Have you ever been in love? Horrible isn't it? It makes you so 
vulnerable. It opens your chest and it opens up your heart and it means 
that someone can get inside you and mess you up. 
- Neil Gaiman
- Neil Gaiman
What does
 love have to do with garlic? Exactly! Nothing. Nothing at all. I 
borrowed the title from the brilliant Paul Watzlawick. In his book "The 
Situation Is Hopeless But Not Serious" he describes a situation that is 
staged and played with virtuosity by many couples:
A
 husband comes home from work and his wife announces that the dinner is 
almost ready. She's got a new recipe and wants him to try it. She serves
 the dinner and after a moment of silence asks her husband if he likes 
the food. If he likes the food everything is all right and they  both 
can look forward into a pleasant evening. But if he doesn't like the 
food things become very complicated. The poor man knows that she will be
 offended and maybe even angry if he doesn't like the food. But if he 
tells her he likes it she may be inclined to cook it more often. To save
 his own skin he tells her that this dish has an interesting taste and 
continues eating quietly hoping that there is no second serving.
Now
 imagine that the man is brave enough and tells his wife he does not 
like the food she is serving and she really gets upset. She tells him 
that she went through so much trouble, got all the ingredients and spent
 hours preparing the meal and he is ungrateful and does not even like 
the food. He probably does not even love her because if he did he would 
appreciate her sacrifice. She could have spent her afternoon reading or 
watching TV, but instead wasted it in the kitchen... This probably is 
only the first act of a drama that will continue for the rest of the 
evening. Accusation, grudges, tears.
This
 is quite hilarious and you may wonder how it is even possible that 
people behaved like that. Well, believe me, it is possible. I know a man
 who hated grapes, but ate them for ten years to please his wife. On 
their 10th anniversary he told her that he actually hated grapes and 
would not touch a single one till the end of his life. The wife was 
speechless. When she asked him why he did not tell her about it earlier 
he simply stated that he did not want to make her angry or unhappy 
because she always went to so much trouble to buy the ripest and 
tastiest grapes she could only get.
Food
 is only one example. But how many man end up in theaters watching 
romances or going to boring parties. How many women go hiking or end up 
watching a baseball game to please the partner. How many things are done
 out of fear of loosing the loved one.
If you really loved me you would...
We
 may laugh, but you know what? Laughter actually freezes on my lips. 
Relationships based on fear have no chance of survival and have nothing 
to do with love. Our love does not give us any right to manipulate or 
subjugate the person we love. We have no right to control the person we 
love or decide what is right for him or her. We cannot demand to be 
loved and we cannot force anyone to like what we like because they love 
us. We do not threaten or blackmail those who love us and we do not sell
 our love for a plate of a bad gourmet soup. We must accept that the 
person we love is a free human being, free to stay and free to go.
So
 many tragedies, small and big ones, could be avoided if people trusted 
one another and communicated with honesty; but most importantly, if they
 did not bind their love or happiness to conditions and treated their partners as their equals.
Dominique Allmon
Dominique Allmon©2014
Dominique Allmon©2014
