Thursday 25 June 2015

Love, Jealousy, and Danger



July 2015
Love,  Jealousy, and Danger  by  Dr Elizabeth McCardell, M. Couns., PhD
A couple have come together, finally, after many years yearning for this very thing. Their love is raw and tangible. They can’t keep their hands to themselves, and are caressing the other’s hands, lips, knees. One of them, though, has bouts of terrible jealousy and it is for this reason they have come to see me for counselling. 
It is often popularly assumed that jealousy is a sign of deep love, but is actually isn’t.  When people are feeling secure in the love relationship and in themselves (and this is the crucial point), jealous feelings don’t arise. Jealousy is associated with low self esteem, a tendency to be anxious and moody, feelings of insecurity, fear of being socially isolated, not feeling adequate in the relationship, clingy, and feeling the partner will leave them for another person. Summed up, jealousy is positively correlated with neuroticism.
It’s hard for the other person to realize this about their loved  partner, particularly when the jealous one is accusing them of all kinds of infidelities: she glanced at another man, he helped a woman carry her groceries, she greeted her work colleague on the street (she must be having an affair with him), he wrote an email to his female student and labelled it “private”, and so on.
It takes time for the non-jealous one to realize the level of insecurity the other has and that it isn’t anything he or she is doing, but rather that the problem rests almost entirely with their partner. They’re the ones who need to learn to relax into the love relationship and not respond in their old way, according to the scripts they learned while growing up. Jealousy has its root in insecure attachments formed with their primary caregiver (who maybe their mother, but not always). The primary caregiver wasn’t emotionally available much of the time and when they were emotionally present, it was beautiful. And so, they crave the security, warmth and sense of one-ness in relationships that might, perhaps, repair the childhood they never had.
Feelings of jealousy are the responsibility of the person having them. If they don’t take responsibility for their own feelings but try to seize control, absolute control, of the other person, then the whole relationship becomes a danger zone.
It might start out innocently enough. The rather awkward John sees, and falls in love with the elegant Amy who attracts everyone. John is smitten. He begins to make sure that he is always at every event Amy is likely to be. He then sends her flowers. She is flattered and thanks him, but is not particularly interested. He woos her and she, a little bit reluctantly, goes along with it. They become a couple.
He starts leaving notes at her door, and begins stalking her. She is never left alone, he asks her where she has been all the time, and she is getting really scared and angry. She makes sure she is never alone, and starts to invite other friends to escort her to events. This enrages John. She comes home one day to a hundred red roses on the doorstep. She is horrified and dumps them in the rubbish bin outside her house – an act seen by John. He flies into a rage, confronts her and beats her up, while claiming it is she who is hurting him.
Thus desire turns from wanting to be with her, to jealousy, and vigilance and then violence. The roses, a symbol of love, becomes for him a sign of his undying love. She is just disgusted and throws them away. He feels more than merely rejected; he is feeling brutalized. He never realized her actual individuality nor the possibility that she didn’t wholeheartedly welcome his presence, ever.
His brutalization could well have resulted in her death, and rather frighteningly frequently does. This is not a sign of love, but a delusion and jealousy is not a sign of loving closeness, but a desire to control the feelings of anxiety that arise in human encounters and relationships.
I’ve noted above that there is a strong correlation between jealousy and neuroticism. Studies have found that the higher the level of emotional instability and the arising of such unpleasant emotions as anger, anxiety, and depression, the more a person is prone to jealousy. The desire to fuse with the other person is very strong and every act of theirs that seems to snub the jealous one undermines his/her self esteem.
A relationship based on jealousy is an insecure relationship and one that really requires healing. Love, in its committed and freely entered into form, can begin to heal the people involved, but this work requires active and responsible owning of negative feelings. It is at this point that working with a counselor can really help repair the relationship, or, if this is not possible, release the pair into their separate lives.



 E.E.McCardell copyright