Blog Posts

This Week In Love - Test of Time

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This week we're bringing you a collection of stories that deal with enduring... more like enjoying the test of time together. There are a few stories in here that are tear-jerkers in the very best way. You have been warned. Now go make some memories!

1. Enduring Love

This couple has learned to support each other throughout the years despite having to endure extreme physical adversity. Warning: Do not watch this video if you aren't ok with shedding some tears.

2. What Happened When I Had Sex Every Day For a Year

When a relationship has a fantastic sex life, it adds that extra little silver lining to even the smallest moments of life. But when the sex life is suffering, it can reverberate negativity, induce insecurity, spread doubt and resentment, and even straight up destroy relationships.

Brittany went on a one year mission to regain her confidence, and reinvigorate the passion between her and her husband. In this inspiring story, in under a year, this one couple resurrected their stale sex life and their relationship as a whole.

3. A Letter From Fred

96-year-old Fred wrote a song for his wife as a response to a local singer/songwriter competition. Fred's wife, Lorraine, had recently passed away after 75 years of marriage. Listen to the story of his relationship and his song:

A Letter From Fred from Green Shoe Studio on Vimeo.

4. The Loveliest Short Story You Will Read Today

Read the story of a couple that meets on the subway in New York that was published in one of the most unusual places you could imagine... Craigslist. It's a fantastic read. I honestly didn't think it would be that great, but after I started reading, I couldn't stop. It's a fantastic work of amateur fiction.

5. How To Tell Love From Passion

One of my favorite websites, Brain Pickings, shows off an awesome book illustrated by James Thurber, one of the most beloved artists from The New Yorker. The book is entitled "Is Sex Necessary?" The article is definitely worth checking out... and if you feel so inclined, the book as well.

Don't forget to join the 30 Day True Love Challenge! We're one week in, but you can still jump on board.

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30 Day Challenge Email List

Join the email list to receive daily inspiration, motivation, and success stories. We'll do our best to make this totally worth your while. Trust us, 30 days is a lot longer than it seems, and a few days in, things start to suck. A little inspiration can go a long way. [gravityform id="6" name="30 Day Challenge Email List" title="false" description="false"][jcol/]

Join the Facebook Group

For a bit of extra encouragement, community, and inspiration, join the 30 Day Challenge Facebook Group by clicking the button below:

Motivational Penguin | The Loveumentary

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[jbox title="Thanks for Reading!" border="5" radius="15"] This Week In Love is a weekly collection of all things love published every Sunday. If you've seen/read/created something you'd like to see featured on This Week In Love, just drop us a line! [/jbox]

This Week In Love - Date Night

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One of the most important habits to develop in a relationship is to make time for each other. Getting rid of distractions, sitting down to connect as a partnership, and investing emotional and physical energy in each other is one of the most effective ways to keep love alive and thriving. Today's "This Week In Love" is dedicated in large part to spending quality time together.

Now go ask your significant other on a date, would you?

1. Dancing

Nearly every Friday, Ted and Lucienne go dancing together. It's the desire to be a couple like them that inspired me to learn to dance.

Learning to dance is one of the best things I've ever done. It's not easy, but when you "get it," the joy you experience on the dance floor with your partner is incomparable.

2. Jar of Dates

Sometimes thinking of a date is... well, more work than the date itself. So, maybe you're next date night should be to make a jar of dates. Use colored tongue depressors to write down a few dozen date ideas (maybe stealing from the list of date ideas below), and categorize them by price and effort.

Red: Expensive dates out of the house. Stuff like a night at the symphony, or a fancy restaurant go here. Dark Pink: Less expensive dates out of the house. A night at the movies, or dance classes would go here. Light Pink: Stay at home dates. Board games, video games, and dessert showdowns would go here. White: Sex? I don't know. There was no category for white sticks on this lady's blog. But sex seems like a good fit.

Jar of Dates | The Loveumentary | Photo credit: http://www.lifeinthegreenhouse.com/2012/02/date-night-in-jar.html

3. Kermit the Frog

Kermit is one of my favorite Muppets, and this is easily one of my favorite quotes. Sometimes you just meet someone, and you share this connection, and you are instantly.... well, there's not a word yet for old friends who've just met.

Old Friends Who've Just Met | The Loveumentary

 

4. Talk About... Things

I've been told that you can always tell which couples at a restaurant are married... they're the ones not talking to each other. After years, or even decades together, it's understandable that you can just plain run out of things to talk about. Sometimes it happens to me after like 3 dates. So, here's a huge list of questions to spark some fun conversation. Or you can check out this cool-looking book* that basically serves the same purpose.

5. 52 Date Nights

Here's a list of dates (there are actually 79 on the list)... enough to go on one a week for a year.


Don't forget to join the 30 Day True Love Challenge! It's starts tomorrow. [jcolumns]

30 Day Challenge Email List

Join the email list to receive daily inspiration, motivation, and success stories. We'll do our best to make this totally worth your while. Trust us, 30 days is a lot longer than it seems, and a few days in, things start to suck. A little inspiration can go a long way. [gravityform id="6" name="30 Day Challenge Email List" title="false" description="false"][jcol/]

Join the Facebook Group

For a bit of extra encouragement, community, and inspiration, join the 30 Day Challenge Facebook Group by clicking the button below:

Motivational Penguin | The Loveumentary

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[jbox title="Thanks for Reading!" border="5" radius="15"] This Week In Love is a weekly collection of all things love published every Sunday. If you've seen/read/created something you'd like to see featured on This Week In Love, just drop us a line!

Links with an * are affiliate link. Any money made from an affiliate link goes to keep The Loveumentary up and running.[/jbox]

What Would You Give Up For True Love?

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Do you want to experience true love?

Of course you do...

Big deal. Everybody wants true love.

The real question is, what are you doing about it?

We all say we want true love, yet we fill our lives with hollow emotional clutter. We claim to want to experience deep connection, yet we are constantly on the lookout for a new way to numb our feelings.

We're addicted to Facebook, video games, our jobs, porn, The Bachelor, alcohol, and food.

We use our vices to escape.

When we are bored, we tune out the world with a marathon of Arrested Development on Netflix and a bottle of Nutella.

When we're feeling that social anxiety, we numb our fear with booze.

When we're lonely we flip on our computers and pull up some porn and well... you get the idea.

What Would You Give Up For Love | The LoveumentaryLet's say true love is, well, true. By its very definition, it must not be false, fictional, or illusory. In short, it must conform with reality.

Yet we sit around and complain that we'll never find it while we fill our lives with every empty and hollow counterfeit for love we can get our hands on.

Porn is the opposite of romance.

Facebook is the anthesis of true friendship.

Drunken nights ending in blackouts are the antithesis of late-night soul talks resulting in deep and meaningful connection.

Where's true love? It's out there. What are you willing to give up to get it?

For 30 days, join us, and give up one of your love counterfeits. Sacrifice that emotional crutch. Abandon the guilty pleasure. Tear down that wall you've been hiding behind.

Let's get vulnerable! Let's connect, experience emotions together, laugh, cry, dance, scream! And let's make room to experience true love!

We're starting on Monday, August 19th. You can join our Facebook group, or sign up to get daily emails to help you through this process. Check out more details on this page. Be part of the community that is bringing love back in style!

Sign Up!

[jcolumns]

30 Day Challenge Email List

Join the email list to receive daily inspiration, motivation, and success stories. We'll do our best to make this totally worth your while. Trust us, 30 days is a lot longer than it seems, and a few days in, things start to suck. A little inspiration can go a long way. [gravityform id="6" name="30 Day Challenge Email List" title="false" description="false"][jcol/]

Join the Facebook Group

For a bit of extra encouragement, community, and inspiration, join the 30 Day Challenge Facebook Group by clicking the button below:

Motivational Penguin | The Loveumentary

[jbutton size="xlarge" color="blue" link="https://www.facebook.com/groups/truelovechallenge/"]Facebook Group[/jbutton]

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This Week In Love - Small Moments

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Relationships are full of "moments." There are some moments you only get one chance at to make it right. The first date, the first kiss, and the proposal. It seems that this week's post has focus on these types of moments. We hope you enjoy experiencing them, and we hope they inspire you to create some moments of your own.


1. Kiss

Kissing is good for you. Go do it! Seriously... go...


2. River Asher

Ever wonder what it's like to bring a human into this world? Watch as one of life's most beautiful moments is captured for a beautiful couple in a stunningly beautiful way. Check out Armosa Studios for more phenomenal videos like this one.

River Asher from Armosa Studios on Vimeo.


3. The Most Romantic Proposal Ever

In this video, Garth constructed an elaborate plan to surprise Tess, his girlfriend, with the question of a lifetime. Check out the video below to see how it went, or this link for more details on the relationship:


4. Do Dinosaurs Still Exist?

Kiss me if I'm wrong... but dinosaurs still exist, right? Dinosaur Kisses | The Loveumentary


5. The Danger in Demonizing Male Sexuality

Sexuality can be a touchy subject. There are those who are extremely conservative when it comes to sex and consider the hint that humans are sexual beings a taboo... and then there's Howard Stern. We all fall somewhere on the spectrum of what we're willing to talk about, and how we want to teach our children about sex and sexuality.

One thing is for sure, demonizing sexuality and instilling fear of ones own desires and body is never a healthy approach. This article beautifully addresses the issue. Read it. Seriously. It was phenomenal.

Popular culture sets up this idea that men are sexual predators who need to resort to trickery and cologne to fulfill their one and only mission, which is sticking their penis in a girl.

It’s sad. It’s insulting. And it’s damaging.

This way of looking at male sexuality conflates sexuality with predation. It means that he who possesses sexuality is assumed a predator.


6. Be More Open

A great comic via Simple Marriage that illustrates a feeling that is only too real. Be More Open | The Loveumentary

[jbox title="Thanks for Reading!" border="5" radius="15"] This Week In Love is a weekly collection of all things love published every Sunday. If you've seen/read/created something you'd like to see featured on This Week In Love, just drop us a line![/jbox]

This Week In Love - I Want To Fall In Love

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Each week we curate a bunch of awesome, uplifting, love-related stuff that we think you'll enjoy. You'll find awesome tips on how to improve your relationships, inspiring stories, nuggets of wisdom, cool downloads, and the occasional laugh. Love it? Share it.


1. Fall In Love

This video is just the right amount of adorable:


2. 15 Ways To Stay Married For 15 Years

This article is more tailored to the ladies, and contains some lovely advice. Read it. Talk about it with your significant other. What can you do better? What are your "team rules"?

All the crap you read in magazines about honesty, sense of humor, communication, sensitivity, date nights, couples weekends, blah blah blah can be trumped by one word: loyalty. You and your spouse are a team of two. It is you against the world. No one else is allowed on the team, and no one else will ever understand the team’s rules.


3. A little desktop background for you Whovians out there.

There are a lot of things you need to get across this universe. Warp drive... wormhole refractors... you know the thing you need most of all? You need a hand to hold.

You Need A Hand To Hold, Doctor Who | The Loveumentary[Link to full size image]


4. Three Things I wish I Knew Before We Got Married

Here's a link to the article. It's a fantastic read. Here's one of my favorite excerpts. I have totally felt this way before:

I’m intensely certain that nothing in life has ever made me more angry, frustrated or annoyed than my wife. Inevitably, just when I think I’ve given all I can possibly give, she somehow finds a way to ask for more.

The worst part of it all is that her demands aren’t unreasonable. One day she expects me to stay emotionally engaged. The next, she's looking for me to validate the way that she feels. The list goes on—but never ventures far from things she perfectly well deserves as a wife.

5. The Art of Love Fu. Master it.

No "Best Of" post is complete without a GIF... and this one is priceless.

Love Fu


6. Predicting Divorce

Sometimes the best way to be successful is to know where the pitfalls are, and how to avoid them. This study goes over the science of relationships and evaluates some of the most common the signs of divorce.


7. How To Stay Marrired - A 5 Point Plan

Some great tips to keep things interesting, and avoid allowing your relationship to go stale.

Don’t be the “That’s Not My Thing” guy. That guy is a total dick and a shitty husband to boot. And please feel free to flip genders here, ’cause the same hostile adjectives apply to the wife who thinks dressing up like fucking Chewbacca at Comic Con is stupid, every bit as much as it does for the dude who refuses to ever sit down in front of a scrapbook. Don’t be a macho dick. Don’t be a mean bitch. It’s all the same in the end. And it’ll ruin a relationship.

[jbox title="Thanks for Reading!" border="5" radius="15"] This Week In Love is going to be a regular thing here on The Loveumentary. If you've seen/read/created something you'd like to see featured on This Week In Love, just drop us a line![/jbox]

Turn Off Your Damn Phone

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The following is a message my friend forwarded to me this week, and I felt that it absolutely needed to be shared. I hope you enjoy... and that you put your damn phone away today.

I meet and counsel with couples every single day. Each couple has their own problems and struggles. I've realized that, there's a huge issue now that didn't exist 5 years ago.

Advancements in technology now allow us to be in constant communication with someone just by typing in words on a phone, sitting down at a computer, or using an iPad. We have forgotten about the importance of spending time one-on-one with our significant others.

Life is what happens to you while you're looking at your phone | The Loveumentary |

When you text someone or call someone when you're with your significant other - whether you’re meaning to or not - you’re telling the person you’re in a relationship that what you’re doing can’t wait. I’ve seen people cheat emotionally and physically, not because they wanted to, but because they couldn’t put their phone down. Texts and Facebook are just too damn important.

Here’s my advice... you don’t have to follow it:

When you’re with someone you care about, put your damn phone away! Make sure your partner is the most important person in the room, and make sure they know it!

If you want to text someone or call someone don’t hide your phone, do it right in front of her so she can see the screen. If you want to check Twitter or Facebook, look at it together. If he wants to look at your phone let him. Don’t get in the habit of deleting messages, texts or emails.

Be fully trusting of each other, and put the phone away.

I swear, if people could follow this advice there would be so many less problems and so much less heartbreak.

To further reiterate the point, watch this video:

[jbox title="Pro Tip!" border="5" radius="15"]

If you are having a hard time putting your damn phone away, check out The Phonkerchief. Wrap up your cellular device, and give your partner a visual reminder that they are your number one priority.[/jbox]

The Paranoia of Not Being A Good Dad

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The leaders of every generation continuously set out to become better than the generation of their fathers. We stive to improve upon their failures and shortcomings. We want to provide our children with more opportunity and a better education, shield our families from the pains we suffered, be more attentive, patient, involved, supportive, healthy, eco-friendly, and tolerant and less bigoted, work-obsessed, over-protective, close-minded, and all the other hyphenated words you can imagine up.

The pressure we put on ourselves and each other to rise above and build upon what we've been given is daunting.

I don't know about you, but I was never given a manual or a training course for how to be an ideal spouse or father. This makes taking the obvious next step in my life an incredibly intimidating one. I mean, if you fail a class in your youth, you can beg for extra credit, or worst-case scenario, retake it. Lose your job? Good thing you're still a dependent of your parents.

There's no real safety net as an adult. Get married and find out you're a crappy spouse? Or worse... find out you're married to one? Tough luck. Work it out, or be branded with the mark of divorce.

Don't spend enough time with your kids? Spend too much time being a helicopter parent? Don't give them enough opportunity? Overwhelm them with too many extra-curriculars? Discipline them too much? Don't provide them enough freedom to act as individuals?

Too bad. You can't un-make your decisions. You can only do the best you can with what experience you've been handed and the resources you have available.

So, what do you do to overcome that fear? How do you come to terms with the fact that your best may not be good enough? How do you stare failure in the face every day, and conquer it?

[Video Transcript] "She's something that we both created. We both still marvel at her. It's most obvious on a song called Jay Z Blue. And it deals with, you know, like, my pop left when I was young, so he didn't teach me how to be a man nor how to raise a child or treat a woman. So of course, with my karma, they're the two things I don't have, right? And I have a daughter. It's the paranoia of not being a great dad."

The Formula for Love (Seriously)

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I figured out the formula for love. Nope, I’m not joking.

Friends who know me well have seen me pull this out late night at a bar. It’s my intellectually stimulating version of a party trick. Since I’ve shared it with a number of people, and most seem to get a kick out of it, I figured it’s about time I publish it on my blog.

I came up with the initial formula in February 2012 after a guy broke my heart a little bit. After thinking through a ton of other relationships since then (mine and other people’s), I’ve edited it a little bit over time. But, the gist of the formula has remained the same since the beginning. So here it is, ladies and gentlemen—my formula for love.

The Formula for Love | The Loveumentary

I wrote about the first part of the formula—Rightness—last month. I’ll copy and paste it below for ease. Plus, I also left out a hugely critical component of Rightness—which is “Authenticity"—so I’ll talk about that below.

1. Rightness

Love Rightness Filter | The Loveumentary

When it comes to choosing who to be in a committed relationship with, it all starts with the rightness funnel above.

Before you choose a relationship, you need to whittle down your pool of options. You start with “everyone in the entire world," and that pool goes through a ‘Demographics Filter."

Demographics Filter

The demographics filter weeds out anyone who you will literally never have the opportunity to fall in love with due to factors like geographic location, language barriers, and unbridgeable cultural differences.

You’re left with the population of people on the planet who share enough demographic similarity. That factor alone whittles the selection pool down quite a bit.

Next comes the interests filter.

Interests Filter

Interests can range widely, and the desired ratio of common-to-dissimilar interests varies greatly from person to person. The purpose of this filter is to weed out people who have very different interests from you, to the degree that it inhibits the growth of a high-engagement relationship between you and another person. For instance, if you’re really passionate about your area of work and it’s important to you that you have a partner who is also passionate about and understands the kind of work you do, that is a highly desired common interest. Interests can relate to a whole slew of things, including:

  • Hobbies
  • Weekend activities
  • Education level
  • Movies
  • Music
  • Career
  • Volunteering
  • Traveling

The interests filter whittles your “potential" pool down to only those you share enough and/or the right common interests with to make a high-engagement relationship even possible. What I mean by “high-engagement" is that two people can experience and enjoy enough things together, which allows them to develop an important closeness and high level of mutual understanding between each other.

Chemistry Filter

The chemistry filter is exactly what it sounds like: do you have a physical, emotional, intellectual, and spiritual chemistry with someone? It’s rare to find all four of these things in one person, but they are all critically important for long-term relationships. If you’re not stimulated and there isn’t a shared chemistry in those four distinct areas, at some point, you’re going to feel like things are missing and try to fill the gap, probably with other people. This is what people refer to when they talk about “emotional cheating."

I certainly don’t think it’s realistic that anyone would never be physically attracted to another human being again once they get into a relationship. But, I’m just going to go ahead and say it: I think the right person is someone you can deeply connect with on all four levels. When I say “connect," I do not necessarily mean “agree." It’s entirely possible to have very different opinions from someone else and still feel a ton of chemistry. In fact, I’d argue that a little bit of disagreeing is important because it allows two people to learn from and growth with one another.

Any way you spin it, chemistry matters.

Values Filter

Once you get through the chemistry filter, you’re left with only the people you’re attracted to romantically, and share enough common interests with.

Now comes the good stuff.

The values filter is perhaps the most important one of all. Values represent everything that you hold in the highest regard. They are often a mix of dreams, goals, beliefs, and personality traits that make up the foundation of who you are. They are the parts of yourself you don’t want to compromise on, even when you’re in love.

For instance, say having children one day is critically important to you—one of your values is building an incredible family. If that’s the case, you would not want to end up with a partner that does not want children.

Or, say one of your values is kindness—you believe in treating everyone around you with upmost kindness, and it’s important to you that your partner does the same. That means anyone who didn’t highly value kindness would probably not be an ideal values fit for you.

Values and interests can overlap. For instance, for some people, building a family is an interest more than it is a hobby. For other people, having common career goals in a relationship is a value rather than an interest.

Values often tend to include the following:

  • How to raise a family
  • Core, unshakeable personality traits
  • Political beliefs
  • Religious beliefs
  • Business ethics
  • Individuality
  • Approach to marriage
  • Strong geolocation desires

The values filter gets you down to a list of only the people who have pretty much matching and/or complimentary value sets. This is critical. If two people have misaligned values, it’s not going to work. In fact, I think misalignment of values is by far the major reason most marriages fail. Most couples don’t talk about all of their values to make sure there is alignment; they wait until it’s too late. The bigger issue is that many of us don’t take time to sit down and really map out what our values—our non-negotiables—are.

If you want to be in an incredibly successful relationship, it’s critically important that you understand your values, share them with your partner, understand his or her values, and truly see if there is a long-term match.

After you go through a values filter, you’re left with the very small number of people who you can actually build a happy and meaningful life with.

For some people, this number is in the thousands. For others, it’s in the single digits. I think it totally depends on your filter mechanisms.

*Authenticity

This factor is absolutely critical, and I can’t believe I left it out of my original post about Rightness last month.

Here’s the deal. Choosing your partner is an enormous commitment. I don’t think most people have any idea of the weight of that commitment before they make a decision to get married or otherwise be with another person for life.

Assuming you and your partner only get married once (which I think is what most Americans want—though, it’s totally crazy that more than half of us will work through a divorce at some point in our lives) and you find him or her relatively early on in your life (before you hit the halfway point), you’ll spend more time with your partner than pretty much anyone else in the world—including your parents, siblings, kids, colleagues, friends, etc. Obviously, there are exceptions. But you’ll know and spend more time with your partner than pretty much any other individual.

The only person you spend more time with? Yourself.

And that’s what the authenticity filter is all about. You’ll know you are coming very close to meeting the absolute love of your life when you find someone who makes you feel more you.You know how most of the time on a first date or in a relationship, you have an invisible script playing in your head constantly? “Does (s)he love me? Am I good enough? What does (s)he think of me? Is (s)he happy with our date plans? Am I pretty enough? Am I out of my league? Did I say something wrong? Does (s)he think I’m stupid?"

You know how it goes.

When you find the love of your life, that person will make it past this filter. He or she just lets you be completely yourself. You don’t even think twice about it. You never feel as free, non-judged, accepted, embraced, and loved for exactly who you are as you do with that special person.

Moreover, he or she catalyzes your best self. You feel challenged—emotionally, intellectually, spiritually, etc. You feel like he or she will be your greatest champion, and is never trying to “fix" you or turn you into someone you’re not. When you do something crappy or make a bad decision, this person will love you regardless—but will also be willing to give you real talk advice when you want or need it.

If you feel more like yourself—good and bad, all aspects of you—around this person, that’s a surefire sign you’ve found an incredible fit that most people in life find only once or twice…if at all. When you find this, never let it go. This person will always bring out the best in you and make you feel completely at home.

"X" Factor

This is the very last filter. The “X" factor is the immeasurable experience you have with another human being on this planet. You meet that person, and you just know. You just get this sense that he or she was built for you. That you’d fit perfectly together. That if that person asked to marry you, you’d say yes. No hesitation, no second guessing.

There’s no way you could ever put a finger on exactly what the “X" factor is. That’s what makes it so special.

I don’t think this kind of love comes around very often. I don’t necessarily think many of us find it at all over the course of our lives. And it’s very possible that there’s more than one person in the world who you could find the “X" factor with—I have no idea. But, a quality of the “X" factor is that, once you experience it with someone (and you’re able to pursue it and allow it to flourish), you just know you’ll have eyes for only that person. Maybe you’ll find other people physically attractive or emotionally beautiful along the way. But, nothing will compare.

When you meet someone like this, you can look at that person and see the whole world in his or her eyes. You are immediately captivated. There’s no doubt—you know you’ll be in love forever.

The “X" Factor love is a once-in-a-lifetime thing, if you’re lucky. It leads to the most spectacular, long-lasting, meaningful kind of love. I can tell you for sure that this kind of deep love is possible. And so you can, of course, hold out for it. But you’ll need to consider how long you’re willing to wait.

That’s what we’ll talk about tomorrow: the risk/reward of relationships, and how to make smart decisions when deciding whether to get into or stay in a relationship.

2. Sponginess

Sponginess represents how willing and able you are to soak up the love that comes your way like a sponge. It’s comprised of three different parts:

  • Personal History - i.e. the baggage you carry and the lessons you’ve learned from past life experiences and relationships. This is the set of memories that colors how you behave in relationships, how much you trust your significant other, and your ability to love deeply.
  • General Openness - How willing you are to “lay your cards on the table" - to reveal and share all the parts of who you are, including past experiences, personal beliefs, values, and interests.
  • Propensity for Vulnerability - The willingness and desire to be vulnerable in the face of uncertainty and potential pain/loss. Having a wide open heart and being able to give your whole heart to another person, despite past pain and loss.

I define the difference between openness and vulnerability as follows:

Openness is the willingness to tell other people your story—vulnerability is your willingness to let other people be part of it.

3. Timing

Timing is the third and final factor of the love formula. It represents how “on" the timing is between you and another person. Season of Life - The stage you are at in your life. Totally separate from age (which is a demographic variable), “season of life" is more the mental/emotional age you are at. For instance, say a 25-year-old female who has a clear career path and a very immature 30-year-old male who is lost in his career found each other. If “career" is a big value to one or both people, then the value paths don’t match up, and thus, the relationship timing is off. The timing could be on at some point in the future when dude gets his act together career-wise- but until then, it creates a rift in the relationship.

Geolocation - Where in the world you and another person are. The physical distance that separates two people.

* Note: The “Rightness" and “Timing" factors are weighted (that’s what the “W" is for). For instance, for me, “Rightness" holds a heavier weight than “Timing". If I found a guy who was exactly the “right" man for me, I’d figure out the issues with timing and distance. But, for others, “Timing" may hold a heavier weight- this could be true for a foreigner who lives abroad for work in a country with just a small population of people with a similar demographic background (like language). The selection pool is a lot smaller, so perhaps in this instance, geolocation matters more than a perfect “Rightness" fit.

Sponginess, however, is a necessity (that’s what the “N" is for). It’s the one piece of the formula that must exist at a high level. Both people need to rank pretty high on their individual ability to:

  1. Learn the best lessons possible from past experiences
  2. Be open to sharing their story, and
  3. Have a desire to be vulnerable and open-hearted with a potential significant other

No high sponginess, no true and lasting love. Simple as that. Rightness + Sponginess + Timing = Love Quotient Love Quotient represents the total compatibility “score" between two people. Scores are categorized in three ways: Low, Medium, and High.

  • Low -These relationships represent the non-starters. The ones where you go on a few dates with, or maybe even date for a few months, but eventually die out because it’s not a “right" fit and/or the timing is exceptionally off.
  • Medium - This is the category most relationships fall into—even many marriages (I’d argue most, actually). I call these the “don’t-fix-it-if-it-ain’t-super-broken" relationships. This is when enough of the factors are in play that, depending on your sponginess level, can make another person seem like the perfect fit. A lot of times, perfect fit is judged based on demographics, interest,s and chemistry (the first three parts of “Rightness"), but not enough (or at all) on values, authenticity, and that special “X Factor." As a result, you wind up being in a relationship for a long time thinking your significant other is a great fit - until you uncover a difference in core values and ability for authenticity, which makes the longevity of the relationship unsustainable.
  • High - This kind of love is the Holy Grail of relationships. I know you’ve seen The Notebook (I’m looking at you, too, boys). Everyone dreams of having that kind of crazy, passionate, fulfilling, challenging, awe-inspiring love. In my experience, I’ve seen very few relationships fall into this category—perhaps 10-20% of all relationships in America. I think there are a lot of reasons behind the psychology of why that is, but we’ll save it for another blog post.

The Importance of Hardship

The thing that separates “High LQ’s" from “Medium LQ’s" is hardship: death, illness, financial crisis, adjusting to and taking care of children, losing a job, moving to a new city, etc. Hardship is the stuff in life that inevitably happens—and a couple can only get through (and thrive as a result of) hardship if they are really aligned in all corners of “Rightness," “Sponginess," and “Timing".

When all of these factors are operating at a high frequency, it creates deep love and trust. That, in turn, makes your partner your absolute best friend, lover, husband/wife, father/mother, teacher/soundboard in the world. It takes two people becoming all of these things for one another to overcome immense hardship.

And the overcoming of hardship and total appreciation of life, adventure, and one another?

That, coupled with rightness, sponginess, and even timing is how you know you’ve found true and lasting love.

I can’t wait to hear about the greatest love story you’ve ever heard or lived. Leave a comment below!

[jbox title="About the Author" border="5" radius="15"] Melissa Joy Kong | The LoveumentaryThis post was originally published on Melissa's blog. Ever since she was able to understand the concept of “true love,” Melissa has been insatiably curious about what that looks and feels like—and how we can all cultivate long-lasting, passionate, deeply fulfilling romantic relationships. She is love learning about human behavior and potential, and lives for helping people take big leaps in their lives to start amazing projects or companies.[/jbox]