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Robert M. Young Online Writings
LOVE: FROM LIBIDO THEORY TO OBJECT RELATIONS
by Robert M. Young
I shall begin and end in the domain of idealizations, ones which mean
a lot to me. As a schoolboy I was required to memorize the following poem by
Leigh Hunt:
Abou Ben Adhem (may his tribe increase!)
Awoke one night from a deep dream of peace,
And saw, within the moonlight in his room,
Making it rich, and like a lily in bloom,
An angel writing in a book of gold:--
Exceeding peace had made Ben Adhem bold,
And to the presence in the room he said,
"What writest thou?" - The vision
raised its head,
And with a look made of all sweet accord,
Answered, "The names of those who love the Lord."
"And is mine one?" said Abou. "Nay, not so,"
Replied the angel. Abou spoke more low,
But cheerly still; and said, "I pray thee, then,
Write me as one that loves his fellow men."
The angel wrote, and vanished. The next night
It came again with a great wakening light,
And showed the names whom love of God had blest,
And lo! Ben Adhem's name led all the rest.
This was my introduction to a way of seeing human relations which was
half-way to secular humanism. It conveyed that to love one’s fellow human
being could place one at the head of the list of those who love God. (The other
half is to try to behave altruistically without recourse to God.) I have heard
it said by an eminent professor of ethics that loving everyone is such an
implausibly undiscriminating response. But he is missing the point that to love
everyone is to impute something unique and valuable, a spirit or at least a
human ‘species being’, to every person, making him or her part of a larger
and valued entity, humankind. This is the point made by Preacher at the end of
John Steinbeck’s classic novel of suffering and redemption, The Grapes of
Wrath. In the depths of the American depression, when the migrants from
Oklahoma to California are at a point of maximum immiseration, Preacher shares
his theology. It is no longer evangelical or even Christ-centred. Perhaps, he
muses, we are each a tiny part of one big soul. Religions and ethical systems
urge us to value one another in this or related ways, while our actual behaviour
falls far short of this ideal. Indeed, it is often said that pacifists love
humanity in general but get on badly with one another and those close to them.
Still, many strive toward the fulfilment of the ideal of what we once called ‘brotherly
love’, and some institutions, for example, the United Nations, seek - however
imperfectly - to embody it.
Of course, as I shall amply illustrate, the truth of human relations is that
they are inescapably and irreducibly ambivalent. Indeed, Kleinians are taught
that to believe that one can operate at one end of the emotional spectrum and
love others all the time is to occupy the paranoid-schizoid position, wherein we
make extreme splits. It is much more mature to dwell in the depressive position
where everything is a mixture and a matter of degree. Yet romantic love between
individuals is surely paranoid-schizoid, though not virulently or malignantly
so. We attribute a heightened degree of beauty, goodness and other desirable and
admirable attributes to the loved one, and our doing so often actually evokes or
brings out the best in them. We find it hard to be apart from them and when
separated go to extreme lengths to be reunited with them. We want to gaze into
their eyes, hold them close and never let them go. We want to touch, kiss,
caress, join in lovemaking, mingle fluids, have children together, raise a
family (or the equivalent in homosexual couples). We want to merge.
Love inspires extreme altruism. We make sacrifices for our
loved ones, even to
the point of risking or forfeiting our own careers or even our lives. When one
dies, the other is utterly bereft and often finds it hard to carry on and has to
negotiate the boundary Freud draws between mourning and melancholy (Freud,
1917). When permanent separation and divorce occur, as they do in up to half of
couple relationships, the angry feelings are often extreme. This is not
surprising, since choosing a life partner or spouse is probably the most
externally un-coerced and most committed choice we make in our lives except,
perhaps, to children and to Arsenal football team (in the case of my children).
I don’t know about you, but I really think I know about love. Heaven
knows I have had my vicissitudes and failed relationships, but commitment to the
ideal of a loving and lasting relationship with one other person has never left
me. It has wavered and faltered and undergone recurrent disappointment but it
has never gone. You may say, ‘Some guys never learn’, but, as my mother used
to say, ‘Always let your reach exceed your grasp, or what’s a Heaven for?’
‘In for a penny, in for a pound; it’s love that makes the world go round.’
‘All you need is love.’ ‘Love is a many-splendoured thing.’ I found it
easy to locate in my memory dozens of songs with love in the title, many - most
- of which I know by heart. Most of the Beatles’ twenty-seven number one hits
are about love and its tribulations. As I was writing this talk I was offered on
cable television sixty-four of the most admired love songs on two CDs for
£19,95. Think, also, how much of fine art and the rest of culture - both high
culture and the low culture of soaps, tabloids and schlock writing - is about
love.
I have spoken so far about idealized love of humanity in general and
idealized love of a one other in the sense of lovers or partners or husband and
wife. But there are, of course, many varieties of love and some very good books
about them. I will list some and dwell on a few. There is, for example, Platonic
love in two senses. One is the belief that we are each half a soul and go
through life finding our other half, thereby becoming complete. This is an
attractive myth, but, in truth, most of us have to make do with more than one
mate, so it is hard to hold onto the idea that our other half is unique. The
other sense of Platonic love is love which is deep but does not involve overt
sexual relations - the love of a dear friend. I love and have loved several
people in this way, mostly women, as it happens. Then there is parental love,
something which we as psychotherapists know to be fraught. Its vicissitudes are
the source of most of our and our patients’ difficulties - too little, too
much, too preoccupied, being orphaned, parents divorce or don’t get on,
physical or sexual abuse. Sibling love is almost as dicey and in danger of
causing ructions. One of the very first brothers in the Judeo-Christian
tradition, Cain, killed the other one, Abel. Relations with grandparents are
often safer, less potentially damaging.
If we turn to psychoanalytic thinking about love, there are about two hundred
articles in the main journals and several admirable books. I have perused them
all, read many and studied some closely. However, I have not made much of a dent
in the 11,961 books on love and currently in print listed by Amazon.com. I have
prepared a reading list and starred some items, in particular, the writings of
Irving Singer (1984, 1984a, 1987), Otto Kernberg (1987, 1995), Ethel Person
(1988, 1991) and especially Martin Bergmann, whose The Anatomy of Loving (1987)
I commend to you most highly of all. (Unfortunately it is currently out of
print, but I found over three dozen second hand copies on offer on the internet
under BibliofInd and ABEbooks). Half of Bergmann’s book is addressed to the
history of theories of love, a topic better canvassed in Singer’s three volume
history of ideas of love, the third volume of which recapitulates the first two
and has a sixty page chapter on psychoanalysis. The second half of Bergmann’s
book is the best single source for psychoanalytic ideas about love. His main
finding is simply put. When we fall in love, it is ‘a refinding of some aspect
of a repressed relationship with a parent or parent-figure, a dim recalling of a
very early symbiotic phase, the inclusion of the other within the bounds of the
self and thus some undoing of separateness, and the transfer of some degree of
idealization of the self or the parent onto the new love object’ (Pulver,
1989, p. 655). Bergmann considers this notion of refinding to be Freud’s most
profound contribution to the understanding of love. However, ‘lovers do not
simply and repetitively refind infantile objects, but seek objects who can undo
the wounds and humiliations experienced early in life at the hands of their
infantile objects, with the outcome of love dependent on the balance achieved
between its repetitive and reparative functions’ (Person, 1992, p. 847).
Coming to love someone is typically a powerful, irrational and all-consuming
experience, which is why we call it ‘falling in love’, i.e., infatuation,
which can be short-lived or develop into a more mature love. This idea certainly
conforms to my own experience. The hard task, as most of us have occasion to
discover, is what you do when you discover that this has happened. Another way
of putting this point is to say that we all fall in love with an infantile
fantasy, and this is a neurotic symptom. If you are lucky and work at it, you
will find enough that is good between you so that you can build a strong and
lasting relationship out of the good elements plus what else you can add from
the rest of life, along with large doses of tolerance, loyalty and true grit.
I now want to say something important about changing conceptualisations of
love. A classical Freudian would find it obvious that a talk on love should be
included in a series of sexuality, because classical Freudianism conceptualised
love in terms of instinct and libidinal energies. Love is, on this view, a
sublimation of sexuality. The concept of libido, which meant sex drive in
reductionist versions of Freudianism, now means something as wide as negative
entropy. (Entropy is a concept in physics, specifically thermodynamics,
indicating the tendency of systems to disorganise, for their energy to run down
to equilibrium; negative entropy characterises energised, complex, relatively
organised systems which need further inputs of energy to be maintained.) I
suppose it would be too crude or simple to say that in orthodox Freudianism any
cunt or cock would do, but the uniqueness and individuality of the character and
attributes of the chosen one - ‘the object of my affection’, as the song
says - would be seen in the context of libido and sexual energies.
Love was reconceptualised in the wake of the rise of object relations theory
in the work of Ronald Fairbairn, Melanie Klein and Donald Winnicott. The libido
theory, which roots love and sexuality in instinctive hedonism, is now out of
fashion in most quarters. In the great Freudian triad of instinct, aim and
object, the emphasis has shifted decisively from aim to object, and the mental
representations of instincts are to the fore rather than their biological roots.
Indeed, Fairbairn went so far to say that libidinal attitudes do not determine
object relations. On the contrary, he maintained that object relations determine
libidinal attitudes (Greenberg & Mitchell, 1983, p. 137). One way to
characterise the change is that what was once rooted in biology has come to be
grounded in relationships; what was focused on sexual areas - erogenous zones -
is now focussed on the unconscious phantasies in the inner world. In some
circles the privileging of certain body parts in Freudian theory has been
replaced by a claim that any part of the body, any function, anything at all can be the legitimate focus of sexual preoccupation, excitement and
gratification. Still others (e.g., O’Connor and Ryan, 1993, p. 246; cf. Young,
1996) seek to root out all naturalism from sexual identity, orientation and
behaviour.
Don’t get me wrong. Sexuality, sexual parts, erogenous zones and phases of
psychosexual development have not been purged from most psychoanalytic theory.
It is still the result of biology and evolution that we make highly-charged
responses to breasts, bottoms, eyes, hair, vaginas, clitorises and penises (some
would add anuses) rather than, say, toes, knees or elbows. (I am reminded of a
skit by Billy Connolly in which he goes on at length about God having some spare
scrotum left over after creating Adam, so he put it over the elbow.) In
characterizing the change from libido theory to object relations theory the most
helpful thing that can be said is that erogenous zones and psychosexual phases
have moved from the foreground to the background. Sexuality has been
progressively relocated so that relationships are in the foreground, and sex is
seen in that context as one way of loving. Kisses and cuddles and particularly
hugs which do not lead to intercourse are no longer seen as truncated or
postponed lovemaking but are valued in their own right as expressions of love
which are highly valued. Indeed, in this country two thirds of people value
affection and companionship as the most important thing in a relationship, while
only 16% think sex is (Wellings, 1994, p. 264).
One feature of the libido theory has, in certain quarters, been placed under
particularly critical scrutiny: the centrality of the Oedipus complex in
psychosexual and moral development. There are those - I am not among them
(Young, 2001) - who seek to discard any notion that there is a privileged path
of development which we must all pass through if we are to attain maturity. They
also reject the claim that failure successfully to negotiate the Oedipus complex
is certain to land one in psychological trouble. On this matter there can be no
compromise as far as Freudians are concerned. Freud called the Oedipus complex,
the painful working out (from about three and a half to five years in childhood)
of psychosexual relations between the child and the parents, 'the core complex'
or the nuclear complex of every neurosis. In a footnote added to the 1920
edition of Three Essays on The Theory of Sexuality, he made it clear that
the Oedipus complex is the immovable foundation stone on which the whole edifice
of psychoanalysis is based:
It has justly been said that the Oedipus complex is the nuclear complex of
the neuroses, and constitutes the essential part of their content. It
represents the peak of infantile sexuality, which, through its after-effects,
exercises a decisive influence on the sexuality of adults. Every new arrival
on this planet is faced with the task of mastering the Oedipus complex; anyone
who fails to do so falls a victim to neurosis. With the progress of
psycho-analytic studies the importance of the Oedipus complex has become more
and more clearly evident; its recognition has become the shibboleth that
distinguishes the adherents of psycho-analysis from its opponents (Freud,
1905, p. 226n).
No compromise is possible with respect to the significance of the Oedipus
complex, then. However, if you read the Three Essays on the Theory of
Sexuality with an open mind, Freud’s ideas about sexuality come across as
rather more liberal and tolerant of aberration than many of his critics
represent them as being. For example, the first essay is not about normality but
about sexual aberrations. The second essay is about infantile sexuality, and the
third is about puberty. You could say that normal adult sex comes last. Indeed,
‘The Finding of an Object’ of one’s affections turns up in the very last
section of the third and last essay. You could say that normal love is something
reached by a circuitous path from polymorphous perversity through a series of
fixations and incestuous wishes, eventually renounced, although (in strict
Freudian theory) the girl does not finally sort out hers until she has a child,
i.e., a symbolic substitute penis. (Nagera, 1981, pp. 67-72; Klein, 1928, 1945,
pp. 50 sqq. and 72-74). In fact, that path from polymorphous perversity
to more civilized love is the one he says, in Totem and Taboo and in Civilization
and Its Discontents, that humanity actually travelled in history.
In the first essay Freud stresses just how wide the range of human sexual
behaviour is. His is not a rigid position. He says quite straightforwardly that
everyone is to some extent a deviant. Freud wrote,
No healthy person, it appears, can fail to make some addition that might be
called perverse to the normal sexual aim; and the universality of this finding
is in itself enough to show how inappropriate it is to use the word perversion
as a term of reproach. In the sphere of sexual life we are brought up against
peculiar, and, indeed, insoluble difficulties as soon as we try to draw a
sharp line to distinguish mere variations within the range of what is
physiological from pathological symptoms (Freud, 1905, pp. 160-61).
This allows for quite a lot of latitude, but there is still a definite limit.
His model is one of norm and deviation - deviation up to a point, but you are
supposed to get back onto the appropriate path in the end. There were definite
taboos, as well. According to Freud, it was a perversion if the lips or tongue
of one person came into contact with the genitals of another or if one lingered
over aspects of foreplay which, as he quaintly put it, 'should normally be
traversed rapidly on the path towards the final sexual aim’ (Freud, 1905, pp.
151, 150; cf. p. 211). He regarded 'any established aberration from normal
sexuality as an instance of developmental inhibition and infantilism' (Freud,
1905, p. 231).
Once again, object relations theory has not jettisoned this way of thinking,
although certain dissidents and would-be reformers of psychoanalysis - e.g.,
Lacanians, feminists, gays and lesbians - would gladly see it off. The majority,
I’d say, stop a long way short of jettisoning some version of obeisance to the
libido theory, biological links for sexuality and love and the Oedipus complex.
As I have said, what has happened in most quarters is a recontextualisation,
whereby instinct and biology are seen as less deep that object relations, which
are our unconscious feelings in our inner worlds about important figures in our
lives, initially carers, followed by other significant figures, say, other
relatives closely involved with our care, siblings, teachers and mentors,
friends, boyfriends and girlfriends, partners, husbands and wives, children.
0tto Kernberg has written extensively on love and its pathology. He offers a
summary of his views which he reformulates in the light of later research. He
sets out to integrate object relations theory with basic Freudian concepts:
I concluded that the capacity to fall and to remain in love reflected the
successful completion of two developmental stages: In the first stage, the
early capacity for sensuous stimulation of erotogenic zones is integrated
withy the later capacity for establishing a total object relation. In the
second stage, full genital enjoyment incorporates early body-surface
eroticism in the context of a total object relation, including a
complementary sexual identification. The first stage requires, in essence,
that primitive dissociation or lack of integration of the self and of object
representations be overcome in the context of establishing ego identity and
the capacity for object relations in depth. The second stage requires the
successful overcoming of oedipal conflicts and the related unconscious
prohibitions against a full sexual relation (Kernberg, 1977, p. 80)
After reviewing new work, especially by Janine Chasseguet-Smirgel (e.g.,
1985), he says,
To conclude, the maturation in the sexual realm, in the realm of object
relations, and in superego development jointly determines the capacity for
mature love and for the couple’s stability, but also creates potential
conditions for its dissolution. Sexual passion as the ongoing crossing of
boundaries in the realm of self-experience both protects the couple and
creates new conditions for it, with consequences that cannot be fully
foreseen. I think that mature love relations are not “postambivalent”,
but remain ambivalent with the predominance of love over hatred, and remain
ambiguous, with a combination of intimacy and secrecy, growing freedom,
mutual sexual experience, and a persistent mystery of the ever-changing
nature of private fantasy life. Intimacy and discretion are two essential
ingredients of mature love relations; they permit the combination of optimal
expression of sex and love, and the optimal absorption and neutralization of
aggression in the relationship. The awareness, tolerance, and integration of
the many complex aspects of one’s own sexuality reinforces the capacity
for mutual empathy, another dimension of the growth of the couple. And
empathy, in turn, reinforces intimacy, discretion, and love (pp. 111-12).
Kernberg’s writings about love have been revised and collected in a volume
entitled Love Relations: Normality and Pathology (1995). I admit that he
writes in a difficult style, but he repays patient study.
I have dwelt at length on love, committed partnership and marriage, but, of
course, these are the exception - however desired and repeatedly sought after.
Over eighty per cent of people in this country say that fidelity in a
relationship is highly desirable and infidelity is wrong, but thirty-seven per
cent of men and twenty-nine per cent of women commit it at least once during
their relationship. Moreover, though most take vows of lifetime commitment, the
marriages of about forty per cent of young people will end in divorce, and
predictions are that this will rise to half (Wellings, 1994).
It behoves us, then, to look at other kinds of love relationships, ones less
likely to succeed. The incapacity to love or make commitments usually betokens
an absence of a deep tie to one person in the early years of their life (Bergmann,
1987, p. 269). As bad is a carer who is physically present but emotionally
absent. André Green has, in my opinion, painted the definitive picture of such
a person in his essay, ‘The Dead Mother’ (1983). She is not physically dead,
but there is no end to her dying, and she is not ‘there for us’, resonating,
containing, caring; she is ‘somewhere else’, preoccupied. Bergmann gives us
sketches of other unpromising forms of love, for example, triangular love,
conflicted love, loveless sexuality, masochistic and sadistic love, Pygmalion
love, narcissistic love, addicts of love (whose relationships do not survive the
waning of infatuation), aim-inhibited love (where the sexual component is
absent, repressed or taboo).
He also writes at length and movingly about transference
love, a normal part of the psychotherapeutic relationship which must be
transformed by sublimation, if the therapy is to prosper, into a striving for
understanding. Occasionally a patient will not settle for this, and, alas,
occasionally the therapist succumbs - or, worse - seduces the patient. The taboo
against sex with patients or clients lies at the heart of the forms of
abstinence which constitute the analytic frame and define professional integrity
(Young, 1998). The analytic space is an Oedipal space. The analytic frame keeps
incest at bay. The analytic relationship involves continually offering incest
and continually declining it in the name of analytic abstinence and the hope of
a relationship that transcends or goes beyond incestuous desires. Breaking the
analytic frame invariably involves the risk of child abuse and sleeping with
patients or ex-patients is precisely that.
Bergmann puts some of these points very nicely. He
says,
In the analytic situation, the early images are made
conscious and thereby deprived of their energising potential. In analysis,
the uncovering of the incestuous fixation behind transference love loosens
the incestuous ties and prepares the way for a future love free from the
need to repeat oedipal triangulation. Under conditions of health the
infantile prototypes merely energize the new falling in love while in
neurosis they also evoke the incest taboo and needs for new triangulation
that repeat the triangle of the oedipal state (p. 220).
With respect to patients who get involved with ex-therapists,
he says that they claim that “‘unlike the rest of humanity I am entitled to
disobey the incest taboo, circumventing the work of mourning, and possess my
parent sexually. I am entitled to do so because I suffered so much or simply
because I am an exception’” (p. 222). From the therapist’s point of view,
‘When the transference relationship becomes a sexual one, it represents
symbolically and unconsciously the fulfilment of the wish that the infantile
love object will not be given up and that incestuous love can be refound in
reality’ (p. 223). This is a variant on the Pygmalion theme. The analytic
relationship works only to the extent that the therapist shows, in Freud’s
words, ‘that he is proof against every temptation’ (Freud, 1915, p. 166).
Even so, somewhere between 2.5% and 10% of male therapists have sex with
patients. Female therapists do it, too, but only a fraction as often.
Before I share some clinical summaries with you I want to
round out my sketch of kinds of love. Not all love is for people. The
headmistress of my son’s primary school loved her dog so much that it was
sweet to behold, I was so grief-stricken when my dog was run over when I was ten
that I have never had another pet. People love their schools, their colleges,
especially Oxbridge ones. I certainly do. People love their regiment, their
city, their country, the sports teams they support. Harold Searles waxes
eloquent about his love of the region where he grew up and tells us of many more
sorts of love for the non-human environment. He writes,
Probably for everyone who has found life to be more
kindly than cruel, the land of his youth is a golden land; youth is such a
golden time of life. Certainly for me the Catskill region of upstate New
York possesses an undying enchantment, a beauty and an affirmation of life’s
goodness which will be part of me as long as I live. For as far back as I
can recall, I have felt that life’s meaning resided not only in my
relatedness with my mother and father and sister and other persons, but in
relatedness with the land itself - the verdant or autumn-tapestried or stark
and snow-covered hills, the uncounted lakes, the rivers (Searles, 1960 p.
ix).
I am sure we all have places we love, just as we have
inanimate objects we love and cherish. Bikers love their motorcycles; other men
love their motors. A lawyer friend from Texas told me that when he suggested
that one of his clients, a successful industrialist, should think of making a
will and making provision for his lovedones, the reply was, ‘Don, I don’t
love nuthin’ but my corporation’. We love songs, symphonies, books, plays,
creations in the visual arts. Toddlers love transitional objects, and many’s
the grown-up who does, too. We may be lonely at times in our lives, but we still
lavish our love over all kinds of objects of affection. There have been times
when the only thing that stood between me and despair was the timbre of Willie
Nelson’s voice.
Now some cases. When I cast my mind over the people I have
seen in psychoanalytic psychotherapy, I am struck by how hard love is. I do not
think is right or prudent, in Hampstead, to give detailed expositions of case
material, but I will offer some vignettes.
A man who was pushed hard by his parents and succeeded
academically yet has no confidence in his abilities in his profession (which is
the same as his father’s) and has always been plagued by his mother’s
incessant fault-finding. She got him special tuition at every stage of his
education. When he sought a long-term relationship every new potential partner
was found wanting in increasingly rapid order - too much body hair, too small
breasts, even ‘too Celtic’ (whatever that is). He switched to telephone sex
and could deem several women inadequate in a single evening. He also got through
the introductory year of several psychotherapy trainings, but all were found
wanting, as well, as was the therapist who came before me and as, eventually,
was I.
A man whose mother could not cope in a war-ravaged country
felt she had to take my patient in and out of children’s homes. The father was
gone before he was born. When he was not in an institution he was a latch-key
child. Now living in Britain, he cannot commit himself to a woman, and each, in
turn, loses patience and leaves him.
A man whose mother died when he was one. His father
remarried, but the stepmother brought a lover into the family home and turned
all the children against the father and drove him out. My patient married a
bullying woman who divorced him and left him nearly broke. He, too, now finds it
hard to make a commitment and becomes involved with a compliant woman. She,
alas, cannot break away from her domineering brute of a husband, so my patient
loses out for a third time.
A young woman whose family of origin was so ‘perfect’
that neither she or her sister can seek a new and independent relationship.
Another young woman has grown up in this country, but her family is from a
foreign culture in which a daughter stays at home until she marries. She lives a
life of hypocrisy, sleeping with men but appearing to her parents chaste and
pure and deferential, though seething underneath. No man has the right
combination of skin colour, religion and social standing to be acceptable to the
family or, indeed, to her, so she languishes and frets about her body. She
failed at university and in psychotherapy training because she could never do
the reading or write the essays, though she excelled in class discussions.
A cleric’s father died in World War Two when the boy was one. He and his
widowed mother moved into the maternal grandmother’s home. When the mother
decided to re-marry, the grandmother would not let the boy move out with her. He
becomes successful in career terms but fears women will dominate him, so he
turns to mutual masturbation with adolescents or inadequate men. No amount of
effort to get on with eligible women gets very far.
An older man marries late, and it is decided not to have children. Both he
and his wife come from families in which the father was unfaithful and walked
out. When he retires, he, who has been almost totally faithful, goes on holiday
alone and falls in love with an unhappily married woman, but he breaks it off
and comes home bereft and seeks his wife’s support and sympathy. The wife is
devastated, and he seeks therapy in order to understand his aberration and save
his marriage.
A man in his mid-thirties who received utterly inadequate parenting at
the hands of a hippy mother and a cuckolded father who left when he was a
toddler, cannot bear to have a child, even though this will likely lead to his
losing the wife he really loves. He cannot find the resources to give what he
never had and identifies with the unloved and deprived baby, whose needs he
cannot imagine meeting, since his never were. And he is right about himself. He
has already walked away from one baby in an earlier relationship. When his wife
has miscarried he has been relieved. The prospect of becoming a father makes him
seriously suicidal.
None of these people want to settle for less. Each of them shares the ideals
of what constitutes a loving relationship which romantic songs, films, novels
and poetry leads us to aspire to. All but one of them - the cleric - functions
adequately in intercourse. It is the quality of their relations which is
wanting. They suffer from the heritage in their
respective inner worlds of the emotional structures within which they grew
up. Their problems are hellishly difficult to shift. I have mentioned eight
patients. I know I helped the retired man who had the affair. I know that the
serial fault-finder got nowhere, as he had in a decade of work with his precious
therapist. The cleric gave up the inappropriate relations with unsuitable
partners and is at peace in a pious celibacy. The rest are in the balance, and I
am not unhopeful, though I am far from complacently optimistic. The foundations
of their object relations will have to be re-laid or at least importantly
reconstructed, and in my experience this is a very slow process with an
uncertain outcome.
Just before closing I offer another rendition of a good and loving
relationship, this time from Bergmann. He finds the roots of love in our
prolonged infantile dependency. The wish to merge, to be at one with the
beloved, is a yearning for the very early symbiotic phase of infancy (pp.
260-61). He concludes by saying that mutual idealization is a healthy component
of love.
Idealization identification and regression to infancy all partake of the
love experience without being allowed to go beyond a certain limit. Seen in
this perspective love constitutes an ideal compromise formation of a great
variety of wishes and needs. What Is surprising, therefore, is not that it
often falls short of the ideal, but that in spite of these numerous checks
and balances, many lovers succeed in transforming falling in love into an
approximation of ideal love… We cannot forego idealization entirely, but
the transformation of falling in love into a permanent tie depends
significantly on the ability to establish an inner peace between the
idealization we bring with us from infancy and our capacity to accept the
limitations of reality (pp. 277-78).
I conclude with my most cherished passage on love, one which I heard
so often as a child and keep on the wall next to my bed. In an increasingly
secular age I think we encounter it too seldom. It says, with unparalleled
eloquence what love is and what life loses without it.
Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not love,
I am become as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal.
And though I have the gift of prophecy, and understand all mysteries, and
all knowledge; and though I have all faith, so that I could remove
mountains, and have not love, I am nothing.
And though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor, and though I give my
body to be burned, and have not love, it profiteth me nothing.
Love suffereth long, and is kind; love envieth not; love vaunteth not
itself, is not puffed up,
Doth not behave itself unseemly, seeketh not her own, is not easily
provoked, thinketh no evil;
Rejoiceth not in iniquity, but rejoiceth in the truth;
Beareth all thing, believeth all things, hopeth all things, endureth all
things.
Love never faileth; but where there be prophecies, they shall fail;
whether there be tongues, they shall cease; whether there be knowledge, it
shall vanish away.
For we know in part, and we prophecy in part.
But when that which is perfect is come, then that which is in part shall
be done away.
When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I
thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things.
For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know
in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known.
And now abideth faith, hope, love, these three; but the greatest of these
is love.
is is the text of a talk given in the CONFER series on ‘The Labyrinth of
Sexuality’ at the Tavistock Centre, London, 27 November 2001.
REFERENCES AND READINGS
(Place of publication is London unless otherwise specified.)
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*______ (2001) Oedipus Complex. Duxford, Cambridge: Icon Books.
LOVE AND RELATIONSHIPS
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***______ (1987) ‘What Freud Discovered about Love’; ‘Varieties of Love
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*______ (1910) ‘A Special Type of Choice of Object Made by Men
(Contributions to the Psychology of Love I)’, S. E. 11:163-76.
*______ (1912) ‘On the Universal Tendency to Debasement in the Sphere of
Love (Contributions to the Psychology of Love II)’, Ibid., pp. 177-90.
______ (1918) ‘The Taboo of Virginity (Contributions to the Psychology of
Love III)’ Ibid. , pp. 191-208
_____ (1921) ‘Being in Love and Hypnosis’, in Group Psychology and the
Analysis of the Ego. S. E. 18: 111-16; see also pp. 140-43, 166-67.
______ See also S. E. 21: index entries on Love.
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**Giddens, A. (1992) The Transformation of Intimacy: Sexuality, Love and
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*______ (1995) Love Relations: Normality and Pathology. Yale.
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305-43.
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Psychoanal. 76: 805-24.
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______ (1960) The Nonhuman Environment: In Normal
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______ (1984) The Nature of Love, vol. 2. Courtly and Romantic. Chicago; pb 1987
**______ (1987) The Nature of Love, vol. 3. The Modern World. Chicago;
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SEX, SEXUALITY, LIBIDO AND OBJECT RELATIONS
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*______ (1905)'Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality' S. E. 7, pp.
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*______ (1930) Civilization and Its Discontents. S. E. 21, pp.
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DISSIDENT SEXUALITIES
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PERVERSITY AND PERVERSION
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______ (1952) ‘Notes on the Analysis of Sexual Perversions’, Internat.
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Reference to Fetishism’, in I. Rosen, ed., The Pathology and Treatment of
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______ (1990) Plea for a Measure of Abnormality (1978). Free
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352-61
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bibliographies)
*Stoller, Robert (1986) Perversion: The Erotic Form of Hatred (1975).
Maresfield pb.
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of Mind’, Free Assns. (no. 22) 2: 203-13.
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Quart. 15: 450-71.
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