Chapter One
What Happens to Love After the Wedding?
At 30,000 feet, somewhere between Buffalo and Dallas, he put his
magazine in his seat pocket, turned in my direction, and asked, "What
kind of work do you do?"
"I do marriage counseling and lead marriage enrichment seminars," I said
matter-of-factly.
"I've been wanting to ask someone this for a long time," he said. "What
happens to the love after you get married?"
Relinquishing my hopes of getting a nap, I asked, "What do you mean?"
"Well," he said, "I've been married three times, and each time, it was
wonderful before we got married, but somehow after the wedding it all
fell apart. All the love I thought I had for her and the love she seemed
to have for me evaporated. I am a fairly intelligent person. I operate a
successful business, but I don't understand it."
"How long were you married?" I asked.
"The first one lasted about ten years. The second time, we were married
three years, and the last one, almost six years."
"Did your love evaporate immediately after the wedding, or was it a
gradual loss?" I inquired.
"Well, the second one went wrong from the very beginning. I don't know
what happened. I really thought we loved each other, but the honeymoon
was a disaster, and we never recovered. We only dated six months. It was
a whirlwind romance. It was really exciting! But after the marriage, it
was a battle from the beginning.
"In my first marriage, we had three or four good years before the baby
came. After the baby was born, I felt like she gave her attention to the
baby and I no longer mattered. It was as if her one goal in life was to
have a baby, and after the baby, she no longer needed me."
"Did you tell her that?" I asked.
"Oh, yes, I told her. She said I was crazy. She said I did not
understand the stress of being a twenty-four-hour nurse. She said I
should be more understanding and help her more. I really tried, but it
didn't seem to make any difference. After that, we just grew further
apart. After a while, there was no love left, just deadness. Both of us
agreed that the marriage was over.
"My last marriage? I really thought that one would be different. I had
been divorced for three years. We dated each other for two years. I
really thought we knew what we were doing, and I thought that perhaps
for the first time I really knew what it meant to love someone. I
genuinely felt that she loved me.
"After the wedding, I don't think I changed. I continued to express love
to her as I had before marriage. I told her how beautiful she was. I
told her how much I loved her. I told her how proud I was to be her
husband. But a few months after marriage, she started complaining; about
petty things at first-like my not taking the garbage out or not hanging
up my clothes. Later, she went to attacking my character, telling me
that she didn't feel she could trust me, accusing me of not being
faithful to her. She became a totally negative person. Before marriage,
she was never negative. She was one of the most positive people I have
ever met. That is one of the things that attracted me to her. She never
complained about anything. Everything I did was wonderful, but once we
were married, it seemed I could do nothing right. I honestly don't know
what happened. Eventually, I lost my love for her arid began to resent
her. She obviously had no love for me. We agreed there was no benefit to
our living together any longer, so we split.
"That was a year ago. So my question is, What happens to love after the
wedding? Is my experience common? Is that why we have so many divorces
in our country? I can't believe that it happened to me three times. And
those who don't divorce, do they learn to live with the emptiness, or
does love really stay alive in some marriages? If so, how?"
The questions my friend, seated in 5A was asking are the questions that
thousands of married and divorced persons are asking today. Some are
asking friends, some are asking counselors and clergy, and some are
asking themselves. Sometimes the answers are couched in psychological
research jargon that are almost incomprehensible. Sometimes they are
couched in humor and folklore. Most of the jokes and pithy sayings
contain some truth, but they are like offering an aspirin to a person
with cancer.
The desire for romantic love in marriage is deeply rooted in our
psychological makeup. Almost every popular magazine has at least one
article each issue on keeping love alive in a marriage. Books abound on
the subject. Television and radio talk shows deal with it. Keeping love
alive in our marriages is serious business.
With all the books, magazines, and practical help available, why is it
that so few couples seem to have found the secret to keeping love alive
after the wedding? Why is it that a couple can attend a communication
workshop, hear wonderful ideas on how to enhance communication, return
home, and find themselves totally unable to implement the communication
patterns demonstrated? How is it that we read a magazine article on "101
Ways to Express Love to Your Spouse," select two or three ways that seem
especially good to us, try them, and our spouse doesn't even acknowledge
our effort? We give up on the other 98 ways and go back to life as
usual.
The answer to those questions is the purpose of this book. It is not
that the books and articles already published are not helpful. The
problem is that we have overlooked one fundamental truth: People speak
different love languages.
In the area of linguistics, there are major language groups: Japanese,
Chinese, Spanish, English, Portuguese, Greek, German, French, and so on.
Most of us grow up learning the language of our parents and siblings,
which becomes our primary or native tongue. Later, we may learn
additional languages but usually with much more effort. These become our
secondary languages. We speak and understand best our native language.
We feel most comfortable speaking that language. The more we use a
secondary language, the more comfortable we become conversing in it. If
we speak only our primary language and encounter someone else who speaks
only his or her primary language, which is different from ours, our
communication will be limited. We must rely on pointing, grunting,
drawing pictures, or acting out our ideas. We can communicate, but it is
awkward. Language differences are part and parcel of human culture. If
we are to communicate effectively across cultural lines, we must learn
the language of those with whom we wish to communicate.
In the area of love, it is similar. Your emotional love language and the
language of your spouse may be as different as Chinese from English. No
matter how hard you try to express love in English, if your spouse
understands only Chinese, you will never understand how to love each
other. My friend on the plane was speaking the language of "Affirming
Words" to his third wife when he said, "I told her how beautiful she
was. I told her I loved her. I told her how proud I was to be her
husband." He was speaking love, and he was sincere, but she did not
understand his language. Perhaps she was looking for love in his
behavior and didn't see it. Being sincere is not enough. We must be
willing to learn our spouse's primary love language if we are to be
effective communicators of love.
My conclusion after twenty years of marriage counseling is that there
are basically five emotional love languages-five ways that people speak
and understand emotional love. In the field of linguistics a language
may have numerous dialects or variations. Similarly, within the five
basic emotional love languages, there are many dialects. That accounts
for the magazine articles titled "10 Ways to Let Your Spouse Know You
Love Her," "20 Ways to Keep Your Man at Home," or "365 Expressions of
Marital Love." There are not 10, 20, or 365 basic love languages. In my
opinion, there are only five. However, there may be numerous dialects.
The number of ways to express love within a love language is limited
only by one's imagination. The important thing is to speak the love
language of your spouse.
We have long known that in early childhood development each child
develops unique emotional patterns. Some children, for example, develop
a pattern of low self-esteem whereas others have healthy self-esteem.
Some develop emotional patterns of insecurity whereas others grow up
feeling secure. Some children grow up feeling loved, wanted, and
appreciated, yet others grow up feeling unloved, unwanted, and
unappreciated.
The children who feel loved by their parents and peers will develop a
primary emotional love language based on their unique psychological
makeup and the way their parents and other significant persons expressed
love to them. They will speak and understand one primary love language.
They may later learn a secondary love language, but they will always
feel most comfortable with their primary language. Children who do not
feel loved by their parents and peers will also develop a primary love
language. However, it will be somewhat distorted in much the same way as
some children may learn poor grammar and have an underdeveloped
vocabulary. That poor programming does not mean they cannot become good
communicators. But it does mean they will have to work at it more
diligently than those who had a more positive model. Likewise, children
who grow up with an underdeveloped sense of emotional love can also come
to feel loved and to communicate love, but they will have to work at it
more diligently than those who grew up in a healthy, loving atmosphere.
Seldom do a husband and wife have the same primary emotional love
language. We tend to speak our primary love language, and we become
confused when our spouse does not understand what we are communicating.
We are expressing our love, but the message does not come through
because we are speaking what, to them, is a foreign language. Therein
lies the fundamental problem, and it is the purpose of this book to
offer a solution. That is why I dare to write another book on love. Once
we discover the five basic love languages and understand our own primary
love language, as well as the primary love language of our spouse, we
will then have the needed information to apply the ideas in the books
and articles.
Once you identify and learn to speak your spouse's primary love
language, I believe that you will have discovered the key to a
long-lasting, loving marriage. Love need not evaporate after the
wedding, but in order to keep it alive most of us will have to put forth
the effort to learn a secondary love language. We cannot rely on our
native tongue if our spouse does not understand it. If we want him/her
to feel the love we are trying to communicate, we must express it in his
or her primary love language.
Chapter Two
Keeping the Love Tank Full
Love is the most important word in the English language-and the most
confusing. Both secular and religious thinkers agree that love plays a
central role in life. We are told that "love is a many-splendored thing"
and that "love makes the world go round." Thousands of books, songs,
magazines, and movies are peppered with the word. Numerous philosophical
and theological systems have made a prominent place for love. And the
founder of the Christian faith wanted love to be the distinguishing
characteristic of His followers.
Psychologists have concluded that the need to feel loved is a primary
human emotional need. For love, we will climb mountains, cross seas,
traverse desert sands, and endure untold hardships. Without love,
mountains become unclimbable, seas uncrossable, deserts unbearable, and
hardships our plight in life. The Christian apostle to the Gentiles,
Paul, exalted love when he indicated that all human accomplishments that
are not motivated by love are, in the end, empty. He concluded that in
the last scene of the human drama, only three characters will remain:
"faith, hope, and love. But the greatest of these is love."
If we can agree that the word
love permeates human society, both
historically and in the present, we must also agree that it is a most
confusing word. We use it in a thousand ways. We say, "I love hot dogs,"
and in the next breath, "I love my mother." We speak of loving
activities: swimming, skiing, hunting. We love objects: food, cars,
houses. We love animals: dogs, cats, even pet snails. We love nature:
trees, grass, flowers, and weather. We love people: mother, father, son,
daughter, parents, wives, husbands, friends. We even fall in love with
love.
If all that is not confusing enough, we also use the word love to
explain behavior. "I did it because I love her." That explanation is
given for all kinds of actions. A man is involved in an adulterous
relationship, and he calls it love. The preacher, on the other hand,
calls it sin. The wife of an alcoholic picks up the pieces after her
husband's latest episode. She calls it love, but the psychologist calls
it codependency. The parent indulges all the child's wishes, calling it
love. The family therapist would call it irresponsible parenting. What
is loving behavior?
The purpose of this book is not to eliminate all confusion surrounding
the word love but to focus on that kind of love that is essential to our
emotional health. Child psychologists affirm that every child has
certain basic emotional needs that must be met if he is to be
emotionally stable. Among those emotional needs, none is more basic than
the need for love and affection, the need to sense that he or she
belongs and is wanted. With an adequate supply of affection, the child
will likely develop into a responsible adult. Without that love, he or
she will be emotionally and socially retarded.
I liked the metaphor the first time I heard it: "Inside every child is
an `emotional tank' waiting to be filled with love. When a child really
feels loved, he will develop normally but when the love tank is empty,
the child will misbehave. Much of the misbehavior of children is
motivated by the cravings of an empty `love tank.'" I was listening to
Dr. Ross Campbell, a psychiatrist who specializes in the treatment of
children and adolescents.
As I listened, I thought of the hundreds of parents who had paraded the
misdeeds of their children through my office. I had never visualized an
empty love tank inside those children, but I had certainly seen the
results of it. Their misbehavior was a misguided search for the love
they did not feel. They were seeking love in all the wrong places and in
all the wrong ways.
I remember Ashley, who at thirteen years of age was being treated for a
sexually transmitted disease. Her parents were crushed. They were angry
with Ashley. They were upset with the school, which they blamed for
teaching her about sex. Why would she do this? they asked.
(Continues...)
Excerpted from "The Five Love Languages"
by Gary D. Chapman.
Copyright (C) 1992 by Gary D. Chapman.
Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher. Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.