Like most men and women today, you and your partner are almost guaranteed to descend into what I call the “Functional Relationship.” One that lopes along OK, but with declining energy and connection, emotionally and sexually. That’s because most people learn a way of relating within romantic and sexual relationships that is a version of adolescent romance. “But I’m an adult,” you may protest. “I grew out of that teen-age romance stuff long ago.”
Not quite. We’re socially conditioned into intimate relationships that are basically extensions of the adolescent experience. That is, the features of normal adolescent romance shapes and defines most of the expectations, behavior, and experience about romance and sexuality that you carry into your adult life. Few realize it, because most don’t learn any other way. And that’s a big problem, because adolescent romance is incompatible with building an adult love relationship.
Take a look at some typical features of adolescent romance: Short-term intense arousal from a new partner. Infatuation and idealization of the new love, often followed by deflation and feelings of loss. Intense longing and yearning — especially when the person is unattainable or elusive. Emotional upheaval and turmoil. The novelist Graham Greene captured much of this in The Heart of the Matter, in which he described “…the intense interest one feels in a stranger’s life, the interest the young mistake for love.”
Emotional tumult and intense emotional-sexual arousal by a new partner are part of what a person experiences when such feelings are new – physiologically and emotionally. That’s a part of normal developmental experience for hormone-driven teenagers. Dion captured the anguish this can cause in his classic song, “Why Must I Be A Teen-Ager In Love?” The problem is, most people are still singing the same tune at 40.
Men and women tend to become frozen within the residue of adolescent romance by the time they enter adulthood. It morphs into the Functional Relationship the longer a couple stays together. The reason is that adolescent love extended into adulthood undercuts sustained the vitality and connection needed for a long-term relationship. You can see the features of adolescent romance in what adults do when they are seeking or forming a new relationship. For example, manipulation and game playing; trying to find the right “strategy” to get and possess the partner; jockeying around for control, and so forth. Generally, we learn to associate intensity of feelings with “real love.”
Even though most people don’t really enjoy being caught up in all this, most learn to accept it as part of “normal” love relationships. But a more accurate understanding is that such experiences reflect an enthrallment with our own feeling of being “in love,” much more than a response to the other. The former is part of the adolescent experience. Continue reading