If one more person tells me they have finally found their “soul mate” I am going to slit my wrists. I am gob smacked that almost 50% of people in a recent Globe and Mail poll said they believe in love at first sight, and over 30% think that every person has one particular soul mate. Call me a cynic, but I don’t believe you can lock eyes with someone from across a crowded room and just know they were the one you were meant to be with – forever and ever.
This history of soul mates is very cool, though. According to legend, originally humans had one head with two faces, four arms, four legs, and two sets of genitalia. These were pretty powerful beings. Not surprisingly the gods felt threatened and contemplated knocking them off. Zeus thought – why not split the humans in half instead? Their power would be diminished but there would be twice as many of them to worship the gods. The plan backfired. These bisected humans were miserable. They refused to eat and were dropping like flies so Apollo tried to reconstitute their bodies — but was only partially successful. So we renovated humans are left to search for our other half to be whole again. Our soul mates.
Cool legends aside, I’m sticking to my original position that soul mates do not exist. And for you true believers out there, my caution to you is that even if you think you have found your soul mate, this may not be enough to get you to the finish line in your marathon of love.
First off, many of us can barely live with ourselves. What would it be like to live with someone who is so very much like us? Sure, the thermometer would always be set at the perfect temperature, there would be no battles over the remote control (of course we would watch American Idol rather than the NHL play-offs), and we would never cancel out each other’s votes in elections. But beyond that it doesn’t sound that interesting. Two of the same note doesn’t make a harmony.
Also, having an idealized view of one’s partner can be a set up for disappointment. One could reasonably expect their soul mate to be so in tune to their every thought, emotion and desire that they should never have to spell it out for them. So what happens when our soul mate doesn’t know that we were just kidding when we said not to fuss about our birthday, or that we were fishing for a compliment when we ask them whether we looked fat in those pants? When we put our partners on such a high pedestal, they fall that much farther and harder.
And, there is just something too ethereal about a soul mate. Those words evoke two people floating on clouds, listening to harp music and feeding each other peeled grapes. It is easy to stay in love when our heads are in the clouds, but what about when we descend back down to earth? Eating peeled grapes together is way easier than working out how domestic chores will get done, how dual careers will be juggled, how finances will be jointly managed, and mucking through the many other demands a serious relationship entails.
So, if you haven’t found your soul mate in the universe of lost souls, don’t fret. You might just be better off.
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Tiffany Goodlet
Feb 20, 2014 -
Thanks for the dose of reality, Sue! Love it.
Anne Wade
Mar 19, 2014 -
LOVED your “history of soulmates” and might even have to quote you in a future article for Soulmate Dance! But from that point, we part company. What you describe is certainly the popular version of soulmates, but thankfully it is far from the truth.
Soulmates aren’t boring clones of each other – They are rich and varied complements, yin and yang, tea and toast. They don’t agree on everything – Far from it. Because their real purpose is to help us become more enlightened, those points of disagreement become valuable opportunities for self-examination and personal growth.
To add a bit to your wonderful history, the Twin Souls do wander the earth searching for each other. Along the way and through many lives they encounter all kinds of Soulmates – lovers, family, friends, colleagues, even pets, enemies, and our own victims. Technically, every single person we meet in life is a soulmate of one kind or another (Companion Mates, Ego Mates, Karmic Mates, Twin Souls) because each and every one of them impacts us in some way, kind of like a giant cosmic game of pinball.
It is only through the help and head-butting with our many soulmates that we grow as humans and as souls. It is through them and because of them and the slogging and soaring we do together that we are able to “work out how domestic chores will get done, how dual careers will be juggled, how finances will be jointly managed, and mucking through the many other demands a serious relationship entails.”
Soulmates have been stuck in the Disney Fantasy box long enough. Time to set them free to do their real thing 🙂
Sue Nador
Mar 19, 2014 -
Hello Anne! Thank you so much for the feedback! You are not alone! I received an email objecting to my analysis which I am pasting below! Btw, great soulmate site you have…I’m looking forward to exploring it more! Thanks again! Cheers, Sue
For the first time ever I feel sad for you.
Not only don’t you believe in love at first sight (which I know exists – although it might be more correct to call it ‘lust at first sight’) but you don’t know what a soul mate is (cool legends aside).
Soul mates are defined by the undefinable connection they feel for each other – not by some mirror image ideal.
For those very few people I believe actually have met their soul mate, that person is NOTHING like them…but the connection is there.
Hard to define the undefinable.
But isn’t that the essence of love?
Anne Wade
Mar 19, 2014 -
Hi Sue,
Thank you for your kind words! Hope you enjoy exploring Soulmate Dance. I’ve been poking around your site a bit and chuckled at finding our tagline – The Giver becomes the Receiver – articulated on your page. Very cool!
The subject of soulmates is definitely emotionally loaded. It’s also greztly misunderstood, thanks largely to movies, TV, books, and songs. I would love for you to read an article or two on my site and would be really curious how that perspective fits – or doesn’t fit! – with yours.
Considering what your emailer said, personally I believe in both love and lust at first site. The trick is being self-aware enough to know the difference. And that’s the good news. Soulmates of all kinds are here to help us fall in love with ourselves so we are able to love another. To me, soulmates or good relationships in general look like Venn diagrams – two whole individuals with a common center.
Cheers to you, too!