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Sunday, February 2, 2014

Valentine's Day

Valentine’s  Day special on love by a Philophile.

Philophile [Lover of love]. Greek root ‘philein’ means “loving”

What is love?

Is it a February industry? Or is it many more things or many other things of which February industry is also one?


Can love be divided and described under various categories? What is wrong in doing that? Is it domain specific? Is it easily definable? Or does it defy any particular definition?

Or probably we may get drowned in an ocean of definitions?

Especially those defining in extremes that you may get confused by different waves and definitely get drowned like these Shakespeare in A Midsummer Night’s Dream: “Love looks not with the eyes, but with the mind” or Ambrose Bierce in The Devil’s Dictionary: “Love, n. A temporary insanity curable by marriage” or Susan Sontag, “Nothing is mysterious, no human relation. Except love”.



Certain words have acquired such a vast carapace of connotations, its real denotation and etymology either gets faded in to insignificance or is hidden or is totally forgotten or gets totally mutilated into multiple pieces or is replaced by the multitudes of connotations each giving different meanings according to how those who look at it from their perspective, or perception or prejudice etc.



This word ‘LOVE’ likewise throws up some very usual, predominant and trite connotations, nothing wrong or immoral about them, like romance, beauty, sex, relationships, devotion, happiness, morality, religion, culture, society, thoughts, enjoyment etc, including in its cauldron almost everything to do with life on the whole and that is the reason this word rings a bell to all our senses whenever it is pronounced and make everyone to either to act or to react  or to think or to do something about it. One may think of anything or do anything with this word but no one can afford to ignore it or be indifferent to it. That’s why it is supreme among words.



But despite all these, the beauty of certain terms is that they have a certain inherent attributes, intrinsic meaning, and values that pop out whatever is the connotation or context in which that word is either used or misused. This most vibrant word ‘LOVE’ too is one such word wherein the inherent attribute pops out every time either we use it or hear it.
 


Basically it is an emotion/feeling that everyone experiences and it is a vibration inherent in everything and therefore it could be or probably must be expressed in multiple ways. After all variety is the spice of love and life.

I am aware of the existence of vast and voluminous literature on love, lot of lovely interpretations of love, many marvelous descriptions of love etc so everyone may wonder and hesitate what more can one write on this subject and that too not expressing love or using love as a medium to express something or as an experience but to write something about love. I was emboldened and motivated again by words of love from Debbie Millman’s advice on Courage and the Creative Life, “Do what you love, and don’t stop until you get what you love. Work as hard as you can, imagine immensities, don’t compromise, and don’t waste time. Start now. Not 20 years from now, not two weeks from now, Now”.


For etymology though I have a Large Overdose of Very Exciting and interesting materials I would like to, for the sake of brevity, quote from http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=love
 “Old English lufu "love, affection, friendliness," from Proto-Germanic *lubo (cf. Old High German liubi "joy," German Liebe "love;" Old Norse, Old Frisian, Dutch lof; German Lob "praise;" Old Saxon liof, Old Frisian liaf, Dutch lief, Old High German liob, Germanlieb, Gothic liufs "dear, beloved").

The Germanic words are from PIE *leubh- "to care, desire, love" (cf. Latin lubet, later libet "pleases;" Sanskrit lubhyati "desires;" Old Church Slavonic l'ubu "dear, beloved;" Lithuanian liaupse "song of praise").”


I would like to argue why not for example include the French ‘L’œuf’ meaning ‘egg’ symbolically, referring to creation itself or the act of creation.


Even in the etymology given above the Sanskrit word ‘lubhyati’ has many meanings/connotations depending on the context with subtle nuances like desires of, entice, interested in, long for, allure, covet, be perplexed or disturbed mentally etc. Probably those who do not have a Sanskrit dictionary at hand may refer to this link http://sanskritdictionary.com/?q=lolubhyate


Incidentally Sanskrit has 96 words for love, the most of any language and no wonder from the love of karma, dharma to kama sutra they did everything with love and involvement in a language par excellence.[1]


Though personally for me love with anything or for anyone or about and/or from anything or anyone is seldom a noun but always a verb, either transitive or intransitive defined in terms of simple grammar and it is as much about giving as about receiving a reciprocal affair [2]

Does love have an opposite? Yes, it does, and it is fear. These two are the two extremes of the spectrum of all human activities, thoughts, emotions etc. In fact all human activities, emotions, thoughts etc could be, if at all there is any single possibility of simplifying to understand life, classified broadly under these two categories with varying degrees of their manifestation like love into liking, desire, happiness, peace, pleasure, companionship, wish, wanting, affection, relationship, togetherness, co-operation, physical, emotional or psychological contacts, intimacy, enjoyments etc to name a few.  Similarly fear can be said to manifest in varying degrees as hatred, indifference, judgmental, avoidance, unwillingness, disgust, destructiveness etc



While fear is just the hinge [3] love in its totality is a wonderful splendor beyond the realms of Time and Space and that’s why it is mad, stimulating, creative etc


Even the discrimination between love and lust is a feeling instigated more out of socio cultural morality than any inherent intentional vice or injury implied. Though morality is only contextual[4] , like many other things in life, it gets injected into us through indoctrination and conditioning that we automatically resort to filtering or silting through socially approved sieves many actions, thoughts, emotions etc leading to many conflicts, confrontations, co-operations, collaboration etc and all these various appraisals of socio-cultural moral parameters have produced many wonderful literatures, arts, theories, great stories etc which too play their part in human evolution as part of  life’s own process of polishing the rough edges of emotions, feelings, actions, thoughts etc to enable a less problematic social co- habitation of not only human beings but of human beings with other species and the  whole environment.



While life is a circle or a cycle, human activities, thoughts and emotions in their geometric progression come in and take different shapes and also shape life in different ways and that’s why we have love triangles and squarely blame many things for many of our actions and describe tangential behavior patterns etc. Here are some of the things that I have written on these issues.[5,6]

Diane Ackerman, the great science historian when she wrote a book titled ‘A Natural History of Love , writes,What a small word we use for an idea so immense and powerful it has altered the flow of history, calmed monsters, kindled works of art, cheered the forlorn, turned tough guys to mush, consoled the enslaved, driven strong women mad, glorified the humble, fueled national scandals, bankrupted robber barons, and made mincemeat of kings. How can love’s spaciousness be conveyed in the narrow confines of one syllable? If we search for the source of the word, we find a history vague and confusing, stretching back to the Sanskrit lubhyati (“he desires”). I’m sure the etymology rambles back much farther than that, to a one-syllable word heavy as a heartbeat. Love is an ancient delirium, a desire older than civilization, with taproots stretching deep into dark and mysterious days.”


After reading such wonderful writing we are only tempted to quote more and more from that wonderful book to bring out the entire gamut of love in all its uses of glory as well as misuses of goriness. Let me reserve those for quotes section on the psychology of love.


By its very nature Love is Over flowing of excess with inherent Vital Equilibrium.
This is well portrayed in The Diary of Anais Nin, “Something is always born of excess: great art was born of great terrors, great loneliness, great inhibitions, instabilities, and it always balances them.”

Love is, Life Operating Vital Energy, and Live Operative Vibrant Energy often Lovingly Outpouring Virtual Emotions and Leverage to Operate Virtually Everything,perhaps, like electric current it is one, Lively Omnipresent Vibration Everywhere always live, useful, and extremely functional in myriad ways and could become lethal too.


Its manifestation varies in the applications it is put to, depending upon whether we use to illuminate a bulb; to cool a hot room with air conditioner; or to warm a cool place with a warmer; or to use to burn a cloth; or use it to wash a cloth in a washing machine; use it to char someone to death; or use it to treat someone or to cure a disease; whether we use to operate a computer or a crematorium incinerator.



So, by itself, it is an immense power and an inevitable powerhouse of a feeling but it gets modified in its manifestations of varying degrees of intensities depending upon who uses it, how they use it, what for they use it and why they use it at all. All these various aspects of uses, abuses, misuses of love are all excellently explained in Eric Fromm’s wonderful book ‘ The Art of Loving’.



LOVE is one of those words which is a Live wire Operating dynamically its Vibrations in Every domain and Lingers around either Obviously or opulently and Virtually gets Embedded or enmeshed or entangled.


For ordinary folks it Lives in and Operates in Varying degrees or intensities in Everything; for artists it renders Lively and Offers joys Verily in Every shade of color; for musicians it Lives in Obvious harmony of Vibrations of every Enchanting melody or sound; for the Lofty vocabulary loving and  Over- sophisticated Versions preferring elitists it dazzles in Every facet; for the Learned scientifically spirited it Operates and Verily exists in every successful Experiment; for the religiously minded it Lives Obviously as per God’s Very authentic stamp in Every life; for the philosophically probing self it Leverages and Operates rationally in Very Enlightening ways as John Armstrong says, “Philosophy is the successful love of thinking”; for the spiritually enhanced it Lives , Operates Virtually in Every soul; for the adolescent youth it is Lively Overflow of Vast hormonal Exuberance Lingering in Overall Virile Enthusiasm[7]; for a mathematician it is Living in a Overdose of Virtual world of Every number and shape; for a physicist it is Lively experimenting of the Overpowering Vast Expanse of universe defying his definitions; for a chemist it is Life of Objects in Verified and verifiable Elements; for a biologist it is Living Organisms Vying to Experience life; for small children it is Life in its Overabundant  Vitality and Enjoyment; for adventurous spirits it is Living with an Objective of Verifying and Exploring everything through actual experience; for historians it is Life  Over periods of Varying Engagements and exchanges; for the rich it is Luxury  of Opulence and Viable  Expensive experience; for the poor it is Living in Obnoxiously pitiable and Vilifying Environments; for the environment lovers it is Living along with Other species in Virtual respect of sharing and Exchanging  of everything; for the sincere students it is Learning through Observation and Verbal as well as other non verbal understanding to get Educated; for teachers and preachers it is Lifting up Others’ understanding Via Enlightened communications; as per saints, sages and religious people it is about Linking of your individual self to the Other supreme self through Virtuous vibrations of living leading to Enlightened wisdom; for parents it is concern about the Life of their children Overzealously to become and remain Valuable on Earth for ever etching  their name for posterity etc .

In way in everyone’s Life in every way it has or has become a lasting Over imposing Vital Element. 



So, whatever profession, whichever perception, prejudice, priority, preoccupation, position, power from which you look at it, it is inherently Lively, Operative or operational, Vibrant and Ever present or at least enjoyable.

In short, it is a Lively Omnipresent Vibration Everywhere; it  Lives Virtually On Everyone’s inner self; it Lingers Over Virtually Everything; Whether one Likes it Or not, no one can Vie with it to Escape; many Lives are Operated out of its Virtual Exuberance.




The different labels assigned to it , the adjectives adorning it, many prefixes and  suffixes added to it, the multiple  contextually  confining definitions to describe it ranging from the Lusty Obnoxious ones tarnishing the Vitals of this lovely Emotion to the Lofty Outpouring of ascribing Virtues of Every  hue to it are all the various manifestations, differing perceptions, multiple mutilations, myriads of perspectives etc.

They are all like that because this emotion is very plastic, pliable and elastic and allows itself to be used as however one wants to use it to be. The Loveliest part is from Outside it does not Vitiate anyone’s Endearing association with it.


Now let us move from these
Lovely Outpourings Of Valuable and worthy Endearments and Look at the many obvious and Operational metamorphosis of this Virtue or vice as it is Everywhere and how in many Literatures and Other domains it is Viewed by Everyone through the Lenses Of Various Enlightened individuals,  through the Lovely Outpourings of  Varied Experiences etc 


Going back to where I started the topic defining LOVE thus: Love is Life Operating Vital Energy, and Live Operative Vibrant Energy.


So, Left to itself, it will Open up and blossom into a Very Energizing entity but will get modified, mellowed, mutilated, muddied, misinterpreted etc when we convert it from an vibrant and vital energy into a Lasting Obedient Valuable Entity to serve our Lewd, Lingering, Local, Lurking, Long term Objectives Of Very selfish Emotions and worse still expect it to be everlastingly embed in our confines then it would be wise to understand that no vibrant and dynamic energy is that vulnerable to us  but on the contrary it is we who  are vulnerable.

However if we Long with all Our intense concentrated sincerity and Very badly want it then be Ensured love never fails.
Love can be for anything as for me it is [8]
Here is a link for many interesting quotes on love.
7 Other Definitions of Real Love Worth Considering

52 Fascinating Facts About Love


Here is what all poet and journalist Diane Ackerman, the great science historian says in her book titled ‘A Natural History of Love, “Common as child birth, love seems rare nonetheless, always catches one by surprise, and cannot be taught. Each child rediscovers it, each couple redefines it, each parent reinvents it. People search for love as if it were a city lost beneath the desert dunes, where pleasure is the law, the streets are lined with brocade cushions, and the sun never sets.                                         

It’s tempting to think of love as a progression, from ignorance toward the refined light of reason, but that would be a mistake. The history of love is not a ladder we climb rung by rung leaving previous rungs below. Human history is not a journey across a landscape, in the course of which we leave one town behind as we approach another. Nomads constantly on the move, we carry everything with us, all we possess. We carry the seeds and nails and remembered hardships of everywhere we have lived, the beliefs and hurts and bones of every ancestor. Our baggage is heavy. We can’t bear to part with anything that ever made us human. The way we love in the twentieth century is as much an accumulation of past sentiments as a response to modern life.

After all, there are countless studies on war, hate, crime, prejudice, and so on. Social scientists prefer to study negative behaviors and emotions. Perhaps, they don’t feel as comfortable studying love per se. I add that “per se” because they are studying love — often they’re studying what happens when love is deficient, thwarted, warped, or absent. … We have the great fortune to live on a planet abounding with humans, plants, and animals; and I often marvel at the strange tasks evolution sets them. Of all the errands life seems to be running, of all the mysteries that enchant us, love is my favorite.


We think of it as a sort of traffic accident of the heart. It is an emotion that scares us more than cruelty, more than violence, more than hatred. We allow ourselves to be foiled by the vagueness of the word. After all, love requires the utmost vulnerability. We equip someone with freshly sharpened knives; strip naked; then invite him to stand close. What could be scarier?                                                                                                                                

Love is the great intangible. In our nightmares, we can create beasts out of pure emotion. Hate stalks the streets with dripping fangs, fear flies down narrow alleyways on leather wings, and jealousy spins sticky webs across the sky. In daydreams, we can maneuver with poise, foiling an opponent, scoring high on fields of glory while crowds cheer, cutting fast to the heart of an adventure. But what dream state is love? Frantic and serene, vigilant and calm, wrung-out and fortified, explosive and sedate — love commands a vast army of moods. Hoping for victory, limping from the latest skirmish, lovers enter the arena once again. Sitting still, we are as daring as gladiators.                                        Love is the white light of emotion. It includes many feelings which, out of laziness and confusion, we crowd into one simple word. Art is the prism that sets them free, then follows the gyrations of one or a few. When art separates this thick tangle of feelings, love bares its bones. But it cannot be measured or mapped. Everyone admits that love is wonderful and necessary, yet no one can agree on what it is”                                            

“First and foremost, love is an emotion, a momentary state that arises to infuse your mind and body alike. Love, like all emotions, surfaces like a distinct and fast-moving weather pattern, a subtle and ever-shifting force. As for all positive emotions, the inner feeling love brings you is inherently and exquisitely pleasant — it feels extraordinarily good, the way a long, cool drink of water feels when you’re parched on a hot day. Yet far beyond feeling good, a micro-moment of love, like other positive emotions, literally changes your mind. It expands your awareness of your surroundings, even your sense of self. The boundaries between you and not-you — what lies beyond your skin — relax and become more permeable. While infused with love you see fewer distinctions between you and others. Indeed, your ability to see others — really see them, wholeheartedly — springs open. Love can even give you a palpable sense of oneness and connection, a transcendence that makes you feel part of something far larger than yourself.                                                                                                                                        

Perhaps counter intuitively, love is far more ubiquitous than you ever thought possible for the simple fact that love is connection. It’s that poignant stretching of your heart that you feel when you gaze into a newborn’s eyes for the first time or share a farewell hug with a dear friend. It’s even the fondness and sense of shared purpose you might unexpectedly feel with a group of strangers who’ve come together to marvel at a hatching of sea turtles or cheer at a football game. The new take on love that I want to share with you is this: Love blossoms virtually anytime two or more people — even strangers — connect over a shared positive emotion, be it mild or strong.”                         

Love is a momentary upwelling of three tightly interwoven events: first, a sharing of one or more positive emotions between you and another; second, a synchrony between your and the other person’s biochemistry and behaviors; and third, a reflected motive to invest in each other’s well-being that brings mutual care.                                                                 

This is no ordinary moment. Within this mirrored reflection and extension of your own state, you see far more. A powerful back-and-forth union of energy springs up between the two of you, like an electric charge                                                                                   Odds are, if you were raised in a Western culture, you think of emotions as largely private events. You locate them within a person’s boundaries, confined within their mind and skin. When conversing about emotions, your use of singular possessive adjectives betrays this point of view. You refer to ‘my anxiety,’ ‘his anger,’ or ‘her interest.’ Following this logic, love would seem to belong to the person who feels it. Defining love as positivity resonance challenges this view. Love unfolds and reverberates between and among people —within interpersonal transactions — and thereby belong to all parties involved, and to the metaphorical connective tissue that binds them together, albeit temporarily. … More than any other positive emotion, then, love belongs not to one person, but to pairs or groups of people. It resides within connections.                                         

People who suffer from anxiety, depression, or even loneliness or low self-esteem perceive threats far more often than circumstances warrant. Sadly, this overalert state thwarts both positivity and positivity resonance. Feeling unsafe, then, is the first obstacle to love.                                                                                                                                             Love’s second precondition is connection, true sensory and temporal connection with another living being. You no doubt try to ‘stay connected’ when physical distance keeps you and your loved ones apart. You use the phone, e-mail, and increasingly texts or Facebook, and it’s important to do so. Yet your body, sculpted by the forces of natural selection over millennia, was not designed for the abstractions of long-distance love, the XOXs and LOLs. Your body hungers for more.                                                                              True connection is one of love’s bedrock prerequisites, a prime reason that love is not unconditional, but instead requires a particular stance. Neither abstract nor mediated, true connection is physical and unfolds in real time. It requires sensory and temporal copresence of bodies .The main mode of sensory connection, scientists contend, is eye contact. Other forms of real-time sensory contact — through touch, voice, or mirrored body postures and gestures — no doubt connect people as well and at times can substitute for eye contact. Nevertheless, eye contact may well be the most potent trigger for connection and oneness.                                                                                                     Physical presence is key to love, to positivity resonance.                                                         Love is a many-splendored thing. This classic saying is apt, not only because love can emerge from the shoots of any other positive emotion you experience, be it amusement, serenity, or gratitude, but also because of your many viable collaborators in love, ranging from our sister to your soul mate, your newborn to your neighbor, even someone you’ve never met before.                                                                                                                               At the level of positivity resonance, micro-moments of love are virtually identical regardless of whether they bloom between you and a stranger or you and a soul mate; between you and an infant or you and your lifelong best friend. The clearest difference between the love you feel with intimates and the love you feel with anyone with whom you share a connection is its sheer frequency. Spending more total moments together increases your chances to feast on micro-moments of positivity resonance. These micro-moments change you.                                                                                                                  Whereas the biological synchrony that emerges between connected brains and bodies may be comparable no matter who the other person may be, the triggers for your micro-moments of love can be wholly different with intimates. The hallmark feature of intimacy is mutual responsiveness, that reassuring sense that you and your soul mate — or you and your best friend — really ‘get’ each other. This means that you come to your interactions with a well-developed understanding of each other’s inner workings, and you use that privileged knowledge thoughtfully, for each other’s benefit. Intimacy is that safe and comforting feeling you get when you can bask in the knowledge that this other person truly understands and appreciates you. You can relax in this person’s presence and let your guard down. Your mutual sense of trust, perhaps reinforced by your commitments of loyalty to each other, allows each of you to be more open with each other than either of you would be elsewhere.”




[3 ]FEAR
[4] MORALITY






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