actually find the fascination, to become involved,
and you will not only be rewarded with increased intimacy, you will have grown
as a person.
So, how do you get there? Ask your partner (or
the person you would like to have as a partner) about the subject. Become an
aggressive student, learning all about it, from history to the present, and
then start anticipating the future.
Or surprise your partner (or potential partner)
by studying the subject on your own. Let them know you figured that if someone
as interesting as them found the subject interesting, you would be
"missing the boat" not to know more about it too.
You have just become irresistible.
We all want to be around people we can relate
to, and this is most important in the areas we are most interested in. The more
obscure and unusual your shared interest, the more valuable the bond. Anyone
can share sexual intimacies but only you offer that unique intimacy.
You win!
Intimacy not just sex
More on understanding intimacy
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