I see a disturbing trend of forcing everything about a relationship into the box called โlove,โ and then telling people they are not loving hard enough or right enough or long enough to make their relationships work.
And I think thatโs bullshit.
A big heaping pile of it.
And itโs fucking judge-y.
Which is not very lovingโby their own damn standards.
I want to set the record straight. At least the record as I see it.
There is love.
And there is everything that goes into making relationships work:
โข
Communication
โข
Compassion
โข
Respect
โข
Honesty
โข
Trust
And something a lot of people forget: Friendship, or actually LIKING the person.
And none of those are love.
In fact, they are different words because they are different concepts.
And to clarify, Iโm going to include definitions for love as a noun and a verb:
love [ luhv ]
noun
1.
a profoundly tender, passionate affection for another person.
2.
a feeling of warm personal attachment or deep affection, as for a parent, child, or friend.
3.
sexual passion or desire.
verb (used with object), loved, lovยทing.
1.
to have love or affection for: All her pupils love her.
2.
to have a profoundly tender, passionate affection for (another person).
verb (used without object), loved, lovยทing.
1.
to have love or affection for another person; be in love.
+++++
Hereโs the challenge as I see it. None of those definitions include the ability to maintain a relationship as a factor of love.
Or to be able to communicate.
Or even to not be an asshole.
Love is an internal process.
Erich Fromme says:
โThis book โฆ wants to show that love is not a sentiment which can be easily indulged in by anyone, regardless of the level of maturity reached by him. It wants to convince the reader that all his attempts for love are bound to fail, unless he tries most actively to develop his total personality, so as to achieve a productive orientation; that satisfaction in individual love cannot be attained without the capacity to love oneโs neighbor, without true humility, courage, faith and discipline. In a culture in which these qualities are rare, the attainment of the capacity to love must remain a rare achievement.โ
Thich Nhat Hanh says:
โTo love without knowing how to love wounds the person we love.โ
I think both of these men have it wrong.
They are trying to put a gateway on love. To make it something that is elite, and something that must be practiced.
To rip it from the hands of children and even adults that donโt meet the standards they set for love and loving.
And to me, that is pretty shitty.
Itโs setting up love as something that other people can judge and measure for you. That they can look upon and say, โYUR DOIN IT RONG.โ
Fuck that.
Fuck that all the way to the darkest, nastiest part of infinity, where the other self-congratulatory, judge-y as fuck academics, self-styled superiors in thought, and people who steal French fries reside and leave it there where it belongs to debate endlessly about who is worthy enough to love and be loved, and get on with your own life and loving.
Not that I think Erich Fromm is all wrong.
Heโs not.
His bestselling book, โThe Art of Lovingโ makes some amazing points.
The part I have a problem with is that he makes everything into LOVE.
And love just isnโt meant to be everything.
He says, โThe first step to take is to become aware that love is an art, just as living is an art,โ and I disagree with that, too.
Living is simply living. Existing.
You can make art with your life. Sure. I work on that every day.
But life is not art. My catโs life is not art. A cockroachโs life is not art. A flowerโs life is not art. It is a pattern. A process. A natural thing.
WHAT WE DO WITH IT is what matters.
And we can do art.
Or not.
Love is a feeling.
And we can feel that at any point in our lives.
But the skills of creating a relationship are different from love:
โข
We can communicate with and without love. We can love with and without communication.
โข
We can be compassionate with and without love. We can love with and without compassion.
โข
We can respect others with and without love. We can love with and without respect.
โข
We can be honest or lie with and without love. We can love with and without honesty.
โข
We can trust with and without love. We can love with and without trust.
โข
And we can like people we donโt love and love people we donโt like.
I do believe that itโs important to discuss and learn and grow our skills in all of these areas.
They make life better.
They make relationships better and easier.
They are good for us as humans who want to connect with others.
But letโs not confuse them with love. Letโs not entangle them unnecessarily. Letโs not suggest that because someone canโt find the words that they cannot love well or strongly.
Letโs not judge ourselves and the love we have for others by our failed relationships and mistakes.
Because loving harder is not enough.
Loving better is not enough.
Loving is not enough.
It takes more than love.
And the ability to love is one of the greatest gifts we have. Letโs not even try to decide who is worthy and who is not to experience that gift.