Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Immature Love Vs Mature Love [Migrated Post]

Immature love says I love you because I need you.’ Mature love says ‘I need you because I love you’. - Erich Fromm
I don’t consider myself fully ripe yet, but at its core I know that true love’s very nature is about being mature.
Love can only begin when you are righteous. Righteousness is a decision to firmly maintain an upright disposition in every respect of your being. It is the very essence of being mature.
I believe love ennobles us with gracious ethos. When we do things in love, it forces us to discern the difference between what we need and what we want.
George Orwell once said that sometimes, the first duty of intelligent men is the restatement of the obvious, and as a lover of wisdom, I believe it’s worth retelling what’s been told in every religion and across all faiths of humanity: What you ever need, you already have.
I believe we can be nothing else greater than vessels of love. When we’re willing to submit to the abundance of grace that is readily available for us to perceive, we roost a heartfelt affection for one another, and our selves are made lovely in its grace.
Too often we think or feel we still need something outside of ourselves when every inch of this potential is already lying inside you. Think about those moments when you lose yourself into a project you’re passionate about. You become the child you used to be, sitting on the floor in stillness, quietly drawing out your figments of imagination.
Like the child’s innocence, I believe we don’t need a reason to love the subject or object of our affection, nor we should be ignorant of concedable dangers while indulging in our passions, for love is not the exclusion of reason, but the marriage between reason and passion.
It is about being still no matter what comes your way. Whether your loved ones have surpassed or transgressed, you maintain peace at heart and loves him or her any how.  Whenever you make mistakes in your drawing process, you forgive yourself and keep going anyway. You don’t seek to glorify your self or your other half, but you give honor to the truth – that all you need is love.
When we are conscious of this truth, we can only satisfy our lives through more giving and less of receiving. Merely a vessel of love, we no longer feel deserving special treatments. We stop comparing ourselves with one another. We stop holding selfish thoughts or think we can only feel good through the possession of another. Instead, we feel good by our inherent human need for each other's support, and we do this by giving and forgiving others no matter what happens.
Love requires no prerequisites. You don’t have to win every argument or take the number-one spot in every competition to be able to give love and forgive those who have done you wrong. It simply requires you to accept the truth – that all you ever need, you already have.
Once you submit to the truth, love blooms and becomes a continuous dance of correspondence with the Creator of love, a beautiful life as portrayed like the drawing imagined to reality by the innocent, yet mature child.

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