September 26, 2005
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Not Enough Love To Go Around
Being engaged is a double-edged sword. On the plus side, I get to
devote all of my love and energy towards one person. But the flip side
is that I have less energy for other people. Let’s say I get to
distribute 100 units of love energy (power, actually, for you science
nerds). Before June (BJ), it went like this:-
40 goes to friends (people with whom I spend 1-1 time on a regular basis)
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20 goes to acquaintances (people I see in group settings, such as my Highrock and xanga communities)
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2 goes to strangers (people I should love more: Third-World starving
children, flood victims, unreached scimitar-wielding infidels, and
members of boy bands)
Notice: that only adds up to 62. So I had 38 extra units of love to go
around, and boy was I looking to spend them! Now in comes June, and my
distribution changes:-
74 goes to my fiancee
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20 goes to friends
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5 goes to acquaintances
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1 goes to strangers
Now I am totally tapped out at 100. And I’ve fallen off the face of
the earth, as happens to a lot of couples: friends are getting 50%
less, and acquaintances are getting 75% less of their USRD-Ed. But
worst of all, the strangers I’m supposed to love (c.f. The Good
Samaritan, and lots of other Bible verses) are really getting shafted:
they’ve almost fallen off my radar entirely!This makes me feel like a bad Christian. =( I think June feels kind
of the same way, having given up all of her public ministries to
prepare for marriage and minister to her family and me.My only consolation comes from Mike Mason, who wrote a neat little book
called The Mystery of Marriage. June typed this out for me in an email
last month.
Next to the love of God, the "one thing" that is by far the most
important in the life of all married people is their marriage, their
loving devotion to their partner. Nothing on earth must take
precedence over that, not children, jobs, other friendships, nor even
"Christian work".
As obvious as it sounds, this can be a most difficult priority to keep
in perspective. For what that amounts to, finally, is that it is not
just the bad and the selfish in oneself that must be continually
renounced if one is to be successfully married. Even more painful and
bewildering to cope with are all the good and healthy things which
must be renounced or postponed or watered down on account of the
demands imposed by marriage. How many deep friendships that might
have been are rendered impractical by marriage, or must at least take
a backseat to the primary friendship with one's spouse? How many
wonderful activities are interrupted by marriage duties, and how many
good intentions and charitable plans must be set aside each day? How
much energy that might otherwise have been put at the service of the
church or the community is channeled instead into the work of
marriage? Like Judas Iscariot at the site of Mary pouring out costly
perfume over the feet of Jesus, we cry out, "This ointment might have
been sold, and the money given to the poor!" (John 12:5). What
offends us is the terrible waste of marriage, the waste of our
precious lives being poured out over just one other person. We would
like to think of ourselves, perhaps, as having a great impact on the
world, touching and influencing thousands of lives. How great is our
frustration when we realize that we do not adeuqately touch even the
one single life of the person closest to us!
However, part of the secret to the effectiveness and strength of the
peculiar little vows of marriage lies in this very scandal of waste,
this extravagant simplicity of focus. For marriage involves nothing
more than a lifelong commiment to love just one person -- to do,
whatever else one does, a good, throrough job of loving one person.
What could be simpler than that? There is nothing simplier than love.
... While the rest of the world runs after grandiose and unattainable
ideals, marriage partners walk the humbler but more accessible path of
simple caring for one another from one day to the next. It is a task
that is not very glorious from the point of view of the world, but one
which could hardly be more important in the eyes of God. And there is
no greater peace of fulfillment than in doing a few simple things for
the love of God, the things that He Himself has put closest to hand.
When couples observe (as they are very fond of doing) that marriage
requires "work", what they mean primarily is that it takes time. They
mean it robs them of precious time. They mean that marriage gobbles
up unbelievable enormities, scandalous vastnesses, great fantastic
globs and scads of pure, priceless, unrecoverable time. It is like
the amount of fuel that must be fed into a big, powerful, shiny,
eight-cylinder gas guzzler that has to be kept constantly on the road.
You cannot leave a marriage sitting in the driveway even for a day,
because the only reason for marriage is togetherness... It can be a
full-time job just being a passenger in this thing. But like it or
not, you and your spouse are in it together, and in it for life, and
the work of traveling in marriage is the most vital work you can do.
... This is what a radical business these little vows of marriage
involve us in: they pit the needs and wants of one small, frail,
love-starved human creature against the demands of all the rest of the
universe, with all of its urgency and glory and importance, and there
is no contest! It is the one person who wins over the many, the
humble cause of the home which prevails over every other worthy cause
in the world.-- Mike Mason, The Mystery of Marriage, "Vows"
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Comments (15)
Dude, I totally know what you mean.
But yes, being a spouse is one’s primary ministry when one is married.
she TYPED it all out? wow, that’s love…
Seems like a lot of people actually focus on the way to getting married too (i.e., driving to NY/flying to SF/LA etc. to do some scoping, dating, more scoping). Wonder what THEIR distribution is? Love the distribution analogy. Here’s mine: 90% LOVE units towards Mike the Thesis but it gets “canceled out” by 90% APATHY units for that stupid, short stack of white blankness/blandness that uses alot of words to say nothing. Zero sum gain, but boy, am I tired!
I’m a quick typer
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Ed & I also talked about marriage as a bigger upfront investment… where you have to put a lot in, esp. at the beginning, until you’re overflowing. Then that overflowing love extends to others. I’d love to hear other theories & people’s experiences wih this!
I’m excited for the Power of Two to kick in — loving people & changing the world, more effectively & powerfully together than apart.
whenever single people get upset that those dating or engaged drop off the face of the planet, and they claim that they will never be like that, don’t believe them. it’s just the way things are. too bad since i liked your xanga posts. i also think there is a tendency to stay inward focused. it’s difficult to shake the momentum that gets going during dating. wait until you have kids (if you plan to have kids). you’ll have about 5 units left for others.
Ed – this is happy news.. i am glad you are spending most of your love units on June! what a great ministry you will have to one another!!!
looking at the demand side of the equation, married/engaged people also demand fewer love units from others (friends, acquaintances), so the fact that they supply fewer love units doesn’t have to impose a net social cost. it depends on whether they were net suppliers or net demanders of love units before getting engaged/married.
sadly, i’ve seen two couples that were really active in the church and ministries as singles, and when married (and dating for one), that relatinoship ended up consuming them, they spent all their free time together, pretty much doing nothing of etneral value, and ended up almost completely abadoning chruch to the point where they became sunday morning christians, and one family even stopped doing that…. which was a really sad thing for me, and scared me…(this was my biggest fear of marriage)… in luke 14 it also talks about how marriage can be as much a distraction as new toys (ie oxen and land). so yea, that was my fear, but now the best feedback i get from singles / dating couples about our relationship, is that they really love seeing us serve together, hang out together, becuase then they really see how husband / wife treat each other, in tense situations (ie taboo), or sacrificial situations (serving strangers, ministering to the homeless), and how we submit to each other and care for each other. but then again. we are one of only three married couples at our church… (1 being pastor & wife, and 2 being even newlyier weds than us, and younger in age too).
and i actually found i had more free time after being married to spend with others, cuz instead of trying to spend all my free time with chris (when we didn’t live together, this time seems so important, not that it isn’t, it’s just ended up being so consuming), i found that after we lived together, and he works from home, we see alot of each other, freeing up evenings to invite others over, have girl nights, etc…. also! i’ve seen older relationships where the couple was the only source of love for each other, meaning they didn’t have meaningful relationships outside of the marriage, and that was do-able for them, but personally, i need those relationships to keep an even prespective and to hold me accountable. chris does that too, but more is never bad.
ALSO, ok last plug, DO DEVOS TOGETHER!! probably humdrum for you, but i still need to say it!!! it’s sSSOOOO important to start on day 1, and yes, that means your first night together, soooOOO important, and keep it simple, simple and consistent. consistency is better than complicated stuff but not consistent. but yes you already know this right?!?
ok final last thing, i promise, please talk about family planning!!! i’ve seen two familes already have honeymoon babies because they were unprepared, and thought “it’s hard to get pregnant right?” so yes, they were both young couples… and now they’re very young parents. please please please please!! ok done with my speel. unless you want to have a family now, which is kool too. i kinda want kids now. only cuz i have a really really cute godson though.
ok i’m done, i just have to say these things because i feel like people aren’t prepared… but i’m sure you two are! good luck!!
Wow, I like tiggur35′s comment! Listen to the wimyn! [Am trying to ignore Mike....no, must resist.....dang you stupid Mike!....must read up on limitation and critique of the Perry Scheme for intellectual/ethical development....grrrrr...cannot resist....futile......[Yeah, you don't have to be engaged or even married to have NO love units left for others....well, okay, I guess I'm engaged or married to Mike THE %*&#$^ING THESIS! Can't even do a trial separation. so sad.
]
You have already given a lot of love to many people in many different ways. I guess it is normal that your focus has changed a little. But, you will find different ways to love people soon. And, your post shows that you have not forgotten “your task.”
Moreover, people you have already received time and gifts from you should not require more but give back.
You had me at “units of love energy.”
Hey, I’ve been rationalizing this for years? God before family before church
I like Mason’s use of the word “scandalous,” though the Judas comparison was a bit much unless your romance is with Jesus.
Thanks for sharing this Ed.
I’ve experienced how being in a relationship tends to let your relationships with your girl friends/ guy friends slide and even family sometimes! (i.e. don’t see them, call them or know what’s going on in their lives!). I’ve also found that once your single friends know you are dating, they don’t initiate calling you for get together or meet up anymore.. what is that?!? On the assumption of “you are too busy dating to spend time with us.” No.. you didn’t call to see if I was busy that day… then again, I didn’t inform them about my schedule.. So what I found to be most beneficial for me though is actually planning ahead .. (something I never needed to do because when you are single you have much more spare time to spend with friends/ new people outside of the working/studying hours) or have regular meetings/dinners with your close friends/ family. But June, I share your thoughts. I do believe that couples can have so much love to share between them that the love would overflow to blessing others around them as well. It’s often been my prayer that we may serve God and others much more so together as a unit than individually, I pray the same for you two as well!
Chia Chi
hmmm. . . and then there’s all that conservation of niceness stuff