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  1. #1
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    Expressing Love...Hmm What's That?

    I am in love with a woman who has an amazing handle on the English language, unlike me. Writing is something that comes from my heart but punctuation and spelling seem to have been excluded entirely from my DNA. Which leads me to wonder should I perhaps not write publicly because of this deficiency? Of course on further thought that indeed seems absurd, one must try to express themselves as honestly as possible and if that happens in bad writing, so be it. It’s not like the world is reading my blog anyway!

    But what of other things in our life that must be expressed even though not perfectly like love. Love has been on my mind a great deal of late. There seems to be as many forms of love as there are species of ants. True love, real love, mature love, passionate love, stable love, deep love, expressed love and on an on and on. Love is used to describe ones feelings on baseball and ice cream as well as the deepest regions of our soul. But what is love? What makes it real? And how do we interact with each other with love in a world whose ability to love seems to rival my ability to punctuate? Puzzling indeed.

  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by J-Go View Post
    I am in love with a woman who has an amazing handle on the English language, unlike me. Writing is something that comes from my heart but punctuation and spelling seem to have been excluded entirely from my DNA. Which leads me to wonder should I perhaps not write publicly because of this deficiency? Of course on further thought that indeed seems absurd, one must try to express themselves as honestly as possible and if that happens in bad writing, so be it. It’s not like the world is reading my blog anyway!

    But what of other things in our life that must be expressed even though not perfectly like love. Love has been on my mind a great deal of late. There seems to be as many forms of love as there are species of ants. True love, real love, mature love, passionate love, stable love, deep love, expressed love and on an on and on. Love is used to describe ones feelings on baseball and ice cream as well as the deepest regions of our soul. But what is love? What makes it real? And how do we interact with each other with love in a world whose ability to love seems to rival my ability to punctuate? Puzzling indeed.
    Listen, Mister...You have an AMAZING command of the language, even if YOU don't think so...

    To write this way, is to invite conversation...to invoke thought...You do both

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by butterflySlave4u View Post
    Listen, Mister...You have an AMAZING command of the language, even if YOU don't think so...

    To write this way, is to invite conversation...to invoke thought...You do both
    I agree. But, butterfly, he states that "writing comes from my heart." So he knows he's a good writer. It's the spelling and punctuation that elude him. Thank Gawwwd for editors. hehehe

  4. #4
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    But what is the definition of love in this thread? I love beer but I'm not in love with beer. Do we use the term love too often and too easily anymore. I do hope my punctuation is correct. If not, I'm sure you can get the meaning.
    WB

  5. #5
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    Love is reaching in the darkness and know that someone who knows you, understands you, desires you is reaching back. Love is a choice, a gift, a feeling of falling, a heady feeling of too much wine. Love in everything and nothing as love is what you make of it. It's a rose waiting to bloom, a statue locked in stone, a pair of innocent eyes covered by a blindfold...love simply is.
    The more sweet and pure a thing is, the more pleasureable it is to corrupt it.

  6. #6
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    butterfly: Agreed. Though I chide J occasionally on His grammar and punctuation, I am always engaged by our written banter. I'd rather converse with Him than endulge in well punctuated drivel.

    blythespirit: Indeed. ALWAYS employ a decent editor! They're priceless!

    Warbaby: "But what is love? What makes it real? And how do we interact with each other with love in a world whose ability to love seems to rival my ability to punctuate? Puzzling indeed." It's part of the question! What do you think? I know I, for one, am going to have to give it some thought to put to words...

  7. #7
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    Love is never having to say you're sorry. hehe

  8. #8
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    What is love??



    Love is something different for everyone. What I love may be the very thing someone else hates. There are degrees of love. Where you may love many…..….you may only be “in love” with one……..


    Love is what feeds our souls and lives. Love will drive you mad and feel as if it will take your life. Love is the air we breathe and love is what takes our breath away. Love is what gives us life. Love is the very thing that will allow us to give up our life. Love will fillet you open to bleed and love is what will allow you to put yourself on the block to be filleted. Love is pleasure beyond belief. Love is pain beyond bearing. Love brings things into crystal clear focus. Love will cloud our sight to near blindness. Love is where you are willing to give up everything for the chance at nothing. Love will make you weak and give you strength. Love will enrich our lives and ruin them.


    Love is when you can forgive the shortcomings and mistakes of others.


    Love is where fear is rendered mute. Love is where reason becomes unreasonable.


    Love is when you can be exactly who and what you are without fear. Love is when you no longer care what the world thinks.


    There is no right and there is no wrong. There is no should or shouldn’t. We love who we love…….


    Love is what the two of you, Amber and J-go, feel for each other. Love is what allows both of you to show your affection in public. Love is what we all see when the two of you speak.


    Love is something worth saving, it's precious. Love is something worth working and fighting for.


    Love isn't perfect, its crazy.......but feels..... so very very right.


    Love is real.......when you can ask the question......is this really.....real? Its real when every fiber of your being......shouts back.....YES!



    I love both of you….big hugs
    thrall
    Last edited by thrall; 06-24-2008 at 10:57 PM.

  9. #9
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    In this modern day of computers, you are no longer limited by what you wrote being there for all eternity. In writing that last sentence I made many, many mistakes in spelling and punctuation. I changed them before I pressed 'post'. It's easy to do. A few ideas for you:

    - First of all, someone who loves you as much as you love them will not care about spelling or punctuation.
    - Second, you are not Shakespeare. This is a good thing as it means that the little things you write for your lovers are not going to be analysed and deconstructed by scholars hundreds of years from now. I mean, the poor man wrote many of what he thought were 'throw away' sonnets for women he was trying to seduce only to have them later considered to be the greatest love poems ever written and therefore torn apart by future generations and used to bore school children.
    - Good English use comes with practise. Lots of practise. Read and write as much as you can. Unlike some of my friends (who had English public school education) I learnt my grammar the hard way by reading lots of novels and learning from them then writing lots and having those who were taught the easy way scream at me and point out all the many ways in which I torture the poor, innocent apostrophe. This means that I have an instinctive feel for grammar but cannot tell you what anything is called or why...
    - I suggest you also read 'Eats, shoots and leaves' by Lynn Truss. It is an accessible and fun book on grammar rules.
    - Never trust the Microsoft Word grammar checker. It is evil and misguided. Well, it used to be anyway. It is feasible they may have improved it to follow rules of grammar that actually apply to English instead of Martian as the old ones did. Nevertheless, never take anything like that at face value - always check with a human who knows what they are talking about.
    - And finally, meh. Editors get paid to check spelling and grammar. Why make their lives easier?

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by J-Go View Post
    There seems to be as many forms of love as there are species of ants.
    You said it perfectly, so the question can only be whats love to each and every one of us?

    There is pure and complete love you have for your child.

    Love is forgiveness.

    Love is when the need to hold him, to be in His arms is so strong that it blocks my reasonable thinking.
    Love is the freedom to be myself, knowing he wont judge but accept me as I am.
    Love is not feeling afraid.
    Love is absolute commitment.
    Love is absolute.
    And at the end of the day, Love is picking up dirty socks.
    When I'm good I'm very, very good, but when I'm bad, I'm better.

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by thrall View Post
    What is love??



    Love is something different for everyone. What I love may be the very thing someone else hates. There are degrees of love. Where you may love many…..….you may only be “in love” with one……..


    Love is what feeds our souls and lives. Love will drive you mad and feel as if it will take your life. Love is the air we breathe and love is what takes our breath away. Love is what gives us life. Love is the very thing that will allow us to give up our life. Love will fillet you open to bleed and love is what will allow you to put yourself on the block to be filleted. Love is pleasure beyond belief. Love is pain beyond bearing. Love brings things into crystal clear focus. Love will cloud our sight to near blindness. Love is where you are willing to give up everything for the chance at nothing. Love will make you weak and give you strength. Love will enrich our lives and ruin them.


    Love is when you can forgive the shortcomings and mistakes of others.


    Love is where fear is rendered mute. Love is where reason becomes unreasonable.


    Love is when you can be exactly who and what you are without fear. Love is when you no longer care what the world thinks.


    There is no right and there is no wrong. There is no should or shouldn’t. We love who we love…….


    Love is what the two of you, Amber and J-go, feel for each other. Love is what allows both of you to show your affection in public. Love is what we all see when the two of you speak.


    Love is something worth saving, it's precious. Love is something worth working and fighting for.


    Love isn't perfect, its crazy.......but feels..... so very very right.


    Love is real.......when you can ask the question......is this really.....real? Its real when every fiber of your being......shouts back.....YES!



    I love both of you….big hugs
    thrall
    It's like you took the words out of my mouth. LOL

    Excellent, as usual, thrall.
    WB

  12. #12
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    Love for me is when we go from being indifferent to the world, to picking out one specific thing and rejecting the rest.

    So this is what is expressed. You want to show the world, (literally or symbolically) that you value one person above the rest.

    ...and in turn. Feeling loved means that you feel that the source of the love, cares more about you than other people. But not necessarily all other people. But the more the better.

    When the source of the love cares for everybody equally much, its gone full circle and we're back to indifference.

    I see love as a negative act. Not negative in the sense that it is bad. But negative in the sense that it is about rejecting things rather than embracing them. We just perceive it as a positive act. But just look at the acts. What are they doing? To whom are they aimed? What is their point? How are they formed?

  13. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by J-Go View Post
    IBut what is love? What makes it real? And how do we interact with each other with love in a world whose ability to love seems to rival my ability to punctuate? Puzzling indeed.
    Darling Handsome man, you already well know the answer to these questions for yourself. You now just need to believe enough in it to make you strong, believe in it's power to help you walk the scalding, lava wrought path ahead of you - barefoot. You know what's on the other side but you cannot get there until you Decide to take the first crucial and death defying step.

    And how do we interact with each other with love in a world whose ability to love seems to rival my ability to punctuate?

    You both have a magic and articulate on levels most of us only hope to, ying and yang, balance of opposite is how The compliment of each of your opposites to the other is the beauty within your relationship and it teaches all of us how very real and possible it all is.
    ~wiggle wiggle~ xo

  14. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by mastersgem View Post
    ... until you Decide ...
    That's what my thought revolves around. Love being a decision made, a series of decisions actually- from the little everyday ones that are barely on the radar screen to the grand ones that get noticed by all who are a witness.

    Love is a decision one makes when one decides to say, "Thank you so much for trying" instead of saying, "Why didn't you find a way to make it work, you moron!" (That was a personal thought there, in case anyone thinks I was aiming it at anyone here in particular)

    Love is decided upon when the thought is "yes" instead of "I don't know." It's made easily or torturously. But no doubt about it, it is made. And in the making, it becomes real.

    That's my thought anyway.

    All the best.


    "Life is just a chance to grow a soul."
    ~A. Powell Davies


  15. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by tessa View Post
    That's what my thought revolves around. Love being a decision made, a series of decisions actually- from the little everyday ones that are barely on the radar screen to the grand ones that get noticed by all who are a witness.

    Love is a decision one makes when one decides to say, "Thank you so much for trying" instead of saying, "Why didn't you find a way to make it work, you moron!" (That was a personal thought there, in case anyone thinks I was aiming it at anyone here in particular)

    Love is decided upon when the thought is "yes" instead of "I don't know." It's made easily or torturously. But no doubt about it, it is made. And in the making, it becomes real.

    That's my thought anyway.

    All the best.


    Awsome! Thank you!

  16. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by J-Go View Post
    Awsome! Thank you!

    Your thanks is generous. And even though it feels as if I'm overstepping to say so, you are quite welcome.


    "Life is just a chance to grow a soul."
    ~A. Powell Davies


  17. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by tessa View Post
    Love is decided upon when the thought is "yes" instead of "I don't know." It's made easily or torturously. But no doubt about it, it is made. And in the making, it becomes real.

    That's my thought anyway.

    All the best.[/COLOR]

    an entirely great post, thank you tessa

    "no pain, no gain" *s*

    "...it's in actually making the decision that is so very hard than the follow through to keep that decision..."
    ~wiggle wiggle~ xo

  18. #18
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    Love is a choice made in response to the highest values we hold for ourselves. It is not blind, it is the only truth that exists.

    Tessa is exactly right. In the making of our decisions now, J, the love that we feel will become the concrete stuff of our lives. I adore you.

  19. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by DowntownAmber View Post
    Love is a choice made in response to the highest values we hold for ourselves. It is not blind, it is the only truth that exists.

    Tessa is exactly right. In the making of our decisions now, J, the love that we feel will become the concrete stuff of our lives. I adore you.
    Is that really love? Isn't that the commitment? Love can come both before and after we've made the commitment. But I'm pretty convinced love won't allow itself to be tied down. We can kill it within us, but we can't really make it run where ever we want it to. It's a bit stubborn and annoying that way.

    Who here hasen't at one point in your lives hated yourself for loving someone?

    And seriously, highest values? Ok, sure, you value somebody very highly. But are those the highest values? Really. I bought my wife 20 long roses yesterday just because I was so much in love. What's so high and noble about that? I understand why we would like to see that as something high and noble, since that means that we label our own greed and self gratification as a noble deed.... and who wouldn't want that?

    When I give my wife/slave flowers its not because I make her happy. I become happy making her happy. So I do it for myself. The logical error is removing yourself from the equation. Thinking that the goal is to make her happy. It isn't. It's only about making yourself happy and using your tools you have avaialble.

    It's like "hey, I'm a rational being so my actions must be rational, and therefore my goal was to make her happy". But love isn't rational, so that screws up that line of reasoning. We just have to accept that human nature/instinct includes falling in love and making the object of our love happy. Human instinct is just another word for, what-ever-makes-us-happy.

  20. #20
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    I think there's a real danger in seeing love as something noble and giving. The danger is in that we might think we're entitled to something because we've shown our love. We might think that we're actually giving something that is valuable to the target. That's just setting yourself up for disappointment.

    I hear people saying all the time that pure love is a "selfless act". No, it isn't, its just that the person saying that has worked through half the rational but stopped before seeing where it ends.

    Expressing love is like any self gratifying act. It's all about you.

    Understanding that the target of our love doesn't owe us anything, and that it is only our own wish that our love is reciprocated is very healthy. It's quite understandable that we would want those who we love to feel compelled to return the expression of love. None of us wants our love to be wasted on people who doesn't appreciate or return it. But that really doesn't mean that that it still isn't just about you and what's going on in your own head. That fact that you love somebody doesn't necessarily mean they've gained anything they would value. And expressions of love they don't count as expressions of love, aren't for them, no matter how strongly you might feel they are.

    I'm not devaluing love. I think its a beautiful and wonderful thing, or I wouldn't have bought my wife that large bouquet of flowers. I love it when my love is received by her and it makes her happy. But I'm very well aware that giving her the flowers was a selfish act on my part and it does not make me entitled to anything from her. I would be happy if she would feel the same way about me, (and I'm pretty convinced that she does, oooh my sweetest of snuggle muffins) but that in turn would only be about her. I wouldn't feel any pressure to to act in some special way.

    We all know the feeling when we give somebody a gift they don't appreciate. They feel the need to act like they do, just to make us happy about the giving, ie expressing love.

    Anyway, I felt the need to explain my earlier post some more. I wouldn't like to come across like some bitter old love-hating miser. Love is great and wonderful, but its all ultimately selfish.

    Love you all, kisses and hugs.
    Last edited by TomOfSweden; 06-26-2008 at 01:54 AM.

  21. #21
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    Love is basically the same evolutionary function that makes ducklings follow around their mother.

    We may be smarter and we may understand why we do it, but we're essentially doing the exact same thing. Just because we're a species that is self-conscious doesn't mean we can change our nature and instincts. It just makes us conscious of them and can discuss it... like we're doing now.

  22. #22
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    No, you're right Tom, if you're only loving her because it makes you happy but do you love her 'selflessly'? Doesn't sound like it - Sounds like you love her to make you happy. To love someone unconditionally is to truly love them. You cannot weigh someone else's value of love based on your own selfish way of loving.

    Some people truly do love to the highest value. Yes, it is possible to love someone greater than your own needs and wants - that's the purest definition of love and the rarest form to be found.

    Commitment to that kind of love comes only because of the love, to honour it and cherish it.

    Of course we want it reciprocated and we want to feel their love in return but it doesn't always happen. If your wife didn't respond in the expected manner, would you still Continue to love her or would you love her because you had no choice, you just had to love her because of who she is - without reward, without reciprocation?

    Some people in this life get to experience a truly selfless form of love, a love that stays simply because there is no other choice whether together or apart, a love that they give purely and without anything in return, a love that is rare, a love that is unconditional.
    ~wiggle wiggle~ xo

  23. #23
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    "Is that really love? Isn't that the commitment? Love can come both before and after we've made the commitment. But I'm pretty convinced love won't allow itself to be tied down. We can kill it within us, but we can't really make it run where ever we want it to. It's a bit stubborn and annoying that way."

    I feel it is love, yes. I have spent an entire lifetime becoming me, building who I am and building the esteem I hold for myself. Upon meeting someone that responds to and is reflective of those same high values, a relationship and love grows. When I love, my commitment is to myself as much or more than it is to anyone else, and that commitment is to hold to my own values. I'm not sure how that ties love down? I'm not sure either how that causes it to run where I want it to? Really, I don't think I've ever tried to steer it someplace it isn't already going. That would rather defeart the purpose of it being a truth of any sort.

    "Who here hasen't at one point in your lives hated yourself for loving someone?"

    *raises hand* Um, I've been occasionally embarrassed over crushes based on physical attraction. Then I got to know the person and went, "sheesh, what was I thinking??" I have also occasionally been off base in my assessment of the qualities of the person I was falling for. It's never been fun, but to say I "hated" myself for loving or for staring to fall? Wow. Harsh. I can't see how you even could hate yourself for having love in your heart.

    "And seriously, highest values? Ok, sure, you value somebody very highly. But are those the highest values? Really."

    Tom, I think you misunderstood me. I said love was a choice made in response to the highest values we hold for ourselves. My love is based upon judgment of myself, what I want, MY highest values - when I find a person that represents that which I hold in esteem and respects me for doing so for myself, my response is the beginning of love. Toss in a little chemistry and now we're on our way to "in love."

    [i]"I bought my wife 20 long roses yesterday just because I was so much in love. What's so high and noble about that?"[i/]

    The high value and the nobility is simply the love you hold and why. The roses are just a small symbol of that. I can't imagine you love your wife as an act of pity toward her, do you? It's not a selfless love, born from a lack of love for yourself and an attempt to compensate for that, is it? If I were to take a stab, I would say you could list off MULTIPLE fine qualities your wife possesses and the fact that you enjoy those qualities and why speak volumes about the type of person you are. Your love for her is a response to your values, is a response to yourself. For someone with low values and little sense of self, sure, love may not be what a lot of people would consider "noble," but it is still a response by that person to what is most prevelant within them, thier highest values regardess of low their high may seem to the rest of the world.

    "I understand why we would like to see that as something high and noble, since that means that we label our own greed and self gratification as a noble deed.... and who wouldn't want that?

    When I give my wife/slave flowers its not because I make her happy. I become happy making her happy. So I do it for myself. The logical error is removing yourself from the equation. Thinking that the goal is to make her happy. It isn't. It's only about making yourself happy and using your tools you have avaialble."


    We're right on the same page with each other, Tom. My post that spawned this was either misread or I failed to make myself clear enough.

    "It's like "hey, I'm a rational being so my actions must be rational, and therefore my goal was to make her happy". But love isn't rational, so that screws up that line of reasoning. We just have to accept that human nature/instinct includes falling in love and making the object of our love happy. Human instinct is just another word for, what-ever-makes-us-happy."

    I am going to disagree here. Just because we either can not or simply choose not to comprehend what causes us to choose the people and things we do, there is always a motivation behind our decisions, something that our brain rationalizes even though in practice our theory of the best course of action may crash and burn. Making ourselves happy seems pretty rational to me.

    "I think there's a real danger in seeing love as something noble and giving. The danger is in that we might think we're entitled to something because we've shown our love. We might think that we're actually giving something that is valuable to the target. That's just setting yourself up for disappointment."

    I see it as noble, but frankly it is taking as much as it ever is giving. By taking I mean, for me, the joy the feeling of loving gives me. When I am shown love, FABULOUS. Do I ever feel entitled? Hell no.

    "I hear people saying all the time that pure love is a "selfless act". No, it isn't, its just that the person saying that has worked through half the rational but stopped before seeing where it ends.

    Expressing love is like any self gratifying act. It's all about you.

    Understanding that the target of our love doesn't owe us anything, and that it is only our own wish that our love is reciprocated is very healthy. It's quite understandable that we would want those who we love to feel compelled to return the expression of love. None of us wants our love to be wasted on people who doesn't appreciate or return it. But that really doesn't mean that that it still isn't just about you and what's going on in your own head. That fact that you love somebody doesn't necessarily mean they've gained anything they would value. And expressions of love they don't count as expressions of love, aren't for them, no matter how strongly you might feel they are.

    I'm not devaluing love. I think its a beautiful and wonderful thing, or I wouldn't have bought my wife that large bouquet of flowers. I love it when my love is received by her and it makes her happy. But I'm very well aware that giving her the flowers was a selfish act on my part and it does not make me entitled to anything from her. I would be happy if she would feel the same way about me, (and I'm pretty convinced that she does, oooh my sweetest of snuggle muffins) but that in turn would only be about her. I wouldn't feel any pressure to to act in some special way.

    We all know the feeling when we give somebody a gift they don't appreciate. They feel the need to act like they do, just to make us happy about the giving, ie expressing love.

    Anyway, I felt the need to explain my earlier post some more. I wouldn't like to come across like some bitter old love-hating miser. Love is great and wonderful, but its all ultimately selfish.'


    It's a good thing I consider selfishness a much underappreciated virtue. Thanks for the post, Tom.

  24. #24
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    Quote Originally Posted by mastersgem View Post
    Some people in this life get to experience a truly selfless form of love, a love that stays simply because there is no other choice whether together or apart, a love that they give purely and without anything in return, a love that is rare, a love that is unconditional.
    I think this is a beautiful way to explain unconditional love. That said, and for myself, I don't think there is such a ideal as unconditional love. I don't believe humans are capable of such. People are capable of feeling indescribable emotions towards others, yes, but I think there are always conditions placed on such feelings. The person who gives purely and without the want of anything in return is indeed a rare soul, but even within that pure, seemingly unselfish giving, the one doing such is guaranteed to be getting something from it, or s/he wouldn't continue doing it.

    Look at Mother Teresa as an example. I'm not Catholic, but I happen to think she was one of the best among us as an example of selflessness. That said, her own words tell us that everything she did was because of her selfish, "this feels good to me", better-do-it-or-else conditional reasoning.

    Mother Teresa felt a "call within the call" several years into her nun-hood (or whatever it's called), and said-
    "I was to leave the convent and help the poor while living among them. It was an order. To fail would have been to break the faith."

    Not many will argue against the statement that Mother Teresa was a saint and lived her life in ways that 99.999% of the population never could or ever will, and that her works were blessed and admirable and even noble (well, Tom might). But for all the pure goodness involved in her works, she did it conditionally. My thought is that even Mother Teresa didn't believe in unconditional love. If she had, she wouldn't have felt compelled to live as she did. She was motivated by the need to not fail her God. Because if she did, he would be displeased with her, and she wasn't having that. So what she practiced wasn't unconditional love, despite how it looked on the surface. Her conditions were that she was ordered by God to do such and not doing it would have been a grave sin. Sure, she lived her life never expecting any thank you's or recognition (still, she got them overabundantly), so many say what she did with her life happened because she loved all those souls unconditionally. Not so. She said it herself.

    Now I used a religious figure as an example, so that may hamper the credibility of my argument for some. But the core of my post here is that we all do what we do- love included- because of an underlying motivation. Even in love we don't get away from the conditions. Even if the only motivator is the hope of what may one day be, it's still a selfish, conditional aspect applied to what we call love.

    Even in it's most positvely radiant form, love is conditional. I don't happen to think that's a negative. If selfishness (or whatever term you wish to use) nurtures the feelings between two people and makes their lives, along with others around them, so much more fabulous because of the conditions they place therein, then yay and woohoo! That's a great big happy for those involved. And not a bad thing at all.


    "Life is just a chance to grow a soul."
    ~A. Powell Davies


  25. #25
    Keeping the Ahh in Kajira
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    Well for me I guess my "signiture says it best" You can allways google for the rest of the poem. It has lots of wisdom hidden between its lines.
    When love beckons to you, follow him,Though his ways are hard and steep. And when his wings enfold you yield to him, Though the sword hidden among his pinions may wound thee
    KAHLIL GIBRAN, The Prophet

  26. #26
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    Quote Originally Posted by tessa View Post
    I think this is a beautiful way to explain unconditional love. That said, and for myself, I don't think there is such a ideal as unconditional love. I don't believe humans are capable of such. People are capable of feeling indescribable emotions towards others, yes, but I think there are always conditions placed on such feelings. The person who gives purely and without the want of anything in return is indeed a rare soul, but even within that pure, seemingly unselfish giving, the one doing such is guaranteed to be getting something from it, or s/he wouldn't continue doing it.

    Look at Mother Teresa as an example. I'm not Catholic, but I happen to think she was one of the best among us as an example of selflessness. That said, her own words tell us that everything she did was because of her selfish, "this feels good to me", better-do-it-or-else conditional reasoning.

    Mother Teresa felt a "call within the call" several years into her nun-hood (or whatever it's called), and said-
    "I was to leave the convent and help the poor while living among them. It was an order. To fail would have been to break the faith."

    Not many will argue against the statement that Mother Teresa was a saint and lived her life in ways that 99.999% of the population never could or ever will, and that her works were blessed and admirable and even noble (well, Tom might). But for all the pure goodness involved in her works, she did it conditionally. My thought is that even Mother Teresa didn't believe in unconditional love. If she had, she wouldn't have felt compelled to live as she did. She was motivated by the need to not fail her God. Because if she did, he would be displeased with her, and she wasn't having that. So what she practiced wasn't unconditional love, despite how it looked on the surface. Her conditions were that she was ordered by God to do such and not doing it would have been a grave sin. Sure, she lived her life never expecting any thank you's or recognition (still, she got them overabundantly), so many say what she did with her life happened because she loved all those souls unconditionally. Not so. She said it herself.

    Now I used a religious figure as an example, so that may hamper the credibility of my argument for some. But the core of my post here is that we all do what we do- love included- because of an underlying motivation. Even in love we don't get away from the conditions. Even if the only motivator is the hope of what may one day be, it's still a selfish, conditional aspect applied to what we call love.

    Even in it's most positvely radiant form, love is conditional. I don't happen to think that's a negative. If selfishness (or whatever term you wish to use) nurtures the feelings between two people and makes their lives, along with others around them, so much more fabulous because of the conditions they place therein, then yay and woohoo! That's a great big happy for those involved. And not a bad thing at all.


    Exactly.

  27. #27
    ~wiggle wiggle~ xo
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    hmmmm, I don't know, I still believe in it

    I will not let the naysayers dissuade me otherwise *plugs her ears and dances around* lalalalalala

    hehe
    ~wiggle wiggle~ xo

  28. #28
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    Again we have tried to label something I think un-labelable. It maters not if love is conditional or unconditional or even if it’s a possibility. What I wonder about, is how does it affect us to move in our life? I love my children no matter what (unconditionally if you will) however I don’t want them to spend the rest of their lives in my home. Mother Theresa loved working with the poor but that is a far cry from a committed love relationship. What is love to a couple, what does that cycle look like? We all know what falling in love is, or trusting in love or following love…really these all deal with the same issue romantic love, the process of falling in love. I’m interested in what keeps it going, what keeps people in love for a life time with each other?

  29. #29
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    Quote Originally Posted by J-Go View Post
    Again we have tried to label something I think un-labelable. It maters not if love is conditional or unconditional or even if it’s a possibility. What I wonder about, is how does it affect us to move in our life? I love my children no matter what (unconditionally if you will) however I don’t want them to spend the rest of their lives in my home. Mother Theresa loved working with the poor but that is a far cry from a committed love relationship. What is love to a couple, what does that cycle look like? We all know what falling in love is, or trusting in love or following love…really these all deal with the same issue romantic love, the process of falling in love. I’m interested in what keeps it going, what keeps people in love for a life time with each other?

    simple....you work at it!

    all of the little simple things.......all of the big stuff.......

    love matures......mellows.......smolders .......and flares up to a blaze.

  30. #30
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    Originally posted by thrall:
    love matures......mellows.......smolders .......and flares up to a blaze
    I think what thrall said is important. If what you have is love, it is always going to be adapting, moving, growing, never standing still.

    Trying to define something like that can get to be like trying to nail jello to the wall.
    Please don't stop playing with the switch.

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