We
can love an infinite number of people. There are no limits to
our capacity to care emotionally for another person, to accept
and express our feelings towards others. Love can find many and
varied expressions. The smile we give a waiter, a friendly greeting
for a shopkeeper. We can feel love when we stroke a dog, when
driving a car and we express it. We love both our parents and
we can love more than one child. We can feel love for many men
and for many women and we can live this love.
Society,
history, culture, habit, our hopes, our dreams and wishes condition
the way we love and have introduced limits to our positive expression
of love. In most cultures it has become customary to love only
one man or woman as a partner and lover. This is called monogamy
and is related to monotheism, the prescription of one god, and
the patriarchy, the male hierarchy. The woman should bear one
or more male successors and the blood of the child must match
that of the father. My land, my woman, my child - my possessions.
Over
the centuries the woman has gradually won recognition and equality,
and this is now anchored in the reciprocal betrothal of loyalty.
When a man or a woman then also loves another man or woman this
goes against custom and practice. If such a conflict should arise
then the future for both partners depends very much upon the vision
and needs of all involved. If the person who commits adultery
needs to feel and experience the love he or she has, then it can
be a solution, or even a release, to follow that need with or
without the knowledge of the partner. Telling the partner inevitably
results in them being confronted with worries of loss and inferiority.
If
we wish to be happy in life for a sustained length of time then
casual affairs with others are not to be recommended. They can
often irretrievably destroy long-term relationships. However many
people find themselves in this situation quite unexpectedly and
without intention. They are not always strong enough to resist
the temptation to follow their feelings. The distress this causes
their relationship is not intentional. They then have to carry
the consequences of their actions.
It
requires an almost unshakable self-confidence, an equally strong
trust in the partner and considerable self-assurance with regard
to societal norms in order to be able to love more than one lover
for any length of time and to make it possible and bearable for
all those involved. One needs to determine one's own need to experience
the depths of one's relationships. Where this need is great, this
might only be achieved by separation from one of the lovers/partners
or by all those involved electing to live together. Our readiness
or not to entertain these ideas tells us something about the true
nature of our feelings.