The Chase

Fashion is stupid.

I say that as someone who's been eyeing this particular bag for two weeks now. I know that it will stay in style for only so long, and then the fashion season will change, and that purse will be bagged away like so many leaves before winter. But until then, the chase is on. Luckily, that purse isn't going anywhere.

Now here's another, much more complex chase.

A friend of mine - I'll call her Tanya - has had her eye on a rather fashionable man for about the same length of time as my purse fascination. She's pursued, played it cool, behaved coquettishly, acted shy, etc. Basically, she's tried everything with little to show for it.

Then, over coffee the other day, Tanya says she's not sure she even wants him. Her experience has taught her that often the pursuit is more fun than the possession. Once she's gotten the person she wants, boredom sets in and she feels the need to move on to something (or someone) else.

Granted, sometimes you find the fit isn't right and you do need to move on, but how many perfectly acceptable people do we pass over because the chase has concluded and our interest has waned?

Well, a relationship is only what you make of it. The pursuit brings excitement because you're trying hard to come up with ways to attract and entice that person. You pay attention to their most minute needs and behaviors, and every time they recognize and appreciate that, you feel great.

Why should that change after your relationship moves beyond casual dating? How you caught them is how you keep them. You continue to treat them as though they might leave tomorrow, or as though they aren't necessarily committed to you. In other words, the pursuit never ends.

This brings up an important point. So many people have amazing talents at the dating phase. They can talk a great game and put up an amazingly attractive front. But it's the people who call themselves "players" who wind up in rocking chairs alone in the nursing home.

I'm not saying a lifetime commitment should be your goal. But if that interests you, then behave like it around your current attraction. Be yourself, because when you start slowing your pursuit and let your true self show through for the first time, that someone is bound to leave.

So go for what you want, but appreciate it once you have it. If you don't make the pursuit part of your daily romance lifestyle, then your catch is going to slip away. If you don't take care of your lover, someone else might come along who will.

Love mirrors fashion in a sense - both can always change. But while you can't have an effect on where Donna Versace's attentions will land, you can influence where your partner will stay.

For the past fifteen years, Jackie Fine has coupled her unique experience with information from the American Institute for Sexual Studies to create a revolutionary outlook on modern relationships.

Through her many radio and television appearances and her seminars on sex and relationships, her techniques have found a wide audience and have been featured on HBO's Real Sex TV series.

Jackie focuses on monogomous relationships as the foundation for romantic bliss. Her emphasis on a commitment to learning about oneself and one's partner provides the foundation for how she defines intimacy. Her philosophy has helped people across America re-evaluate their romantic endeavors, allowing them to lead themselves to the relationship they've always dreamed about. People everywhere have their problems solved with Jackie, finding again or for the first time a deeper love and happiness. All it takes to restart a stalled relationship is the courage and openness to just ask Jackie.