When we feel a strong craving for another person, we sometimes say the two of us have strong chemistry. What if that’s more than a metaphor?
It was almost 10 years ago when something hit me which seemed like a major revelation at the time, even though I realize others had already figured it out. I realized that the things people wanted in life — myself included — weren’t the actual material things or the achieved goals. Instead, what we really want is the emotional or psychological states that come with those things.
Once I’ve satisfied my actual physical needs, I don’t actually want money. Instead, I want the feelings that I’ve attached to money and having more of it.
I don’t have to have one partner I’ve committed myself to as my wife. After all, I could make the wrong choice. But I’m driven to find the right wife anyway, because I want the feelings I’ve attached to being loved and understood by a one special woman who is my partner.
In an objective way, I don’t want the extra responsibility and headaches that come with having children and raising them, but I want the emotional state that I attach to reproducing and having a loving family.
Plenty of people have money and spouses and children — and hundreds of other things that we attach to this sort of emotional state — and they’re miserable. So just having the thing itself isn’t necessarily what we need or want.

NOTEBOOK: If results confuse Paul’s aides, how competent are they?
We all see bits and pieces of reality; not a one of us sees whole picture
Pop culture creates overgrown kids in adult bodies who won’t grow up
‘Curing’ unpopular beliefs through psychiatry is throwback to ugly past
Abortion debate gives us lots of candidates for ‘Idiot of the Year’
We’re neither friends nor enemies, just strangers who share the past
‘This path leads to somewhere I think I can finally say, I’m home’
When love finally dies, it’s like a fever breaks and the pain is gone