Karthmin wrote:
Lady Kitra Skene wrote:
Family and friends often want to be together, but couples in love are drawn to one another. Like not being able to pull away from the window when you first see a hummingbird. It is a sort of love that is beautiful in its mystery. You grow up understanding the dynamics of your family. This is the way your brother is, he has his habits that he keeps to himself, but that's fine because you know having him on your team in a card game makes the two of you a force to be reckoned with. You may also be able to go to him with your sorrows and pains, but it isn't a mystery. It is literally familiar love. I think in romantic love, the draw is never gone. The treasure is never quite attained because there is always a little bit deeper; a little bit more to learn about your love, another new piece to cherish.
O.o
Beautiful. You nailed it.
It's odd that you say this, since a large part of what attracts
me to marriage is the idea of being able to know someone so well that they
aren't really a mystery. I find it deeply satisfying to get to know somebody so that I can predict how they talk and act, so they make me laugh sometimes when they do something utterly characteristic of themselves. I want to have an exciting life filled with the new and unknown - but anchored with some things I
do know very deeply, like a spouse, or a friend, or a favorite book.
That being said, I want this sort of relationship because I've experienced it in my family. Maybe it is more of a familial love thing and I haven't figured out yet how a romantic relationship would be different.
Karthmin wrote:
Friends stand side by side, looking forward. Couples stand face to face, looking at each other.
...
In a friendship, you can believe different and even go on your separate paths without fundamentally damaging the friendship - but the same can definitely not be said of marriages.
I spent a long time trying to write something that explained my thoughts about this, but in the end I only figured out that I haven't gotten it figured out yet.

The main point I was trying to express, though, is that marriage involves two people working towards the same goals. The husband and wife are both committed to the relationship, to any children, to the direction they want for their lives. I think of the marriages I've seen among missionaries where I live. The husband and wife might appear to be doing different things - maybe the husband teaches at a university while the wife works with other women - but they must be united in their ultimate goals and their vision for spreading God's truth. Different people, different genders, different individual jobs, but aligned to one end. In friendships or familial relationships, on the other hand, the parties are working towards different goals. You're just supporting a person as they do whatever they're going to do.
This is why I most often enjoy romances in stories where you don't just see the internal mechanics of how the two people relate to each other - you also get to see the external outworking of the couple planning together, fighting together, doing different things in different places but working to one end. It shows that these people aren't just committed to each other - they're also committed to the same goals, and committed to working together to achieve them. I find
that romantic.
I'm reminded of the development of Vin and Elend's relationship from Brandon Sanderson's first Mistborn trilogy. At the beginning, they're very different people with different goals and commitments. But as time goes on, they come to understand each other better, they listen to each other, they change their ideas and shift their priorities, and by the last book they are working very closely together towards one clear goal. It's beautiful to watch, and much more healthy and sustainable than, say, a relationship between two infatuated teenagers who both happen to hate the same evil dystopian government.
