“Knowing me, knowing you,” it says, “there is nothing we
can do. / Knowing me, knowing you / We just have to face it / This
time we’re through….” These lyrics can only tell us that the two
cannot be together definitively.
The root of the problem is, of course, because one of them
makes as the basis of their relationship his or her own
self-knowledge, of how he or she is at the moment, which definitely
will always have differences with the other party in spite of the
things they share in common. And if one insists on how he or she is,
then sooner or later the differences will overwhelm what they have in
common. That relationship is doomed.
What should rather happen is that instead of starting with
oneself, we have to start knowing the other, the object of our love,
and from there try to make the necessary adaptations for the
relationship to hold. In other words, it should be “Knowing you,
knowing me.”
That way, one gives priority to the object of his love and
adjusts himself to the way the other party is. That is what loving is.
The lover identifies with the beloved and adjusts himself to the
beloved, not the other way around, and that relationship would last.
But obviously, since all of us have our defects and
weaknesses, knowing the object of our love would not be enough for us
to relate to him or her properly. If we simply base our loving on the
way the other party is, then sooner or later the couple will share the
same defects and weaknesses, even as they also share some good
qualities. The likelihood of a break-up would be high.
The ideal condition to have is first to know and love God
so that we may know and love ourselves and others properly. Thus,
instead of “Knowing me, knowing you,” it should rather be “Knowing you
(God), knowing me.”
This was what St. Augustine precisely said. “Noverim te,
noverim me,” Latin for “May I know God, may I know myself,” St.
Augustine said. It is when we know and love God first that we can know
who we really are and ought to be. God is our Creator and Father in
whose image and likeness we have been made. How he is, who is pure
love in essence, is also how we ought to be.
It is God who will tell us what is true and false, right
and wrong, moral and immoral. It’s not us who define and determine
these things. And if we know God first, then we would know how to
relate ourselves with the others, how to love them properly the way
God loves us, as shown, taught and commanded to us by Christ himself.
Thus, if we really want to truly fall and remain in love
with our beloved, if we want our relationships to last long until
forever, then we have base it on our knowledge and love of God first.
There can be no other way to assure us that our relationships here on
earth would last!
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