Are you sure?
This bookmark will be removed from all folders and any saved notes will be permanently removed.
Satisfying our hunger for closeness
You love him for his tenderness, his listening ear. You love her for her courage and her spontaneity. That's what started this very special friendship, anyway. Now you find you think a lot about your friend. You want to be close, to share as much as possible.
Naturally, when we find so much of what we love in another person, we want to be with him or her, to stay close. With closeness in a relationship there may also come a physical yearning, almost an insatiable hunger for that person's presence. What do we do with those feelings?
If we look around for answers, we'll surely find lots of human advice and alternatives. Books, magazines, movies, and television shows portray love as romantic and as what one film called "endless."
Enjoy 1 free Sentinel article or audio program each month, including content from 1898 to today.
JSH Collections
This article is included in:
1982 - PAMPHLET
Know who you are
JSH-Online has hundreds of pamphlets, anthologies, and special editions for you to discover.
March 22, 1982 issue
View Issue-
Peacemakers for the world
ROSALIE E. DUNBAR
-
We begin with our neighbors
AMY E. DUNBAR
-
Satisfying our hunger for closeness
CAROLYN F. RUFFIN
-
The distinctness of man
WILLIAM MILFORD CORRELL
-
Citizens of the world
VERA HAGAR
-
Beyond the humdrum
JANE E. GLASSER
-
Facing the unknown
JUNE BIBB
-
See Life through the lens of Science
DeWITT JOHN
-
Turn to a friend, not to an enemy!
NATHAN A. TALBOT
-
Mary Baker Eddy's discovery, Christian Science...
PAUL DOUGLAS WHITE
-
Our family has had so many healings that there is not space to...
JOAN MARIE MILLER
-
A startling question in Miscellaneous Writings by Mary Baker Eddy...
FENTON WADE LARIMER