The
Love of Your Life: What We Learn from Living in the
grip
of passion
by Susan Baur.
Naperville, IL: Sourcebooks,
November 2002
$14.95/trade paperback
266 pages
ISBN: 1-57071-871-7
“In
claiming a love of a lifetime, we
take a brave stand. It is an act of
self-trust and an act of faith. No
wonder people are proud of the
certainty they feel when they say,
“Love of a lifetime? I know exactly
what you mean.” Susan Baur
When
I was over forty, a man I had dated in college picked up my book
The Dinosaur Man at a distant Border’s Bookstore and then, as
I had been fantasizing for decades, picked up the phone and called
me. We had not been in touch for years, and although I had married,
raised children, started two careers, and divorced during that
time, I had also begun to long for this love the way a compass
yearns for north. Whenever I thought of love, I swung toward the
place I’d last seen him and asked a hundred questions beginning
with, “Are you alive?”
So begins
The Love of Your Life, and so began my search for what that
term really means to the people who use it. Does everyone eventually
find a great love? Do we recognize it when it arrives? And what
if the crazy, attractive man or the lovely woman we give our
heart to lets us down? Does that turn the love of a lifetime
into a Bad Mistake? The night I got the call, I remember lying
in bed looking up at the starry sky through my skylight and
wondering if my whole life up to this point hadn’t been a detour.
Now the important part was about to begin, I thought. Well,
yes and no. Over the next five years, as my personal fortunes
lurched back and forth between ecstasy and heartbreak (see excerpts),
I asked some 200 people a simple question: “What do you think
the phrase ‘The Love of a Lifetime’ means?”
At first, I got short answers: “It’s your soul mate.” “It’s like
Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton.” “It’s the person you’d take
a bullet for.” “It’s a stupid publicity gimmick.” Next I got hints:
“My grandmother couldn’t marry the man she loved, but he waited
for her, and twenty years later they finally got together.” Or,
“When my mother died, we found she wanted to be buried wearing
a certain ring--not the one my father gave her.” And finally I
got the whole story: “Love of a lifetime? I know exactly what
you mean. I thought I would die and yet . . . it was the most
perfect romance in the world. Let me begin at the beginning.”
When men and women 18 to 80 finally told me their stories, I was
surprised to learn that happily-ever-after was not the only way
they ended. In fact the ending didn’t seem nearly as important
as the love itself--the electric bolt from the blue that banished
forever the feeling that something terribly important had been
missing from their experience. Some stories told of a love that
led to the altar after overcoming great obstacles, but just as
often stories described love arriving at an inconvenient time
and joining men and women who weren’t ready, were married to someone
else, or who held incompatible beliefs. “Do you ever hear dumb
stories,” a woman asked, “like where someone makes a fool of herself?”
“Yes indeed,” I assured her. “Well I ran off with a con man after
knowing him five days and lost everything,” she confided, “and
yet when I think of love. . . .”
Five years and many stories later, I realized that the love of
a lifetime is an initiation into life. It is the passionate romance
that reveals the best and the worst of us and propels us into
taking the greatest emotional gamble of our lives. Once caught
in the grip of passion, we see ourselves and the world in a new
way and learn things that gentler forms of love can’t teach.
We discover how hungry we are for life, how little control we
have over the things that really count, how giving not getting
is what determines how we remember a love affair, how something
inside us is stronger than anything outside, and more. Although
we are commonly told that if love doesn’t last, there was something
wrong with it, the stories I heard did not agree. They maintained
that the first time you love wholeheartedly remains in your heart
as a special memory regardless of how it turned out. This passionate
leap of faith begins a transformation that other loves may complete,
but not erase. When a heart embarks on its greatest adventure,
it’s the adventure, not the destination that counts.
top
About the Author:
When I was ten years old I started a newspaper for my cousins,
and to my embarrassment, I remember that it included a love story
that ran in installments from week to week. I know the story was
terrible, because I remember two lines. “Kiss me,” John said.
Barbara looked up in surprise. “Why?”
Not surprisingly perhaps, one of my first jobs after graduating
from college was writing for a newspaper. First in New York State
and then in Florida where I reported on oceanography, I took my
notebook and my curiosity everywhere. When I won a Mark Ethridge
Fellowship for my reporting, I was able to go to graduate school
at Duke University where I studied the history of science. There
I began a book on the history of oceanography and discovered that
telling a very long story--a book--was more satisfying than telling
many short ones. Moving to Woods Hole, Massachusetts, a seaside
community
devoted to the study of the ocean, I finished first one and then
two books on oceanography. The first won a Pfizer Award for the
history of science.
But did I want to spend years writing books that only a few people
read? I did not. So my next book was on the history of hypochondria,
a painful psychological state that I had intimate knowledge of
although I wouldn’t admit it at the time. For four years I studied
the history of medicine and psychology, and when I finally wrote
the book, no-one would publish it.
After some twenty submissions, a publisher explained to me that
my manuscript would not be taken seriously unless I had the letters
M.D. or Ph. D. after my name. The first was impossible, both because
medical school would give me the creeps and with a husband and
two children I had no time. So instead, I enrolled at Harvard
University and then Boston College to earn a doctorate in psychology
and become a clinical psychologist. On the day I entered Boston
College, the book on hypochondria found a publisher.
Now I was a writer and a psychologist, and the latter opened some
heavy, locked doors that few people are able to go through. In
my last years of training, I worked at a large public hospital
and there took care of--or more accurately learned from--a paranoid
schizophrenic who believed that he and I were both dinosaurs.
Dinosaurs, he taught me, stroll for hours through the hot summer
fields behind hospital buildings looking for half-empty cans of
Coca Cola, cigarette butts, and naked women. They eat pumpkins
which they break open with their enormous feet. I adored the Dinosaur
Man, as I came to think of him. Perhaps my affection was influenced
by my recent divorce and the death of my father, for the Dinosaur
Man’s loneliness seemed to match my own in that sad time. Or perhaps
it was the strange tales he told which caught my imagination.
In any case, I wrote up my accounts of our meetings every day,
and when I got my degree, turned my notes into the book Dinosaur
Man. Jodi Foster decided to turn it into a film, and it was exciting
to see the book turned into a script. Several years later, she
decided not to make the film, and that was all right too.
I wrote two more books on psychology, Confiding, which concerns
the stories we tell about our lives, and The Intimate Hour, which
describes passionate doctor-patient love affairs from Freud’s
time to the present. In the latter, I had expected to find only
exploitive relationships between arrogant doctors and vulnerable
women, but to my surprise, in addition there were love affairs
that marked a turning point in both lives. As I was brooding over
a particularly amazing love affair between a Dutch Jew and her
German therapist which took place during the Nazi occupation of
the Netherlands, I picked up the phone to hear the voice of my
college sweetheart for the first time in some 30 years. What resulted
was The Love of Your Life. |