| Is This The One?
by Skye Thomas
Isn't that the million dollar question? How can I tell if
this is the one? Is this one my soulmate? How will I know
when I find the right one? There is no magic answer, but I
can tell you what seems to work. I asked a psychic one time
if a certain person was my soulmate. His answer, "If
you have to ask, then he's not the one." He went on to
explain that with soulmates no matter how good or bad a day
you have together, you wake up in the morning knowing without
a doubt that this is the one and you go to bed at night knowing
without a doubt that this is the one. Nothing that happens
in between those two points can change your mind.
Whenever I find happily married couples in their fifties or
older who have been married for most of their lives to each
other, I always ask them, "How did you know this was
the one?" Every single one of the men answered the same
way. They all said that the first time they laid eyes on the
girl, they knew in that moment that they would eventually
propose to her. For every one of those men it was love at
first sight. "But why that one? What made you fall in
love with that particular woman at first glance?" Each
one answers differently, but they all have a vague unanswerable
quality that the guy just knew she was it before they even
knew what the girl's name was.
The women all said they thought the guy was
nice enough, just okay, or a little goofy but not too bad.
None of the women fell head over heels right away. The women
were all living a happy upbeat life and were not really searching
for a husband when the guy came along. That may be a big part
of the mystique that these women created. They were not needy
nor desperate. Truth be told all of the lifetime happily married
women I know are very strong and independent, but loyal and
loving women. None of them are nags nor codependent types.
The thing that all of these couples have in
common is that the each one was relatively happy and mentally
healthy going about their lives, their goals, and their dreams.
All of them planned to some day fall in love and get married
to one person for life but none were attached to a soulmate
type concept or ideal. None of these people were sexually
loose but they weren't complete prudes either. They chose
not to sleep around because they had a strong sense of self-respect.
Some had religious beliefs that added to the dynamic and others
did not. All were of a mindset that you simply didn't whore
around for the heck of it.
In all cases, the man chased the woman. You
have to remember the deep underlying needs of the male and
females of our species. The man must hunt and conquer. If
she's too easy to catch, then there must be something wrong
with her. Right or wrong, men have a very deep down need to
'win' the girl. They were all upbeat, bright, kind, loving
women with full happy lives of their own. None of the women
were pushovers and none of the women were easy to 'win.' It
was always love at first sight on the man's end, but not on
the woman's. The women were not cold and unapproachable, so
the men were able to charm them and 'win' them over. All of
these relationships had at least a two-year courtship and
engagement period. Their eyes were wide open when they said,
"I do."
Were they soulmates or just lucky? It depends
on how you define soulmates. If you define a soulmate as your
cosmic twin, then I'd say no these people were very different
types that hooked up and stayed happy together for life. In
one example, the woman was a devout Catholic and the husband
was just sort of generic Christian. She didn't try to convert
him and he respected her need to go to mass every Sunday.
No, he didn't become any more or less of a Christian then
he already was. They each respected the other's right to be
who they were. Nobody tried to change anybody. Who they fell
in love with is who they stayed in love with. In another example,
he was from an extremely conservative religion and she was
very lightly Christian. She completely changed her entire
way of life to be with him. She gave up makeup, stylish haircuts,
jewelry and sexy clothes to become almost Amish in her life
with him. She never regretted it because he was everything
to her and she came to agree with his family's religious beliefs.
In none of the relationships were the couples a twin copy
of the other. Yes, every one of those couples struggled in
the first years of their marriage to find a balance between
'me' and 'we'. Every one of those couples had to learn to
listen, to compromise, to be fully present in the moment,
and to show their love in a way that resonated with the other.
However, they all managed to live that elusive 'happily ever
after' that the rest of us only dream of.
If you define a soulmate as the right one for
you, the one you were meant to spend the rest of your life
with, the one specially designed to create 'happily ever after'
with you, then yes, they were soulmates. No matter how bad
things got, these couples never ever contemplated divorce.
They didn't stay together because of a vow before God. They
stayed together because they couldn't fathom the concept of
not loving the other one. Every morning they woke up knowing
they were both in love. Every night they went to sleep knowing
they were both in love.
Copyright 2004, Skye Thomas, Tomorrow's Edge
Keywords: soulmates, romantic relationships,
dating, love, happily ever after
About the Author
Skye Thomas,
Skye@TomorrowsEdge.net
http://www.TomorrowsEdge.net
Skye Thomas is the CEO of Tomorrow's Edge, an Internet leader
in inspiring leaps of faith. She became a writer in 1999 after
twenty years of studying spirituality, metaphysics, astrology,
personal growth, motivation, and parenting. Her books and
articles have inspired people of all ages and faiths to recommit
themselves to the pursuit of happiness. After years of high
heels and business clothes, she is currently enjoying working
from home in her pajamas. To read more of her articles, sign
up to receive her free weekly newsletter, and get free previews
of her books go to www.TomorrowsEdge.net.
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