I can't begin to tell you how often I have recently heard the
term "soul mate."It seems that so many of my single or divorced
friends are on a quest in search of finding theirs.In almost every
personal ad one reads these days, somewhere in the profile it is
written...
"in search of my soul mate." We are inundated with this
term in greeting cards, on television and in books and magazines.
But what
is a soul mate and does one really exist?
I have often asked people what they think it is and I've
received some interesting answers. One woman I know defined her
soul mate as someone who would rescue her from a $20,000.00 VISA
debt, pay for her children's college education and trade her old
Buick in for a new BMW.
"And he would do all of this with a happy heart," she
said. I was speechless. Yeah right, I thought, if this is really
the case, then it is no small wonder why
everyone is searching for one and why they seem to be in
such short supply!
Another woman said that the concept of having a soul mate simply
meant that each person would be totally accepting of the other's
annoying habits. Ah yes... a carpet full of nail clippings and
dirty underwear left on the floor, but all of it made so much
sweeter knowing that it is your soul mate that left it there.
I heard someone say once that a soul mate is someone who
completes you. What? You mean right now, as a single person I'm not
completed? If I never find my soul mate, I'll walk the face of the
earth incomplete? I mean let's face it; wouldn't a relationship be
more promising if it started out with two
complete individuals, rather than two
incomplete ones? Maybe I have too much common sense for my
own good but I just don't get it!
I do however; have a few questions about this theory. If a soul
mate really does exist, is there only one available for each of us?
What if he lives in Cleveland and I live in Alaska? What if our
soul mate dies in a dreadful accident before we even had a chance
to meet him? If so, then are we left to endure a life with someone
who's just mediocre? Or do we have multiple soul mates that we
could meet on any given day?
I asked a married couple I know if they were soul mates. They
assured me that they were.
"The first time we looked into each other's eyes, we just knew
it," the wife said. The husband looked on shaking his head in
agreement. But that explanation really didn't
tell me anything. I pressed for further details.
"But what was the
"it" that you knew?" I asked in frustration
insistent that I would finally get an answer I could understand.
They just looked at me as if I was pitifully out of touch and
rolled their eyes skyward. They were no help whatsoever
My parents have been married for over 50 years. I have never
heard them fight or even raise their voices to one another in
anger. Can you imagine such a thing? Over the years it has been
interesting watching the way my parents interact.Even to this day
when they attend a social gathering, my Dad will tell me afterwards
that
"your Mother was the most beautiful woman in the room." They
still hold hands and give each other a little "peck on the cheek,"
even in public.
They visited me from out of town recently. One night I walked
into their bedroom to wish them a good night. They were both
propped up with their pillows, my father reading the newspaper, my
mother doing her crossword puzzle. I sat down on the bedside and
thought how lucky I was to have been raise by two such fine people.
Feeling sentimental, I began to talk about the length of their
marriage. I asked my father, "Dad, what's it been like to be
married to the same woman for over 50 years?" My father looked up
over the top edge of his newspaper and without hesitation he
replied,
"Boring!" My mother proceeded to hit him in the head with her magazine
and then they both laughed. I laughed too. As I was leaving the
bedroom they looked at each other and continued to giggle and the
intimacy between them excluded me.
Is this the behavior of soul mates? Is this the indescribable
"it?"
I have given this a lot of thought. Maybe I have too much time
on my hands. I admit though that I am still sitting on the fence
about the concept of soul mates. I guess each and every one of us
has to reach our own conclusion. For me, I think it would be nice
just meeting someone who will simply accept me for who I am without
handing me a list of things I need to change first. He's someone
who doesn't particularly have to have all the answers, or save me
from myself, or pay off my debts. I just want a mate who is
reliable, has a sense of humor and who will be there through the
hills and valleys of day to day life. Communication is important
too. I have to be with someone I can talk with... and someone who
might rub my back on occasion... O.K... I'll quit while I'm ahead.
But if by some stretch of the imagination, what I have just
described is the
"it," then all I have to say is...
"SWF in search of soul mate."
Kit Danes De Roche
This article was written in 2003... Kit is now newly married
(Feb.2005) and lives with her husband Gerard in Palm City,
Florida
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