4. Gender roles have been complicating expectations forever. Feiler cites social scientists who say men and women fall in love differently — and that extends to the tale of our friends in the garden of Eden. Even though Adam was lonely and longing, Eve didn’t reciprocate just because she literally had no other options. “Adam was driven by impulse, but for women like Eve, it takes longer. That’s something the Bible gets right,” Feiler says.
5. Healthy relationships can survive doubt. The Cliff Notes version of Adam and Eve: “Don’t eat the forbidden fruit.” But what drives Eve to initiate the downfall of man? “Each person (in a relationship)) needs to feel like themselves; it’s a balance of dependence and interdependence,” Feiler explains. “When (Eve) realizes she’s not happy, (it’s) because she doesn’t want to be a subset of Adam. That prompts her going into the garden alone, and eating the fruit. She thinks, ‘If I am just an appendage of him, this relationship is not going to work. I need to have a voice and knowledge.'”
6. Don’t mistake codependency for compromise. On the flip side, the beauty of Adam and Eve’s long-standing relationship (they remained together until Adam died at the ripe age of 930), is their chosen interdependence, Feiler says. After Eve gets the fruit, “she could be like, ‘I can keep it all to myself,’ but she doesn’t want to be entirely alone. Instead she goes back to Adam,” Feiler explains. “And Adam knows it’s wrong (to eat the fruit), but he asks himself, ‘Do I choose obligation and duty? Or do I choose companionship?’ For me, that’s the most romantic moment of the story, when Adam eats the fruit, too.”
7. Love stories are written by two people, together. Not only does Feiler call Adam and Eve the first love story, he dubs them the “first joint byline.” “The No. 1 thing I learned myself is that love is storytelling, but particularly love is a story that we tell with another person,” Feiler says. While we see Adam and Eve through the perspective of the scriptures, the dual characters set a standard for relationship equality. Unfortunately for Eve, Adam’s point of view tends to undercut her own in popular culture, which brings us to the next point.