Jean Fitzpatrick, L.P.
What's intimacy?
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It's not quite the same as closeness... 

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To many people, intimacy means closeness. Actually, the two are somewhat different, and knowing this can be helpful to a couple locked in conflict over their relationship.

When we are close to another person, we are aware of how connected we feel to them. Sometimes, especially at the beginning of a relationship, closeness is a heady experience. We may be delighted that we share so many things -- a fondness for chocolate milk, Oriental rugs, jazz clubs. All those popular songs about "two being as one" seem to have been written just for us.

Sometimes, though, we may feel overwhelmed at or burdened by the prospect of closeness. It feels like an intrusion or a demand. Stifling. 

A truly intimate relationship contains both closeness and distance. When we are intimate with another person, we are able to connect with them while maintaining our own sense of identity. We are not only sharing our thoughts and feelings with the other person or listening to their thoughts and feelings, but each of us is in touch with ourselves. We are separate people who have developed our own ways to both nurture and confront ourselves. When the focus is less on closeness and more on authentic being and relating, intimacy becomes a rich and very alive experience.

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As Thomas Patrick Malone and Patrick Thomas Malone say in their book The Art of Intimacy, "few of us could sit in a closet with another person for any length of time without learning a great deal about that person....In the closet our own awareness is focused on the other while we are close. But in some rare moments, in that shared space of our closet and in the presence of the other, we may experience ourselves in some new, different, and more profound way. This is intimacy. When I am close, I know you; when I am intimate, I know myself. When I am close, I know you in your presence; when I am intimate I know myself in your presence. Intimacy is a remarkable experience. Usually I know myself only in my aloneness, my dreams, my personal space. But to feel and know myself in the presence of another is enlivening, enlightening, joyful, and most of all, freeing. I can be who I am freely and fully in the presence of another."

For fifteen years, Jean Fitzpatrick has been helping individuals and couples in Westchester, Putnam, and Dutchess develop satisfying intimate relationships.  To set up an appointment for a free consultation, call Jean Fitzpatrick at 914-941-6478.   Or send an email to jean@westchestertherapist.com.

N.Y. Licensed Psychoanalyst
Member, American Association of Pastoral Counselors
Individuals, Couples, Parent coaching
Westchester County and  midtown Manhattan
914-941-6478
212-802-7333 

The Tree of Life image at the top left corner of your screen is an original work
by the Canadian artist Cari Buziak and is used with her permission.

Serving the online community as well as Westchester Putnam Dutchess and Fairfield counties, including Ossining Briarcliff Manor Croton-on-Hudson Yorktown Heights Sleepy Hollow Tarrytown Pleasantville Pocantico Hills Chappaqua Millwood Mount Kisco Somers Katonah Mahopac Irvington Hastings-on-Hudson Yonkers Hawthorne Thornwood Peekskill Bedford Hills Bedford and Valhalla.  Midtown Manhattan, Grand Central, Park Avenue, Murray Hill, East Side, Flatiron.  Experienced, active help to build a fulfilling life and relationships.  Individual therapy,  couples counseling,  parent coaching, premarital counseling, support through divorce and transitions.

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