Have you heard about the other way of writing the word “intimacy”?—”INTO ME, SEE.” There’s a valuable piece of marital wisdom embedded in this clever play on words.
“I would not wait for you to ask [any questions] of me were I in you as you now in me.”
– Dante Alighieri, Paradiso, Canto IX, 81.
Have you heard about the other way of writing the word “intimacy”?—”INTO ME, SEE.” There’s a valuable piece of marital wisdom embedded in this clever play on words, especially when it comes to authentic intimacy.
Maybe you’ve heard something like this before. He says, “My wife’s an enigma. I’m always hot; she’s always cold. I like barbecue; she likes Thai food. I like action movies; she likes schmaltzy ‘chick flicks.’ I’m beginning to wonder if we should have gotten married at all!”
Meanwhile, she says, “My husband keeps the thermostat so low that I’m always shivering. He thinks my romantic comedies are stupid and craves charred turkey legs that disgust me. Is there any hope for our relationship?”
If that sounds like your marriage, maybe you and your spouse need to try harder to “see into” one another and develop deeper, more authentic intimacy.
Authentic Intimacy: Two become one
Author Charles Williams, a friend of C. S. Lewis and member of “The Inklings,” took this concept a step further. Following up on a cue from the great medieval poet Dante, Williams coined a term of his own— co-inherence —to describe the deep spiritual love that marks the relationship between Christ and His church and (hopefully) a man and his wife. As he saw it, true intimacy is not so much a matter of seeing into one’s mate as it is of being in one’s mate. It’s a question of two becoming one flesh—of identifying so closely with another person that the two of you start finishing each other’s sentences and looking at the world from one another’s point of view.
Authentic intimacy includes shared responsibility
One of the “Twelve Traits of a Thriving Marriage” developed by Focus on the Family’s Marriage Team is “Shared Responsibility.” Sharing the responsibility of running a household, doing chores, raising children, and providing for a family is one of the most down-to-earth aspects of married life. But the point we want to make here is that this very practical side of the marital arrangement has deep roots in something that can only be characterized as a profoundly spiritual, even mystical, experience—the experience of two becoming one.
Can you catch the vision? When it’s “I in you and you in me,” nobody has to ask any questions. There’s no need to jockey for position or fight for a fair division of labor. The further a man and a woman move into the core of that mysterious phenomenon Charles Williams called co-inherence, the less they have to hassle over who cooks dinner and who takes out the trash. And it’s at that point that the marriage really begins to work. Do you still want to dive deeper into living selflessly to achieve oneness in your marriage? We know with Christ’s help, you can!
It’s all a matter of getting your priorities straight.