Monday, November 05, 2007

Today's Quote: On Love 2

"I know that people can be beautiful and happy without losing their ability to dwell on this earth. I cannot and will not believe that evil is man's natural state...

A dream they say... I shall go further: let it never, never come true, let paradise never be... ...I shall anyway go and spread the word. And yet it could be done so simply: in a single day, in a single hour everything would be settled! One should love others as one loves oneself, that is the main thing, that is all, nothing else, absolutely nothing else is needed, and then one would instantly know how to go about it. It's nothing but an old truth, repeated and read billions of times, and yet it has not taken root.
...If only everyone wanted it, it could be all done at once."


Fyodor Dostoevsky, from his short story 'The Dream of a Ridiculous Man'

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Monday, October 22, 2007

Today's Quotes: On Love

"Dear friends, let us continually love one another, because love comes from God. Everyone who loves has been born from God and knows God. The person who does not love does not know God, because God is love. ...If we love one another, God lives in us, and his love is perfected in us. ... God is love, and the person who abides in love abides in God, and God abides in him."
'The Bible' - 1 John 4:7-8, 12 & 16


“Let us speak then of love. What does it mean to “love” something? If a man asks a woman... “do you love me?” and if, after a long and awkward pause and considerable deliberation, she replies with a wrinkled brow, “well, up to a certain point, under certain conditions, to a certain extent,” then we can be sure that whatever she feels for this poor fellow it is not love and this relationship is not going to work out. For if love is the measure, the only measure of love is love without measure... One of the ideas behind “love” is that it represents a giving without holding back, an “unconditional” commitment, which marks love with a certain excess. Physicians counsel us to eat and exercise in measured moderation and not to overdo either. But there is no merit in loving moderately, up to a certain point, just so far, all the while watching out for number one (which is, alas, what we are often advised by a decadent “New Age” psychology)... Love is not a bargain, but unconditional giving; it is not an investment, but a commitment come what may. Lovers are people who exceed their duty, who look around for ways to do more than is required of them. If you love your job, you don’t just do the minimum that is required; you do more. If you love your children, what would you not do for them? If a wife asks a husband to do her a favor, and he declines on the grounds that he is really not duty bound by the strict terms of the marriage contract to do it, that marriage is all over except for the paperwork. Rather than rigorously defending their rights, lovers readily put themselves in the wrong and take the blame for the sake of preserving their love. Love, St.Paul said in his stunning hymn to love, is patient, kind, not puffed up or boastful; it bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things (I Cor. 13). A world without love is a world governed by rigid contracts and inexorable duties, a world in which – God forbid! – the lawyers run everything. The mark of really loving someone or something is unconditionality and excess, engagement and commitment, fire and passion. Its opposite is a mediocre fellow, neither hot nor cold, moderate to the point of mediocrity. Not worth saving. No salt."

From 'On Religion' by John Caputo

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Thursday, July 26, 2007

Facial Expressions, Communication and Love...

Just last week while we were in Greece for Dana’s vacation (more on this later), Dana and I were watching TV together flipping through the channels trying to find something in English, when we happened across a documentary all about facial expressions and the huge part they play in communication. It was absolutely fascinating.

They explained that we all use facial expressions unconsciously all the time. We can ‘speak’ our happiness, frustration, love, surprise or any other emotion with something like 7000 distinct expressions. Our facial muscles are incredible. We can use our expressions to communicate our feelings, or to mask them. But making and reading facial expressions is picked up by the brain completely unconsciously. In fact, certain expressions such as surprise, happiness, anger and fear even trigger direct reactions in the brain which then controls certain reactions in the body. Similarly, when we make facial expressions, whether real or faked, we trigger a change in our bodies. A person’s body can’t tell the difference between a fake smile and a real one – both are good for our health.

The show was very helpful in giving me an answer to this problem that I’ve noticed especially since getting married. Sometimes the smallest and most insignificant difference, or miscommunication between Dana and I can turn into a huge argument. We may be arguing about how to make sandwiches or something stupid like that when it all suddenly gets blown completely out of proportion leaving both of us angry, frustrated, and hurt. I’ve often wondered at this, and why this happens for no apparent reason about the stupidest things. Watching this documentary gave me a very good answer.

They did studies with married couples and found that spouses reacted to the facial expressions of their partner much more than to the words spoken. So that when one spouse might show signs of frustration or anger, it triggers an unconscious reaction in the other spouse.
Also, even though expressions are so important for communication, we very easily misread them, and miscommunication can easily happen when strong emotions are involved. People get hurt easily and without need.
The whole show was very helpful because, knowing the problem is the first step to being able to deal with it properly.

Problems arise too with the growth of technology such as emails. Because so much is communicated by expressions (as well as tone of voice), when we are emailing or blogging, the subtle yet important information about how someone is feeling and reacting about what is being said becomes lost. (Which is perhaps why we like to use smiley faces. :-)

I began to think about our blog here. Dana and I, always try to strike a balance between writing personal communication for our friends and family while we are so far away, and expressing ourselves in what we are excited or passionate about. But I have to recognise that this can be dangerous. At times we have written about spiritual or political issues which can be very controversial and divisive. Even though we are passionate about these issues, we’ve tried to write in a way that will show humility – that we don’t know it all – and to show that we value relationships (especially with people who have a different point of view) more than our own ideas. Unfortunately, we may have failed a bit in this.

Yesterday I began flipping through the book ‘Blue Like Jazz’ which is an excellent book about Christian spirituality in which the writer Donald Miller shares his personal experiences in a very open and honest way. So while reading yesterday, I came across a passage which is what got me thinking about all this in the first place. After talking about how he learned to appreciate and become friends with a person who he had once disliked immensely, Miller writes:

“Here is something very simple about relationships that Spencer helped me discover: Nobody will listen to you unless they sense that you like them.
If a person senses that you do not like them, that you do not approve of their existence, then your religion and your political ideas will all seem wrong to them. If they sense that you like them, then they are open to what you have to say…

…When I am talking to somebody there are always two conversations going on. The first is on the surface; it is a about politics or music or whatever it is that our mouths are saying. The other is beneath the surface, on the level of the heart, and my heart is either communicating that I like the person I’m talking to or I don’t. God wants both conversations to be true. That is, we are supposed to speak the truth in love. If both conversations are not true, God is not involved in the exchange, we are on our own, and on our own, we will lead people astray. The Bible says that if you talk to somebody with your mouth, and your heart does not love them, that you are like a person standing there smashing two cymbals together. You are only annoying everybody around you.”


Speak the truth in love. It’s so true. The truth can be hard. Many times I find myself rejecting criticism because of how the person says it – especially if it’s true. I like to think of myself as a good person, and I don’t want to recognize that sometimes I’m a jerk, selfish, lazy, or whatever. I think this is how we all tend to react at every level of relationship - from close personal relationships like marriage and friendships, to the international level of nations interacting with other nations. Nobody likes criticism - especially destructive criticism. If people feel that we dislike them, that we do not approve of them, and that they are not lovely, then they will resist us. They will hate us. Returning dislike or contempt for what they receive from us. So often, when there’s a problem, we want others to mould themselves to our way – ‘it’s my way or the highway’ – but this is exactly what breaks down relationships and turns people against each other.

Earlier in the chapter, Donald Miller had been explaining a realization he’d had about love. A communications professor was talking about the metaphors that are used to describe cancer: “…we battle cancer, we fight cancer, we are rebuilding our white blood cells, things like that.” All from a war metaphor. The professor talked about how even though cancer is not nearly the most deadly disease, people feel they have been thrust into a deadly war. Apparently ‘Science has shown that the way people think about cancer affects their ability to deal with the disease, thus affecting overall health.’

In a similar way metaphors are damaging to relationships. “We value people…we invest in people…relationships could be bankrupt…people are priceless… All economic metaphor.” It doesn’t sound that bad but it is. The dangerous part is that we tend to use love as if it were money.

“If somebody is doing something for us, offering us something, be it gifts, time, popularity, or what have you, we feel that they have value, we feel they are worth something to us, and, perhaps we feel they are priceless. I could see it so clearly, and I could feel it in the pages of my life…I used love like money… With love, we withheld affirmation from the people who did not agree with us, but we lavishly financed the ones who did.”

Love is not meant to be used this way, and when we do we only alienate people. Of course the natural human reaction is to repay good with good and evil with evil. But this is exactly where we’ve got it all upside down. We don’t stop to consider what it would be like to be in the other person’s shoes. That’s the brilliance of the ‘Do to others what you would want them to do to you’ ethic. If only we all could empathize with other people, and think about our own actions from their point of view, the world would be a much better place.

Shanti, शांति

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Wednesday, March 28, 2007

‘My Life is My Message’

‘My Life is My Message’

Gandhi spoke this of himself, and ever since I read it, it has always been something which struck me as being exceptionally wise. So I just wanted to share a few thoughts I’ve had about this idea.

Recently, Madonna was quoted in an article where she said that she wanted to be like Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr (but not be murdered). She went further to say that we should all be like Jesus in our time.

I know that Madonna has become very religious of late, and I agree with her that we should all be like Jesus in our time, but the problem is that to be like Jesus isn’t just about words, it’s about how we live, in the real world. And for me, just like for Madonna – the biggest question is: What's my life's message?

For a long time now, these people have been heroes to me, who changed their societies with their voices and with their lives. But again – I have always hesitated to apply Gandhi’s statement to myself, that ‘My life is my message’ because I was afraid of what that would tell people. But here is something I realized recently: Whether I like it or not, my life really is my message. It’s true for everyone.

This is a hard truth to accept, if I believe that selfishness is not a good thing but makes the world a worse place; if I accept that to live like Jesus (the way that Mother Teresa, Gandhi, and Martin Luther King Jr. all tried to) makes a person truly great; if I accept that lives like that which have shown love, truth and justice at great personal expense, have made the world a much better place; if I believe all this, and then I turn around and take a good look at my life, I realize that:


“I don’t believe very many noble things. My Life testifies that the first thing I believe is that I am the most important person in the world. My life testifies to this because I care more about my food and shelter and happiness than about anybody else.” (Donald Miller – Blue Like Jazz)

Of course I’m guilty of this. And normally, I don’t think anything of it. There is a disconnection between what I say (and even think) I believe and what I actually believe.

When self-centredness rules, the world becomes a lonely place. Cut away from true friendship and the beauty of a selfless love. This is the stuff of broken relationships for the sake of material possession, or the self-gratification of a secret affair and the pain which it causes when the former beloved finds that they were no more than a tool for pleasure. We are all like this in one way or another. This is the stuff which Allan Bloom spoke of when he said:

“The most visible sign of our increasing separateness and in its turn, the cause of ever greater separateness is divorce… There is a quest, but ever more hopeless, for arrangements and ways of putting the broken pieces back together. The task is equivalent to squaring the circle, because everyone loves himself most but wants others to love him more than they love themselves.” (The Closing of the American Mind)

But this isn’t the last word on things. Yes, the problem is that we all love ourselves more than anyone else. But there is true love too.

There is the love between really great friends, between a husband and wife who really love each other more than they love themselves. We all recognize the nobility of a friend, a husband, a father or mother, who sacrifice themselves to save their friend, their wife, or their son or daughter. This is the kind of love we all want and need.

I think we can't really even imagine how good the world would be if it was only filled with such people who love purely and truly. But we can get at least a glimpse of heaven in the love of a good father, a friendship which crosses all barriers and is true, the love of newlyweds, or in a mother for her new-born baby. We can get a glimpse of heaven, if only in part.

As Donald Miller wrote
“I am learning to believe better things. I am learning to believe that other people exist, that fashion is not truth... I am learning not to be passionate about empty things, but to cultivate passion for justice, grace, truth, and communicate the idea that Jesus likes people and even loves them.”

I’m also learning that I can change – but this has only come when I’ve realized that what I believe in my head and what say I believe - that other people matter - isn’t enough. I have to live it. It’s come when I begin to realize how self-centred I really am. As Gandhi said, “It is our actions which count”. The struggle is to figure out in each new situation how I will respond and how I will change to become a better person.

How will I react to the realities of suffering and injustice around me? How will I respond to beggars, to street kids, to the person who stole my new shoes, or the person who offends me? How will I act when there is a choice between acting for my own comfort or going out of my way to help someone else. That’s the question.

What will our lives say about us? What message are we sending?


Everyone thinks of changing the world, but no one thinks of changing himself.”
Leo Tolstoy

I am the problem
-An idea that Donald Miller talks about in his excellent book ‘Blue Like Jazz’

Fathers and teachers, what is Hell? I think it is the suffering of one who can no longer love.”
-from ‘The Brothers Karamazov’ by Dostoevsky

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