About a month ago I wrote about a new
paradigm for relationships (http://www.romancerecovery.com/blog/both-and), and
lately I’ve been thinking about this Third Stage of relationships. What does it really mean, and how would you
recognize it? How is it expressed inside
a relationship while life is also swirling around you? Is the third stage some goal to be achieved,
or is it always a work in progress?
Being in a third stage relationship is an organic process. It’s even a misnomer to call it a third stage
relationship in most cases. There are
couples who are able to consistently maintain the third stage, but they are few
and far between. More often, couples are
able to achieve a third stage state, but they’re unable to sustain it. They have moments where they expand into the
third stage consciousness, but their base line is second stage. And for the record, I’d like to say that
there’s absolutely nothing wrong with that.
We have a tendency to think that one stage is better than another, and
that’s not true. Instead of judging
ourselves as if the third stage is the ultimate destination, it would be more
helpful to judge ourselves on the quality of the journey. That is, of course, assuming we want to judge
ourselves at all. Being human, this is
probably a fair assumption. The question
is not, “Am I there yet?” Rather, the question is, “Am I growing and evolving
in myself and in the relationship?”
How would one recognize a third stage state of being? One way is to ask, “Why did I just do
that?” Let’s say you gave your partner a
shoulder massage. Was it because you
know he expected it? (first stage) Do you want to ask him to do something he
won’t like and are hoping to soften him up? (second stage) Perhaps it’s because he’s in a bad mood and
when daddy’s unhappy, everyone’s unhappy. (first stage) Or maybe it just seemed like a good way to
express your love for him in that moment.
(third stage)
Any time we express our love in a spontaneous way for the sake of love,
we are in a third stage state. When I
first began contemplating this, I realized how firmly entrenched in the second
stage I was. We prided ourselves on the
egalitarian nature of our relationship.
If he cooked, I did the dishes. I
cleaned up inside, he took care of the outside of the house. Practically speaking, using the second stage
to manage household chores can be a good idea.
The intention of the third stage of a relationship is to remember who we
really are. It is to help us access the
limitless, divine spark of the Creator within each of us. That can happen while washing the dishes, or
mowing the lawn. But it is in those
moments of vulnerability, those moments of exposing our heart to another; those
intimate moments of love, where it is most possible. In those moments, it seems profane to barter,
or even to rush to some destination, no matter how good it might feel. In those moments, we can use the breath to
enter into our own sacredness. We follow
our breath, we use our eyes—the windows of the soul—to connect deeply with our
partner, and we open our hearts wide. We
merge, not just with the body of our beloved, but with the entire ocean of
consciousness. We lose ourselves, but
not really. The French call orgasm “le
petit mort”, the little death. In those
moments, we die to the illusion that we are individuals, mere mortals, and we
re-member our true selves.