Many factors go into creating a loving relationship. It helps if two people share the same interests and hobbies. It also helps if they have similar values around religion or spirituality, politics, the environment, abortion, and personal growth. It helps if they both eat junk food or both eat organic food. It makes things easier if both are neat or messy, or if both are on time or late people. Physical attraction is also quite important. It’s great if they have common ground around money and spending.

Yet, a couple can have all of these and still not have a loving relationship if one element is missing. Without this essential ingredient, all the other wonderful attributes will not be enough to make the relationship work.
This essential ingredient is about intention.

At any given moment, each of us devotes to only one of two different intentions: to control or to learn. When we intend to control, our deepest motivation is to have control over getting love, avoiding pain, and feeling safe. When we intend to learn, our deepest motivation is to learn about being loving to ourselves and others.

The motivation to get love rather than be loving can create havoc within a relationship. Let’s look at a typical relationship issue and see what happens regarding the two different intentions.

Jason and Samantha feel emotionally distant from each other, and they haven’t made love in a month. The problem started when Samantha stated that she wanted to take an expensive vacation, and Jason objected. Samantha got angry, Jason gave in, and they have been distant ever since.

Samantha intended to have control over getting what she wanted. She equates an expensive vacation with love – if Jason does this for her, then he proves his love for her. She used her anger as a way to have control over getting what she wants. She wants control over feeling special to Jason.

Jason intends to avoid pain. He gave himself up to have control over Samantha not being angry with him. He hopes that by giving Samantha what she wants, she will see him as a good and loving husband.

However, because both Jason and Samantha were trying to control each other rather than be loving to themselves and each other, their interaction created emotional distance.

What would this have looked like if they had intended to learn?
If Samantha had intended to learn, she would not have become angry. Instead, she would have wanted to understand Jason’s objections. If Jason had intended to learn, he would not have given himself up. Instead, he would have wanted to understand why this particular vacation was so important to Samantha. Both Samantha and Jason would have been caring about themselves and each other, rather than wanting to get love or avoid pain. In their mutual exploration about why they each felt the way they did, they would have learned what they needed to learn – about themselves and each other – to reach a win-win resolution. Instead of Samantha ostensibly winning and Jason losing, they would have come up with something both of them could live with. With some exploration of his financial fears, Jason might have decided that the vacation Samantha wanted would be fine. With the understanding of Jason’s financial concerns, Samantha might have decided on a less expensive vacation. In either case, both of them would have felt fine about the outcome.

No matter how much Jason and Samantha have in common or are attracted to each other, their love will diminish when they intend to control rather than learn. It’s amazing how quickly love vanishes when one or both partners have the intent to control it. It’s equally amazing how fast it comes back when both partners have the will to learn.