Sunday, December 21, 2008

Relationship Vision

Please read the preceding post, "Profound Relationships" for context.

My last posting wondered about the components of what I was calling a "profound relationship". Admittedly, a less verbose name is needed for the concept. Maybe this is just another packaging of the age-old musings about the nature of love, but I think rather than trying to define all the various kinds of love, this conversation is more about narrowly focusing on one expression of it that we normally see in long-term monogamous couples.

I called it "profound" to distinguish it from flings, infatuations and other flavors of those kinds of relationships and to call attention to the fact that profound couplings are extremely rare. By profound, I mean one that lasts a "long" time, is satisfying to both partners, produces good fruit and has a presence that is detectable to friends and observers. In other words, the "couple" is a strong entity without diluting the individuality of the partners involved.

There are lots of other interesting discussion paths to explore regarding timing, friendship, romance and eroticism. Can there be any order? What is the difference in the relationship for particular orders? What is the difference for relationships with higher portions of one or the other? What if one or more is completely missing? On and on....

But I want to talk about what I believe is a fifth and very important component of a truly profound relationship: Vision. Of course, vision is important for any organizational entity or collection of people with a mission. It provides the reason for existence, direction and expectations for the future. It provides a mission and and inspires an energy to drive the mission.

What does this mean in a personal two-person relationship? I do not mean to suggest that it should be anywhere near as dry as explicitly mapping out plans, deliverables, success metrics or anything like you'd find in a commercial enterprise. But I do think a vision is an important part of the level of profundity of the relationship.

The vision is more than likely implicit rather than explicit. Or it starts implicitly and grows. And, it should be more abstract than concrete. If a vision is too concrete or explicit, it is too mechanical for a personal relationship, especially one that includes romance and eroticism. It can kill or diminish these important components. IOW, the relationship becomes too much of a business.

For young people, the obvious overriding vision is the family. Raising a family requires a vision that takes 20 years or more to bring to fruition. Thousands of decisions are made on a daily, weekly, monthly, annual basis that drive the vision of the family.

That said, a truly profound relationship will likely have a parallel vision that either runs as a secondary priority or is a seed that is planted and nourished at a slower pace while the more urgent family vision is grown to maturity.

Vision provides a framework in which the profound relationship can grow. It is idealistic and will never be completely realized. This keeps the infinity alive to avoid stagnation. Visions might range across artistic expression, community service, scientific endeavor, spiritual adventure, world travel and many more or some creative combination. The more abstract and spontaneous the better.

How can I tie these two posts together? I'll give it a shot, although consider this is one of a million, billion possibilities...

A particular accident of timing throws two people together who both experience that first romantic spark of interest. This morphs into a short-lived eroticism that runs its course, at least in its most intense form, giving birth to a very rich friendship that allows each to grow in new ways and explore common interests as well. Continued attention to timing pushes the relationship forward and promotes a desire for dual spiritual growth that gives birth to a vision that is never explicitly stated, but is unconciously created daily leading to increased creativity, productivity, appreciation and emotional presence of both partners.

Daily noise and haze does not stand a chance against such a formidable reality.

1 comment:

dbazan said...

Vision is the guiding framework for all the elements of a good relationship. Vision provides goals for both individuals and couples to strive for and agreeably should be idealistic and abstract. My vision may develop and change as I mature.

I also agree that a healthy vision should welcome and enable a couples similarities and differences.