PLANET
WAVES
by Eric Francis
Organic
Love
Were all familiar
with organic food. This is food grown without pesticide sprays or toxic
fertilizers, from natural seeds that have escaped genetic engineering.
In theory, organic food has no synthetic preservatives or artificial
dyes, nothing extra that it does not need (like plastic filler) and
its handled in a way that preserves some of the integrity of what
nature created. Due to crop loss, its expensive (though cheaper
than restaurant food, which most of us eat a lot ).
But its better. Organic food is often sold closer to the natural
growing times, and there are some philosophies of organic diet (Macrobiotics,
for example) which suggest that we eat only food grown locally and when
its in season. Most important, we think of organic food as whole
food, rather than food which is fractioned off like white flour, or
recombined to make weird things like fortified breakfast cereal or vitamin
D skim milk.
The organic food philosophy (usually known in Europe as Biodynamics)
honors the reality that both the land and people need to be healthier
and the relationship between the two is food. There is an acknowledged
connection between ecology (which means the study of home)
and the health of the people who live in that home.
A concept at the core of organic eating is sustainability. We know that
our current agricultural system is killing the planet and making us
sick; we know that most of the food available in the supermarket lacks
basic nutrition. Organic farming, Biodynamics and other philosophies
show how we can sustain both human life and planetary life through one
process.
We also know that the societys teachings about relationships,
which glorify possession of other people, which rely on artificial structures,
and which are usually based on oppressive, negative ideas, are harming
us, and damaging the health of the planet, just as aggressively as agribusiness.
Unfulfilled people are dangerous to others, and they spew violence and
toxins.
So, what about organic love?
Toxic ideas about love, like toxic food, are sold in the supermarket,
at the check-out counter. Flip through those magazines, or just look
at the covers (who doesnt?). They teach us to think in terms of
ideas like married and monogamous; we can learn
to please or be more pleasing to our partner; we can have affairs, which
means lying and cheating, and there are instruction manuals
for catching our partners in these activities. We read a lot about rape
and violence, which are portrayed like sexy advertising. People are
gay or straight and if theyre really wild,
theyre bisexual. We tend to consume these ideas as
unconsciously as we consume food containing polysorbate-80, hormone-tainted
meat and sugar-packed soft drinks with laced with propylene glycol.
Over the past 40 or so years, several different relationship outlooks
have added some diversity and allowed people to be more natural.
The polyamory movement is one of these. Polyamory (meaning more than
one love) suggests that its natural for people to have more than
one sexual relationship at a time. When you consider how many people
do have more than one sexual relationship at a time (but deny it), then
the real claim-to-fame of polyamory is that people are getting together
and making a choice to face reality, and to be happier as who they are.
Polyamory has its own problems; for one thing its a kind of movement
and not everybody wants to join a movement. Part of its movement quality,
though, is based on the idea that this lifestyle requires support. Another
problem with poly is that its based on the idea of poly,
meaning more than one lover. What about people who want to have more
natural relationships tending toward monogamy? Here, the notion of polyamory
can alienate people who may otherwise have a lot else in common with
poly folk.
Many people have observed that polyamorous relationships often have
much of the same confusion and toxic issues as monogamous relationships,
just spread out among more people. Some would say that this makes the
weirdness worse, and others would say that expanded relationship models
give us a chance to see the dynamics in action, and work them out openly
(remembering how many people cheat).
It may be that so-called monogamy has problems, but that polyamory does
not really address them because these problems reside closer to the
core of who we are, and what we are trained to be in our society.
Without going into a long discourse on religion, most of our ideas about
relationships are based on Christian metaphysics (God was born to a
virgin and never had sex; and the love of God is more important than
human love experienced in the body), which is heavily overlaid with
romantic ideals (such as one-and-only erotic love) that send us spinning
wildly in the other direction.
Combine this debate with natural hormone biology, and you can see all
our conflict in and about relationships, from guilt to jealousy to cheating,
as products of a war between two belief systems (religion versus romance)
plus our naturally horny, delightfully curious human nature.
In witness to life, I offer a few ideas about how we might go about
creating, or rather, allowing organic love.
All love starts with selflove. In order to love another person
we need to be at peace with who we are, which means loving and appreciating
ourselvesincluding sexually. Selfloving means being a whole person.
If we bring this whole person into our relationships, we are likely
to find greater peace and fulfillment.
Love requires trust in order to grow naturally. Trust is both
intuitive and cultivated. In an atmosphere of trust, it is easier to
feel safe enough to be oneself, which will allow greater expression
in loving relationshipsof love, fear and other emotions that we
face.
People are naturally curious about one another. Can we deny this?
Why bother? We need to allow for human nature in our human relationships.
If we are with a beautiful person, we can presume that others will be
curious and want to get close to that beauty; we can presume the same
thing about ourselves.
People seem more beautiful when we are in love. When we are in
love, we are love magnets. If we allow for this fact rather than trying
to deny it, I believe well be happier and live more naturally.
People cannot be controlled; we are our own people. We can lie
and act like we are controlled; we can kid ourselves and think we control
another. Both perceptions are false rather than wrong. Once control
has entered a relationship, it has filled-in spaces where many other
nutrients are lacking, such as trust, allowing, or selflove.
Relationships take their own form and each is different. Relationships
grow, like plants; they change as they become. We may go through different
seasons of love, and might want one partner some years or some days,
and more than one partner some years or some days.
Communication is a learned skill and is essential to relationships.
Communication is based on honesty; honesty is a learned skill as well.
We learned to lie in order to defend ourselves against deception, control
and attack. In order to communicate honestly, we need to teach one another
to do so patientlywithin contexts that are free from deception,
control and attack.
Our homes need to support our relationships. As our own people,
we need our own spaces. It is much healthier for people to have safe
retreats, a safe space to call their own. I suggest that in live-in,
long-term relationships, people have their own rooms and their own beds,
and invite one another as guests.
Sexual beings often make babies. Though the science of this was
not understood until the late 19th century, we now know for sure that
sex can lead to birth. We know that most pregnancies are unplanned,
but there is no excuse for this. Men and women each need to take 100
percent responsibility for birth control, and for birth, as a matter
of love for one another and for the unborn.
We are each responsible for our own healing of childhood wounding
and past relationships. If we dont take responsibility, we will
dump our toxic emotions, most of which began with our family of origin
(blame, guilt, shame, resentment) onto our partners rather than dealing
with them. Taking this responsibility would include each person in a
relationship being on a conscious path of growth, whether spiritual
or with a therapist of some kind: having a space outside the relationship
to deal with ones own life, including relationship experiences.
Jealousy is not what it seems to be, and to love organically
we need to get to the heart of the matter. We are all of mortal flesh
and will not be with our partners forever. But we can be
with them in any one moment, which is all that there is anyway.
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