Not the same thing
Jan. 3rd, 2012 07:49 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I've written before about lust and envy being hopelessly conflated for me. It's good that I recognise this but identifying something like that isn't the same as understanding it. It's also not simply raw lust, but attraction on a few levels. So it's not entirely a possession thing which is a bit creepy now that I think about it. So I want to be what I admire. That's not a bad thing at all in many instances but it gets stuttery and less well formed when I come back to basic physical attraction and I wonder to what extent I blur the lines between the person and their physicality.
Strong, graceful, deft, feminine, lean, muscular, expressive...things I want to be and things I find delightful in others. I suppose it doesn't matter that there's a lot of overlap there and nor should it surprise me, given that I've worked out that complementary but opposite roles in a relationship isn't what I like. What I really want is more like two very similar roles that fit together like two like hands meeting.
I'm wary though. I've had relationships that (and I only realise this in hindsight) ended because I couldn't have from my partner the thing that I wanted which was to *be* them as much as to be *with* them. Because I didn't understand this there was only a cold sour sense of dissatisfaction and frustration which I couldn't articulate well enough to understand. Because attraction and envy co-exist and intertwine so ridiculously in my mind I worry that my view of anyone I'm attracted to will be tainted by what I want to be myself. I also worry that I will confuse the desire to be the person with the desire to be with the person. I can't just shy away from a relationship with someone I genuinely like though. I hope I get more insight into this before it becomes more than intellectual abstraction but then it's a situation that I'm starting to think that I'd really rather like to arise.
Maybe it's ok to aspire to be more like the better part of the person I fall in love with. It's definitely not ok to resent them if I fail though, nor to resent them if in some way they fall short of the person I want to be. It's also important to remember that the two very similar people who wind up together are still *two* people. They can weave their lives together and create a glorious synergy with each other but they will still be distinct and separate people.
Gah, my head. What the fuck is in my head?
(no subject)
Date: 2012-01-04 09:47 pm (UTC)This is to a degree what you are talking about, and a cool thing. Of course, you want to avoid the "Single White Female" effect! (In reference to Jennifer Jason Leigh's character in the movie).