Tuesday, August 26, 2014

When Love is not enough...

Essay on Love: ( I wrote this 4 years ago, but only re-discovered it today. I'd like to share it with all of you once again...) "When Love is not enough"
I have two friends who just recently broke up. It was the lady's choice, and the guy is just unable to deal with it. He's absolutely ripped up about the whole thing, and he can't understand why, if he truly, deeply, passionately loved her, she could just leave him and walk away.
The problem is that she's really much better off without him. She's more mature, and she's growing at a faster pace, meeting new people, discovering more of herself, while he is still clinging to an ideal of her that isn't true anymore. He still sees her as the girl he got together with last year, instead of the richer, more complete girl she has become. She didn't want to do it, but she had to let him go. He was holding her back from becoming the lady she knew she could be. He was preventing her from becoming more than the girl he thinks he loves.
I haven't spoken with him at length yet (he needs time to grieve), but I think this typifies why many men and women can't get over relationships. They pour so much of themselves into something that they sometimes miss the big picture altogether. Not to sound so high-minded (I have suffered through many such breakups myself, and I know how it feels to hurt), but what many don't realize is that LOVE SIMPLY IS NOT ENOUGH in a relationship.
I'm a romantic by nature, but a realist by inclination. I believe that two people who truly love each other can make things work, even in the face of tremendous odds. I just don't believe, however, that it is just the love that will see them through it, as so many other things come into the picture.
First, there is a common sense of happiness. If one person just isn't happy anymore, no matter how much the other loves that person, it just wouldn't be right for that person to stay. I mean, I'm going to tell this guy that she may be the right girl for him (or so he believes), but is he really the right guy for her? One of the most painful things to accept is that the person you are just may not be good enough. It's damn heartbreaking to admit, but sometimes that's the way life goes. Sometimes your best just isn't good enough. Or sometimes, what you give her isn't what she actually needs. And in the end, if you truly love a girl, it is really up to you to let go and move on, pain be damned. I mean, there is no way you can force a girl to be happy with you, no matter how happy you may be with her. That's not love anymore. That's selfishness.
Secondly, many people have to understand that two people are like circles. When they get together, the circles intersect, kinda like a Venn Diagram in Math (you know, those circles that overlap and are "shaded" where they meet...). Unfortunately for some, especially those who put all their eggs in one basket, no one's circle will ever stay the same. People grow. They learn new things, gain new experiences and meet new people. They become more than the people they used to be. And when that happens, the circle on one side of the relationship grows bigger and bigger, and the intersection, in sheer percentage terms, just gets smaller and smaller. In other words, it IS possible to outgrow a relationship, especially if that other person cannot, or refuses to, grow along with you. If he or she does not make an effort to participate in your growth... to contribute to helping you become better and happier, you will most likely feel less and less in love, and ultimately that love will die. I'm not saying we should always be intertwined... always trying to meddle in each other's affairs. Rather, I'm saying that we should accept that growing up is part of falling in love, and that we should constantly seek to re-evaluate and reaffirm our love for each other, constantly noting the new levels of growth and the new depths of your love's personality. Only when we ourselves learn to grow and to accept growth can we see our love deepen. Otherwise, it will die a natural death, no matter how much you say you "love" someone.
In the end, two people will never stay the same, no matter what the vows may have been in a relationship (marriage or otherwise). If you get together with someone not seeking to keep everything the same way it was when you first met, but rather seeking new ways to grow TOGETHER in love, then maybe, just maybe, your love will truly work.
-Peejay Garcia 

Sunday, August 24, 2014

Why should I have faith in God?

A matter of perspective: (This will be long, but I believe it is worth the read, so please give it a go.) Last night a young student asked me how it was I could still have faith in God in spite of what had happened to me ( a serious stroke that left me semi-paralyzed for life); I answered him thusly...
One shouldn't have faith because of what he gets in life; one should believe in God because it is what He deserves from us... Any Christian who's ever read the Bible will know just how much God sacrificed for us and how much He loves us all. If faith is a form of devotion, then we owe Him ALL of our faith for that alone. However, if we MUST go by what we get in life, then, even then, God has been very good to me, you see; He gave me a loving family and many good friends. I always have shelter and good food to eat, plus I have a computer and a good internet connection... What more do I need, really?  I've been blessed... 
Even my stroke was a blessing, in its own way... I was wealthy, well-respected and constantly bathed in attention and general acclaim while I was in Korea and it caused me to forget about God in my life. I even stopped really being concerned about what was happening back home in the Philippines so much so that I lost touch with my family and most of my Philippine friends; I even decided never to come back to the land of my birth ever again because life was so good to me in Korea... I was rich, full of pride, and arrogant, but then God lay me low... 
In one fell swoop I lost my ability to physically be the same, dynamic self I used to be that got me so much money in the first place. I could no longer physically handle my usual 21-hour work days so much so that I had to give up work in Korea and return to the Philippines and, because I am no longer financially raking it in, I'm now relying on my family's love and support to get by. For the first time in many years I'm once again living in a home that has people who love and care about me. I'm reminded every single day now of just how wonderful my family is. How could I not consider this a blessing from God? 
Take it from me, the trappings of wealth, while a nice distraction in life, are really just that.... a "distraction;" they blind you to what truly matters in the end... I can no longer afford to be proud and arrogant; I must acknowledge I need others in my life. I must now acknowledge I need God's infinite love and grace to get by day-to-day...  There is a line in the Bible that goes, "What does it profit a man if he gains the entire world, but loses his immortal soul?" (Mark 8:36) 
Yes, my young friend, God took away my wealth, my prestige and privilege, even my physical body, but He gave me back my family, my friends, my country and my soul... How could I NOT feel blessed??? God has been SO good to me, you see... It would be totally illogical of me NOT to believe and have faith... I'm not a perfect Christian by any means, but with His loving grace, I hope to one day be more worthy of the name... Thank you for reading this far. I hope it's been worth your time... God bless you all!!!