Friends from our childhood or adolescence
are special, no matter how much time has elapsed between visits. These
compelling connections are the result of shared roots during the
formative years. Our childhood friends and teenage sweethearts
experienced with us all the wonderful, horrible, boring, and
embarrassing moments that helped to make us who we are today.Yet, when children are young, parents
may regard these relationships as insignificant. If the family must
move to a new community and the children's close friends must be left
behind, so what? They will make new friends, the parents assure them.
But, is a friend as interchangeable as a new toy for an old one, or is
there more to friendship
than that? Why are we so elated to rediscover long lost friends in our
adult years if, as some parents believe, they were so dispensable to us
as children?
Even more belittled by many parents is a teenager's (or preteen's)
love for a boyfriend or girlfriend. Adults refer to these relationships
with demeaning language, calling them "just puppy love," and these
romantic bonds are not taken seriously. Parents question the ability of
teenagers to know what love is, yet they accept their teenagers'
statements, "I love you, Mom & Dad," with full appreciation and at
face value. If adults accept that teenagers can love parents truly, then
shouldn't they also accept that teen romances are "real" love?
Recreational
dating is relatively new. Teenagers many years ago married their first
sweethearts right out of high school. These men and women of the World
War II Generation married at younger ages than their Baby Boomer
children or their Generation X or Millennial grandchildren. But education has become prolonged, so marriage is later.
The
age of puberty, however, has dropped. Whatever the reasons for this,
reaching puberty influences the age of first love and first sexual
experience. It is rare now to marry a first love. Today's teenagers date
not for mate selection but for fun. However, the first love experience
is no less powerful than it was in the 1940's.
Adults who
underestimate the strength of the bond-- or the impact of the loss -- of
a first love may have forgotten what a blow it was when they lost their
own first loves. They may even try to comfort teenagers with
lighthearted lessons: a surprising number of men and women wrote to me
to bitterly complain about parents who joked years ago, "Don't worry!
Boyfriends/girlfriends are like buses... a new one comes along every ten
minutes!" This was not helpful, and it was not funny. The loss of a
first love can be so crushing to some teenagers that they become suicidal.
The
pain of the breakup will subside with time, but the love may stay
buried and dormant for decades. While most men and women find satisfying
partners after first love breakups, there are adults who spend their
married years aware that "something is missing." They continue to think
about their lost first loves. Perhaps if they had married their first
loves when they were younger, they tell me, they could have formed
lasting and fulfilling marriages, but they will never know. These
romances were interrupted - often by their parents' interference.
In
my recent survey of 1600 people (who had never tried a reunion with a
lost love), ages 18 to 92, 56% of the participants said they would not
want to go back to their first loves, 19% were not sure -- but 25% said
they would!
Even the adults who had no current interest in their first loves, including those who had only bitter memories, revealed that these early romances influenced their life-long attitudes about love, and even about themselves.
The
longer I study lost loves and lost love reunions, the clearer it
becomes to me how important young love really is. First love, young
love, is indeed real love. This intense love does not come along every
ten minutes. For some people, it may come only once in a lifetime.
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