There is no reward for suffering for love.

For women to voluntarily dedicate themselves to suffering for love, the patriarchy had to invent the romantic paradise. Love is like a religion: they ask us to pass through the valley of tears with resignation and assure us that in the end, we will be able to enter the gates of heaven to enjoy eternal, wonderful, and perfect love. But there is no reward, no paradise as a prize for enduring.

Women are raised in a culture of endurance, sacrifice, and renunciation with the promise that at some point in their lives, they will be rewarded and receive their prize. In Princess stories, this is the main message conveyed to women: if you suffer and endure, if you wait patiently, if you persevere and remain loyal, he will realize and fall to his knees before you, promise to love you forever, and you can be happy.

It's the perfect trap for women to care for men with problems: they seduce us with the idea that our love can conquer all, and with great patience and tenderness, we will change the ogre and turn him into the Prince Charming. Our role model becomes the Beauty who transforms the Beast by enduring his mistreatment. We fall in love with the scared and traumatized little boy that resides within every monster. Women tend to feel pity right away for these babies who demand love in a misguided manner, convinced that our love will save us both, and that we will be rewarded for being so good, generous, patient, and loving.

However, there is no reward. There is no prize, no possible paradise when we "for love" give up our freedom, our rights, our passions, our projects, our self-care. There's no way to give and receive love under conditions of suffering and abuse. It's impossible to build a healthy and beautiful relationship, and happiness cannot be achieved when we carry the burdens of others and they become our own problems.

When women come together with men who have problems, what happens is that we take on the responsibility for their well-being, and guilt is immediately triggered. We believe that we could do more or do it better, but nothing seems to satisfy the suffering man.

No matter how submissive, obedient, and accommodating we are, they won't love us more for behaving as expected of us, nor will they treat us better. On the contrary, our masochism exacerbates the sadism of those who know they hold power.

Our victim status will never provide us with the eternal love we were promised. It doesn't matter how much we suffer, how much we endure, or how much effort we put into saving the poor man who doesn't know how to love. Truly, sisters, there is no reward, no prize, and no paradise.

Alcoholics are not saved by love, gamblers, drug addicts, and violent men do not become good men through love. Each person must come out of their own hell if they want to and if they invest energy into their personal work, but no one can pull someone out of depression, their childhood traumas, their accumulated hatred, their pettiness, and misery.

There is no paradise in exchange for suffering and hardship: life slips away as we wait for the romantic miracle that never arrives. Penelope waited for Odysseus for 30 years, Sleeping Beauty waited for her Prince for a hundred years, and thus all the women of warriors and princes spend their lives, waiting for him to return, or for him to change, or for a miracle to lead us to the romantic paradise we deserve.

In all the stories, women wait and endure, but in reality, very few actually enjoy happy endings where the man redeems himself from his sins, stops being emotionally wounded, or solves his problems to make his princess happy. And usually, the price we pay for enduring is too high: suffering leaves a mark on our bodies, our brains, and our hearts, it deteriorates our mental and emotional health, makes us look unattractive, and ages us.

We cannot afford to waste our short existence waiting for the situation to change or for the other person to change. We can only change ourselves. We cannot squander our energy trying to save our loved one from their problems: we need partners by our side who know how to care for and love us properly, who can give their best in the relationship, who are generous and supportive, who know how to share and be there for us in both good and bad times.

Let's demystify love so that we can love with our feet on the ground, so we can love each other without hurting ourselves, and to avoid abusive and exploitative relationships, so that no one can take advantage of our need to be loved.

We need to be realistic and love in the present, here and now, without being complacent, without victimizing ourselves, without believing that our love will change them in the future. The only time to enjoy love is in the present, so let's forget about rewards: paradise is on Earth, and in the good moments you can experience with people who know how to love you properly.

Coral Herrera Gómez

Artículo original:  No hay recompensa por sufrir por amor

 

Love Revolution

First came the Sexual Revolution.

Our mothers and grandmothers fought at the end of the 20th century against guilt and sin, and also fought for their right to pleasure. Contraceptive and protective methods helped separate sex from reproduction, disease, and death.

In the 1970s, women claimed their sexual freedom, their right to choose motherhood freely, their right to enjoy and live a life free of violence. That's why they fought for our right to abortion, and against trafficking and prostitution, female genital mutilation, street harassment, public transportation harassment, harassment in educational and workplace settings.

They also exposed the sexual assaults suffered by women at the hands of our fathers, stepfathers, grandfathers, uncles, brothers, cousins, husbands, and "trusted" family friends. Years later, they dared to denounce bosses, managers, priests, film directors, producers, teachers, and powerful men by name in the successive waves of the #MeToo movement.

We have come a long way in these years, although many people still raise their daughters to center their sexuality around men's needs, to strive to please and appease them, to feel guilty for the sexual violence they endure and to keep silent about it, to always live on their knees in front of men (in brothels, in the Church, or at home), and to teach boys to treat them as mere sexual objects to use and discard.

Today, our culture remains deeply patriarchal and misogynistic, just as it was 40 years ago, but women are not staying silent. We point out all the men who continue to promote the objectification of girls and women, and all the people who continue to defend the idea that poor women are free to rent and sell their bodies and babies, and to allow men to profit from them.

The Love Revolution now joins the Sexual Revolution:

We women are fed up with suffering for love: we have dethroned romantic love as the sole way to attain happiness. We want to free love from sexism and transform it from top to bottom, so that love doesn't hurt us, nor subjugates us. We want to rescue all the women who still believe that love is enduring pain, we want to put an end to the femicides that claim the lives of 137 women daily on this planet, women who are claimed to be loved.

Love can no longer be a path to oppression, suffering, and death; instead, it should be a joyful experience that allows us to weave networks of love where a partner is just one element, never the sole one.

As we have been conditioned to be emotionally dependent and addicted to love, we are unlearning all we were taught in order to be free. Because the more emotionally dependent we are, the more violence and abuse we tolerate from men. In the laws of some countries, women appear as free beings, full subjects of rights, but the reality is that millions of women are enslaved by romantic love, living on their knees, in service to a male.

How does romantic love enslave "free" women? Take a look at the statistics on how leisure time is used: working women have two shifts a day, one inside the house and another outside, and those with children bear the weight of three shifts, with no leisure time at all. Meanwhile, men have only one work shift and plenty of time to invest in their careers, to engage in physical exercise, to pursue their passions, to spend time with loved ones, to rest, to enjoy life, and to have as many lovers as they wish.

No woman is obligated to care for a man for a lifetime, but there are millions who live in service to their husbands. They have made us believe that unpaid labor is love, that we were all born to suffer and sacrifice, that only men have the right to be happy, that our function is to ensure they live like kings, and that at the end of our lives, there will be a reward for all our sacrifices.

Now that we have rebelled against this immense injustice, it is clear to us that if care is not mutual, it is exploitation.

What does the Love Revolution entail?

It is a fight by feminist women who are fed up with suffering and wasting our time and energy on romantic love. Since the beginning of the 21st century, we have been writing, reading, debating, and analyzing the romantic myth. We now know it's a scam that has subjugated millions of women, and we are working on our personal and collective liberation.

These are the keys of the Love Revolution:

Relationships not based on mutual care and reciprocity are relationships of exploitation and abuse.

Women have the right to enjoy life, which requires energy and free time for rest, pursuing our passions, and spending time with our loved ones.

We can no longer prioritize men's well-being and happiness: our needs, desires, and appetites are more important. Women's self-care is a top political issue.

We don't need kings to serve, what we want are companions. We can't live in unequal relationships: living subservient to a man is detrimental to our physical, mental, and emotional health.

We know it's better to be without a partner than in a bad relationship, and we will never be alone if we have a good support network.

It's not the same to relate out of freedom as out of necessity: we must cultivate economic and emotional autonomy to not depend on men and to prevent them from depending on us.

Autonomy requires us to continue fighting for all women to have decent jobs and incomes, as poverty and female emotional dependence are not personal issues but political problems.

We are clear that Cupid doesn't have total power over us, nor do any men, and we are the Women who no longer suffer for love.

Women are the owners of our love and our lives: we are responsible for our well-being and mental health, and we are free to make choices, decisions, and take control of our lives.

Women in love are capable of anything: we've proven we can fall out of love whenever we want and don't have to be prisoners of romantic love.

We are working to spare ourselves tons of unnecessary suffering because we increasingly value our time and energy, and we want to live better.

We have learned that other ways of loving, relating, and organizing are possible, and that by transforming our relationships, we can change the whole world.

Our personal problems are political: millions of women struggle with low self-esteem and suffer at the hands of men who treat them like trash. It's a structural issue: we're taught to tolerate abuse and believe violence is romantic. No more.

Women are engaging in loving self-critique to free ourselves from guilt, fear, jealousy, envy, anger, frustration, emotional dependence, and all the patriarchal influences within us. We want to be better people and contribute to building a better world through our transformation.

Women are learning emotional self-defense and using our power to prevent exploitation, abuse, and violence from men.

We are aware that romantic love is a drug, and we can seek help to break free from the childhood addiction that was imposed on us, and we can detox and liberate ourselves.

We no longer participate in the silence pact that protects men; we expose the violence we endure on social media, share information among ourselves, and support one another.

We know who benefits from our romantic suffering, and it's crystal clear: we're no longer deceived or manipulated.

We know that love can't fix everything, that we can't change men, and men won't change on their own because they have no need to: they're doing just fine. The only transformation possible is the one we make within ourselves.

We're clear that we weren't born to be watchdogs, policemen, or jailers, and we can only relate to honest men.

We also know they are scarce and we can't wait for men to become aware of the importance of working on their honesty.

We've learned that verbal violence is violence, and that verbal, emotional, and psychological violence is as serious as physical violence.

We know that men who benefit from our suffering are abusers, and we won't fall into the trap set by stories and movies: our love doesn't change any man, and enduring abuse has no reward or compensation.

We're freeing ourselves from the tyranny of "what will people say" and the roles and stereotypes that dictate how we should be, because we want to love freely and always be ourselves.

We've discovered that we don't need a man to be happy; we need a network of people who truly care about us.

We know that Man is not the center of the Universe, and we're learning to take care of ourselves and love ourselves independently of them: more and more women are loving themselves, and we're feeling increasingly free to enjoy each other.

We now know it's impossible to enjoy love with a man who doesn't know how to take care of himself, his spaces, or the people he loves.

We're becoming more disobedient and realistic: we no longer buy into the monogamy story, and we're removing the blindfold from each other's eyes.

We no longer tolerate the male privilege of leading a double life and having as many lovers as they want while we give up sex and love, confined at home.

We're convinced that we have the right to enjoy without giving up or sacrificing, and without enduring. We know that love isn't suffering, and if we're in a relationship, it's to enjoy, not to suffer.

We now understand that we shouldn't settle for men who don't meet the standards of being good partners because they haven't put in the necessary work on themselves.

We've learned that with most men, the best approach is to keep them as lovers, or with the masterful formula: you in your house, and me in mine.
We know that we can't do it alone: we need each other, and with good company, processes of personal and collective liberation are easier and more enjoyable.

We're fully aware that ceasing to suffer for love is revolutionary, as the main battle of feminism lies within our hearts and sexuality, in our beds and homes: we won't kneel before anyone.

We're crafting the tools we need for feminism to make us freer and to put theory into practice, and we're starting to reap the fruits of the seeds we've been planting so that all of us can live a Good Life.

Now that we know how to use our power, our lives are no longer centered around yielding and pleasing. We know what we want and what we don't want; we can say it out loud, we've learned to say no, and we can set boundaries.

Now that we're training in the art of assertiveness, we can establish a loving contract with our partners to set the conditions for loving each other well and building an equal relationship based on mutual care and companionship.

Women know we have the right to live a good life, free from suffering, and this right is universal and inalienable.

We dream of new love utopias where women and men can love each other well, in freedom and equality, in relationships based on care, solidarity, honesty, teamwork, and good treatment: companionate loves.

The Love Revolution is unstoppable, and there's no turning back: more and more women are enjoying these processes of personal and collective liberation. As we transform our relationships, we change the society we live in, because the romantic is political, and other ways of loving are possible.

Men can either continue to resist our liberations and end up alone, or they can start their own.

We have already come a long way and won't sit around waiting for them to catch up: we're already reaping the rewards of the seeds we've sown, achieving victories, and even though many may fear this revolution, we're growing in number.

Loving is caring, loving is enjoying!

And Love Revolution has already begin!

Coral Herrera Gómez

Fuente: La Revolución Amorosa