What is love? What is life and living?

What is love? What is life and living?

“Most people, even though they don’t know it, are asleep…they never understand the loveliness and the beauty of this thing that we call human existence” Father Anthony de Mello

Dating single men over the age of 45 reveals a huge population of men who, in my opinion, have missed the boat on knowing what love and living really means, and really feels like. If we believe that  “love” is only loving your job and only your small family and small group of friends, we have missed a lot of love. That is unless your job involves working with beauty, creativity, closely with other creative and learning people, giving back, your soul and mind being nurtured by your job, and nurturing others and this world. You cannot love a job; a job cannot love you back. But you can love what it does for your soul and mind, and for others. If your job feeds you with greed, power, control, selfishness, the need to conquer, be better than others, the need to be a dictator, to destroy and conquer, that is not love. If you are not giving back to your staff, employees, to the betterment of the world around you, not mentoring, learning and helping others to learn in constructive ways, that is not love. If you live only in the business world, and not in the rest of the worlds, you are missing a lot. You live in your own little box.

If you think loving a partner means sex only, you are missing out. I don’t hear most single men over 45 say, “I need love. I need great long hugs and kisses and touch. I need the smell of her hair and to touch her skin, and to hear her voice and feel her soul.” I do hear, “I need to get laid.” I think these men equate sex with love and feeling loved.

The other worlds involve getting to know people, cultures, the rest of the world, learning new things, doing new things; experiencing new things and feelings; experiencing and seeing beauty, things being created and nurtured, thinking out of the box, exploring, having real fun, playing, listening, feeling.

These same men don’t read books, unless it is about work things. They will never feel the pleasure of reading, feeling, learning, expanding their world through books; touching their souls, minds, hearts. They can’t walk on the beach in peace and beauty. They are thinking about “things”. How I look, how the person I am with looks, last week at work, next week at work, what I am going to do next today, planning my day, my week, wanting to buy that beach house, what are we going to eat tonight, wishing they were back inside watching sports. The world, living, loving is passing them by.

Linda had been dating Mark in New Orleans for several months. They had fun together, but she planned most of their outings because he was new there and she knew all the fun things to do and places to dine. He wanted her to do this. She did notice however, that when they went to outdoor concerts that he seemed uninterested and would lay down and go to sleep, even though he said he enjoyed concerts. She of course felt no connection to him when this happened. Linda, when dating, would not react to something negative happening once or twice, because it may just be a fluke. But when patterns develop; when the same thing happens every time or frequently, then she takes notes.

Linda had of course told Mark how much she loved the beach and asked him if he enjoyed going to the beach. He said he had gone to many beaches/resorts but they were mainly on golf trips with guys. He didn’t really spend much time “at the beach” on these trips. He did tell her he could not swim and thus didn’t go into the water much. He usually just played volleyball, sat around pools, bars etc.  This is a man who had been married twice, for short times, and his wives had left him. He had spent more time as a bachelor than as a married man. He had had some short term relationships. Twice he took women/dates on a beach/resort vacation for a week. Both were disasters. He was not quite sure why they were failures.

Number one disaster: They were not getting along from the beginning; arguing, etc. So, the second day he went to the outdoor bar by himself. He met a married couple there who were not getting along. So he struck up a conversation with the wife and she sat there and vented and poured her problems out to him. This is his kind of conversation because he loves to listen to other’s problems and share his relationship problems: drown your sorrows over drinks. The man left and they talked for hours. He said, “We connected.” His date came looking for him and saw him chatting with the woman. She asked him what he was doing and he said he was enjoying talking with the woman. His date sat down and he continued to converse with the woman. Soon his date got up and left. “She was mad”. He didn’t understand why she was mad. She could’ve joined in the conversation. The rest of the week was spent not talking to one another and he just hung out at the bar and played volleyball; end of the relationship. He did not know why things went so poorly.

Number two disaster: They got to the resort and spent 2 days together, just dining and hanging out. On the third day she “was not feeling well” and spent the next 4 days in the room. He then hung out at the bar, pool, and played volleyball in the pool. (Never any mention of going to the beach on either of these trips even though the resorts were on the beach). He met a couple and hung around with them. It was his birthday and they invited him to a birthday dinner. His date was absent. This was the end of the relationship. He did not think she was really ill. He felt something had gone wrong, but he did not know what.

After hearing these stories Linda was starting to wonder about Mark, but decided to find out for herself. They planned a week-long vacation at a beautiful beach resort in Mexico.  This is how the week went:

Day 1: They spent an entire day flying to the resort. When they got to the airport in Mexico they were approached by time-share wolves. Mark listened and paid $50 down to get some free boat rides, etc. in return for attending a marketing session. Linda was not aware of these ploys and just watched, not knowing what it entailed. They went to the resort. They were tired. They checked in and Mark wanted to wheel and deal some more with the timeshare ladies there to see if he could get a better deal; he got some free drinks and switched to their timeshare appointment, instead of the appointment with the guy at the airport. They had to go back to the room to get the paperwork and show it to the ladies. This took about an hour. Linda asked if they could at least walk outside on the terrace and look at the beach and the resort and have a drink. Mark agreed. They went to the bar and Linda ordered a margarita. Mark does not drink tequila, wine, bourbon, or anything else if he had gotten sick on them in the past. He now only drank vodka and soda. So he looked befuddled and asked Linda what tropical drinks were good. She suggested a Mai Tai. He got it. They walked out onto the beautiful terrace, on the side of a mountain, overlooking the pools, beach, etc. Mark was looking at his cell phone. Linda chose a table. She sat so that she could see the views. He sat in a chair with his back to the views, still looking at his cell phone; no conversation. Soon Linda asked Mark what the problem was; why was he looking at his cell phone? He explained that he had gotten a text from the cell phone company asking if he wanted to do international texting, etc. He had accidently pressed, “no”, instead of “yes”. He was mad! “Now I will not be able to get my texts, emails, etc. He sat there for a long time trying to figure out what to do. Finally, Linda said, “ You know, we just got here, to this beautiful resort, and you have not glanced up at anything here, including me. You are sitting with your back to the views and are obsessed with your cell phone which you don’t need right now. You haven’t touched your drink, or me. Can you please deal with your phone later?!” He put it down and was glancing around, backwards to the views. He noticed people with little kids that were wandering around near us. He said they need to take their kids somewhere else.  Linda asked if he would like to turn his chair around and sit next to her, so that he could see the resort and beach. He got up and moved, glancing at his phone in his hand.

There they sat. Linda drank her drink and occasionally would say something like, “ The water is beautiful!”  “This resort is fabulous!”  Mark said nothing. He looked around. Mostly watching the people.  About a half hour later Linda said, “What do you want to do?”  He,“I don’t know”. She, “Do you want to go to the room?” He,“OK” . They took the golf carts to the room. The suite was beautiful, with a balcony looking at the beach and the mountains. Mark spent the next hour unpacking: he is OCD. He took the entire master suite closet, hanging clothes, not touching, putting his other clothes in perfect stacks, and took all the drawers.  Linda went and sat out on the balcony. He came and asked her if she was going to unpack. She said she would do it later. He told her they would have to get up and go to a timeshare appointment in the morning for 2 hours in order to get his $50 back and get some free things. Linda couldn’t believe it. She said nothing. They had a quick dinner at a resort restaurant and then went to bed: they were tired. They had not yet toured the huge resort.

Day 2: The next morning they got up and went to the timeshare meeting with the salesman: 2 hours of listening to a salesman. He did take them on a tour of the resort. It was wonderful, self-contained, with 6 pools on the side of hills, with swim up bars and food, 6 restaurants, and the beach and water just steps away from the main pool. The beach there was a no-swim beach. We did not know why. Mark said good, because he was not going into the water anyway.

When they finished it was close to lunch. Mark said they could go to the little market there and get sandwiches and take them back to the room. They got sandwiches, bread and jam for breakfast, water, tortilla chips and salsa, and V-8 juice. Linda asked if they could get some wine and a bag of coffee. The suite had a complete kitchen.  They went back to the room. Mark called his cell phone company and got his cell phone straightened out. They ate and then went to explore the pools and sat by one for a while. There was no touching, very little conversation: no romance! They went back to the room.  She sat on the sofa; he sat in the chair across the room. They watched some TV. He, “What do you want to do?”  She, “Let’s go to dinner. I noticed that a nice Italian buffet is tonight in the restaurant with a terrace overlooking the water.”

They went to dinner; No touching, hand holding. They got a table overlooking the beautiful views. Mark dove in to the buffet, eating for a long time; no conversation. Linda ordered wine; he did too, although she didn’t understand why since he doesn’t like wine. His wine sat there. Linda noticed his table manners were not good, and his ability to converse at dinner was poor. Again, she tried with comments about the views, etc. No response. He was eating. An hour later it was starting to get dark and Linda noticed that there was a full moon appearing right behind his head. She said, “Oh my God, look, there is an awesome full moon behind you!”  He did not look. She sat there baffled for a while. He continued eating. She drank her wine and watched the waves and boats. Half an hour later, she decided she would try again. “Mark, there really is a great full moon behind you, look!”  He turned, looked, turned back around and said, “It is not quite full yet, but will be in a day or two.” End of conversation. At the end of the meal Mark got a toothpick and proceeded to clean his teeth for about 15 minutes; Then hung it out of his mouth. It was gross. He did this at every meal. They went back to the room. They turned on the TV. They turned on an HBO movie. She sat on the sofa. He sat in the chair across the room.  15 minutes later he was asleep in the chair, snoring. He also snored at night. She got up and went to watch the movie in bed. Later he woke up and she could hear him go out onto the balcony. He did not come check on her. She imagined he was looking at the full moon, but obviously didn’t want her there. She went to sleep. Hours later he came to bed and immediately started snoring. No touching. She would punch him. He would roll over and start snoring again. She got up, took her pillow and blanket and slept on the couch. He came in the middle of the night and told her to go back to bed; he would sleep on the couch. So she did.

Day 3: He always gets up early: between 5:00 and 6:00. He got up from the couch and went directly out to the balcony to sit; Never came into bed with her. She heard him get toast and juice and go back out. She laid there for hours hoping he would eventually come to bed so that they could get amorous; Never happened. He came in and took a shower in the hall bath and got dressed. She got up. Linda loved to sleep in on vacations but was finding it difficult there with him. There also was no reason to sleep in. He went back onto the balcony. She fixed coffee and went out. She said, “Good morning!”, and was going to give him a good kiss, but she got a chilly hello and a closed, tight mouth; so it was a quick peck. Again she tried some small talk: the weather, the beauty, the water… she got nothing back. She, “What do you want to do?” He, “I don’t know”.

The resort was near a small Mexican town. On the way in the driver and people in the van told us of a “famous” bar and restaurant in town owned by an American rock star. They had good music and bands. Linda recommended they go into town for dinner and stay for music. Mark agreed. In the meantime, Linda realized Mark was not going to recommend going to breakfast, so she ate a piece of toast. She asked if he wanted coffee. He said, “A little”. She fixed him coffee. It sat there. Linda asked if they could go to the beach. He, “and do what?”  She, “enjoy the beach and the water”. He, “but you can’t get in”. She, “it’s OK, just enjoy being at the beach.” She brought towels and sunscreen; offered to put it on him. He, “No, I’m wearing my shirt and hat”. Linda walked out in her bathing suit. This was the first time he had seen her in a bathing suit, and she thought she looked great. He said nothing. He had no desire to touch her or initiate anything. She was weirded out.

They get to the beach: she goes to put her toes in the water. The guard tells her not to do that. She is weirded out. She lays the towels down and sits on hers. Mark lays down, puts his hat over his face and either goes to sleep or zones out: no conversation; no looking at the sights; no enjoying the waves, beauty. Linda sat and enjoyed the beach, feeling very much alone and disappointed. After an hour, she recommended they go up to the pool to cool off in the water. They found chairs. She said, “let’s go in the water.” He didn’t. She did- alone. After a while, she asked if he wanted a drink from the swim-up bar. He said no. She went and got one, by herself. She went to lay back in the chair. About 1:00 she was getting hungry and wondered if he was ever going to ask her if she wanted lunch—or initiate anything. He didn’t.  She, “Do you want to get some lunch?” He, “yes”. She, “Do you want to order here at the bar?”  He, “yes”. She summoned a pool man. They ordered lunch and ate. She, “Do you want to go back to the room?” He, “OK”. They went back to the room. She opened the wine and asked him if he wanted some. He said, “A little.”  His wine sat there. She said, “You know if you don’t want coffee or wine all you have to do is say ‘no’.” He, “I am just being polite”.  She, “No, please just say no thanks; I don’t want to waste wine.”  She found him weird. She went out onto the balcony to drink the wine. He sat in the living room.

Soon, she came in and took a long, hot bubble bath in the beautiful garden tub with views.  He stayed away. Amazing. They dressed to go into town and catch the van. They went to dinner at the famous bar/restaurant; very little conversation. At the end, Linda asked if they could go look at the bandstand and courtyard and inquired as to when the music would start. They walked to the back. It was great and one band was starting soon. Linda was going to sit at a table when Mark said that he did not want to stay. He was tired. They caught a cab back to the resort. When they got back, they turned on the TV, turned on a movie, she sat on the sofa, he sat on a chair. She poured a glass of wine. She asked if he would like to come sit on the sofa with her. He came and sat a yard away. 15 minutes later he was asleep. She went out onto the balcony, bored to death. This is not the way he acted in New Orleans. They went to clubs all the time with live music. He seemed to enjoy it and drank lots of vodkas and sodas. They danced and had fun. Now all of a sudden he was a non-drinker. In New Orleans they had a normal and good sex life although it was only on weekends. Yes, going with someone on a week-long vacation reveals things! They went to bed, he snored. She went to sleep on the couch.

Day 4: He woke up at 5:00 and came in and told her to go get in the bed. She did. He went into the living room. She woke up later and looked out onto the balcony and saw him sitting there. She laid there for a while hoping he would come back to bed for cuddling, etc. He didn’t. Finally she went out to the balcony. It was time for a talk. She went out and he was sitting there with a very contemplative, serious look on his face. She said, “So, you seem very serious and deep in thought this morning. What’s up?” He said yes, that he noticed that we were not connecting. She said, yes, they were definitely not connecting. She asked him if he knew why. He said no. So then she shared her thoughts. She basically reviewed the last 3 days with him, the way she saw them. She told him he was not initiating anything; had no plans, no ideas; had not touched her, held her hand, kissed her, sat next to her… She said there was NO romance, no nothing. She told him they obviously had very different needs and beliefs as far as who was to take the lead and initiate plans, affection, everything. She told him that early in a relationship she expected the man to take the lead, initiate plans, and affection. She told him he just was acting like he just was not into her.  She also told him that he knew how much the beach means to her, and he acted like he didn’t even want to see the beach, and that he pulled the “lay down, go to sleep” thing again with her. She told him of the 5 other times he had done this when they went to concerts and how it made her feel: not connecting with him, bored and grossed out that he was not able to get into and enjoy the moment with her. He asked her why she didn’t tell him before. She explained it’s because she waits until there is a pattern of negative things before she jumps to conclusions and says something. She explained to him that their evenings consisted of him sitting across the room and falling asleep. She explained the moon experience to him and all the other negatives she was experiencing. He said, “You go to bed early every night”. She said yes because he fell asleep and she was bored. She explained that if she had not initiated everything, she felt they wouldn’t have done anything. Mark did not really say anything nor have anything to offer to fix things. She asked him what he thought. He said he thought the big problem was the resort. It was all inclusive and isolated from the town, and the town didn’t have much to do, and the beach was a no-swim beach… He felt trapped there. He said he thought he asked every night what she wanted to do, but that there was not much to do.

Linda could not believe it. How can a man be at a beautiful resort on the beach and not be able to figure out what to do with a romantic relationship? And yes he asked what she wanted to do, but he had NO ideas, no enthusiasm, no great plans. She knew he was depressed that there was no volleyball…and he didn’t know what to do with a woman in a beautiful pool; never went to the hot tub…So, the problem was the resort! Linda told him that she was not going to initiate anything else; ask if he wanted to do anything, eat, etc. He would have to initiate. If any affection was to be initiated he would have to do it.  She did finally tell him that the toothpick had to go; it was gross. He said, “so?”

He seemed shocked. He said he was used to women initiating affection, touch. Mark had not gotten married until he was in his 30’s and had been a playboy before that; a big partier with the boys, drinker, womanizer and so always had women all over him; he was a “bad boy”. He never learned how to be with a woman because his parents were not into each other, ever. His father was quiet and never initiated anything. They had a bad relationship. Then he never had to “make plans” or be romantic with women because most hookups happened in a bar, with drinking involved. Sex came easily. Then he married. He still did not know how to be with a woman, except to have sex. His wife strayed. He met another woman and married; still did not know how to be with a woman and focus on building a strong relationship. He admitted he was a taker and not a giver. She strayed. Then he was bitter and angry, and fearful that he did not know how to do relationships with women. He realized he was a taker, but then never really learned how to be a giver. He did not know how to initiate romance and affection with a woman. While he was married he even hung out with men a lot; went on golf vacations with men. Linda realized that even in New Orleans all plans and ideas were hers. He wanted it that way. It was not because he was new to the city. It was because that’s how he operates. He said that he often thought he was not marriage material.

Linda realized what had happened with his two other resort, week-long vacations with dates. She had just gone through the same thing in the first 3 days: Lack of connection, romance, things to do, him not initiating fun or anything, boring dinner date, shoveling the food in. He was like a fish out of water at a resort unless there was volleyball, golf, buddies to be gross with, or strangers at bars that he can strike up a new conversation with, over a drink, and talk about problems, no strings attached. Linda also believed that because Mark had been alone for a long time, he enjoyed being alone, doing whatever he wanted to do, with no pressure, planning, or effort involved. He just needed someone to sit at dinner with, even though he does not pay much attention to you at dinner. He also likes to have sex with women. But the only time that happened was when they were already in bed.  He does not want a relationship to be work for him. He wants the women to make all the effort and do the work. He does not know how to nurture women.

So, Linda was ready to see if anything changed over the next few days. Later in the morning Mark did ask her if she wanted to go to breakfast and then to the beach and wander farther down the beach, out of the resort area, to an area that is a swim area. Linda agreed. They ate breakfast and went farther down the beach. This time Mark sat up and talked! They watched people living in the houses swimming and sunbathing. Mark suggested she go out in the water. She explained that she does not swim in the ocean alone, for safety reasons. Mark does not swim, so there was to be no swimming. In about an hour they walked back up to the buildings. Mark said he was feeling sick and hungry. He does not like to drink water and they had been sitting out sweating for a while. It was very hot. Linda had been drinking water all morning. They stopped in a store; she got a bottle of water and drank it. He did not. Then they went to the deli and got some sandwiches for lunch and took them back to the room. Mark wolfed his down. Linda ate half of hers and put the rest in the refrigerator.  They decided to go to a pool; one they had not gone to yet. It was very hot and they each got 2 Mai Tais. Linda got in the water. Mark did not.  He said he was feeling dizzy. They went back to the room. Mark laid down and said he had a headache and was dizzy from the Mai Tais. He still did not drink any water. He fell asleep. Linda went to take a nap in the bedroom. She woke up around dinner time and said she was hungry. Mark said he had eaten the rest of her sandwich and was not hungry. She went back to sleep.

Day 5:  Mark actually stayed in bed and the couple had sex. Linda took a long bath. Mark went out onto the balcony. They went for a walk and went to lunch. After lunch Linda wanted to take a nap. Mark said that he was going to the pool. He went and came back 4 hours later. He said that he had 2 mai tais and felt good. He had drunk water before and during. He was wet. Linda asked if he had gone into the pool. He said that he had and it felt good. (He had not gone into the pool with Linda at all). While he was gone Linda drank some wine, ate chips and salsa by herself, and watched a movie on TV. Later, they went to dinner. When they got back, Mark sat down and fell asleep.

Day 6: The day before flying out: They got up, had toast, sat out on the balcony, went to the pool. Mark did not get into the pool; ate lunch at the pool; went back to the room. Mark spent the afternoon planning for leaving: went to the lobby to book a shuttle to the airport, checked on the bills, etc.; was gone a couple of hours. He is a “planner” in every arena except his relationships; is OCD about planning trips, organizing paperwork/files, at the office; loves to plan flights, packing, unpacking, leaving a trip, checking bills and paperwork; but what occurs between flights: having fun and romance while at a resort or city, he cannot plan. When at home, his closet, condo is clean and organized, but he will not use a grocery list, thus forgets he needs bread, paper towels, can’t figure out what to eat: so he goes out to eat.

In the evening they went to dinner and he came back and packed for about an hour. They watched TV and went to bed.

Day 7: They leave. Linda knew this relationship was over.

Mark did not “love the beach”. Linda was not sure he had ever “sat” on a beach. He had never built a sand castle or “played” on the beach. He never learned how to “play with girls” on the beach.  Linda did not feel a connection with him, and knew that she never would.

We are not going to find love with people who don’t know how to love and live.

What Women Want: Men who are not zombies

We  talk about scary things and zombies at Halloween time, and now zombies are all the rage on TV; time to be scared, fearful. Many middle aged men are scared, fearful all year long…of love, getting close, getting hurt, rejected; scared of being vulnerable. So they protect themselves from these things. They close up emotionally. All experts will tell them the only way to find true love is to put yourself out there. Take off your costumes, masks, defenses, past hurts. Be aware of the past and what was done wrong, fix what can be fixed, let go of what can’t be changed, and move on. We cannot be thinking about the past, or the future(because we can’t see the future), in a relationship. We must be fully in the present; fully with the one we are with, and fully with ourselves. We have to be skilled in shutting out negative thoughts, feelings that pop into our heads and putting ourselves back into the present and all the wonderful things in the present.

Women often talk about being with men who are “not really there” when they are with them. They are often “emotionally checked out”. They are zombies. It is scary! Another word for these men is “space cadets”. When with these men we can tell that they are “somewhere else”. Experts will tell you that their minds are in the past or future; thinking about negative things that happened in the past(worrying), or worrying about the future, even the rest of the day or week. To be emotionally available we have to let go of fear. We cannot change the past and we certainly cannot cause the future in relationships. The most effective thing we can do is be fully in the present: be into the person we are with. What’s ironic is that all the worrying we do to try to improve the present is the very thing that messes up the present.

Men also have to be willing to be hurt and/or rejected. It’s part of loving. Your fear of being hurt can cause you not ever to be hurt again: be alone for the rest of your life. You have all heard the phrase, “It is better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all” ; so true. Egos also get in the way big time. If your ego keeps you from going after someone, or saying something or doing something: sticking yourself out there, because it doesn’t what you to be rejected, you have to learn to not operate from your ego. I have also heard ego-oriented men say they don’t compliment women because they don’t want the women to get big heads: don’t want the woman to feel they are better than them. They want to keep the women “down there” so that they, the men, can elevate themselves “up there”. Egos are very bad in relationships, and in life.

There is spooky talk of zombies evolving into our day and time; that there really are zombies. Middle age women will tell you that there are LOTS of men zombies out there. They can’t listen, think, be mindful, use their 5 senses to see, feel beauty, wonder, play, touch, to really see women. They can’t feel and show real romantic love with a woman.When you talk to them, they are off somewhere else, in zombie land, with no eye contact. They grunt, look at you blankly, can’t feel, don’t like touch and giving. When driving with them they are off somewhere else. Single, middle age men become zombies after many years of fear, negativity, ego: closing themselves off: their hearts, souls, minds dry up. How more zombie can you get? It’s pretty scary!