Tuesday, October 1, 2019
Love :: essays research papers
Love           Upon examination of the vast amounts of theories on love I can only find  myself in a more convoluted state. Love is in fact a great mystery to me, and I  have only achieved frustration in trying to explicate it. In Scott Peck's book  The Roadless Traveled there are a conglomerate of avenues that are explored  within the topic of love. It is here that some insight is expressed to me about  this perplexing subject. Although I do feel that actual life experiences that I  have been involved in recently have attributed to a better understanding of this  love phenomena, some of the ideas that are expressed in this book were of  tremendous merit. I find it almost prophetic that this assignment happens to  fall into the same time frame as when I am at a point of heightened curiosity on  this subject of Love. Why at this very moment I find myself questioning my  current status with a newfound relationship. I can't help but to assume that I  have found "Genuine Love" because of an overwhelming feeling of vivacious  content upon finding a seemingly perfect union. Peck's views on love in this  respect differ from what my thoughts have conjured up as such. And I can only  infer that the words of a reputable author and doctor are more legitimate than  mine. It is here that I must stop to apologize to you, Louis, for making this  part of the paper far too personal than necessary.       "Falling in Love" is a common myth in this society. The actual act of  falling in love, according to Peck, is a misconception. There is a  differentiation to be made between what is termed "falling in love" and the act  of real loving. Peck describes exactly what it is that we experience when We  think we have fallen in love. Much of what Peck describes as falling in love  has to do with what he calls "ego boundaries". These ego boundaries are  established during infancy and continue to develop throughout the person's life.  These boundaries represent an individual's limits with their mental and physical  power, as they are perceived by the individual. With these ego boundaries many  people feel confined into their own personal identity which generally creates a  feeling of loneliness. A need to form a cathexis is then developed. Peck  describes it thus, "The essence of the phenomenon of falling in love is a sudden  collapse of a section of an individual's ego boundaries, permitting one to merge  his or her identity with that of another person. The Sudden release of oneself  from oneself, the explosive pouring out of oneself into the beloved, and the    					    
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