Sunday, January 3, 2010

The Languages of Love

Love, is it just a word?  Is it just a feeling?  With love in our lives, everything makes sense - we have direction and a sense of purpose.  But when it disappears, nothing makes sense anymore...  Can we trust ourselves when we love someone?  Does our life have any profound meaning if we opt out of love?

A friend of mine just told me recently that he broke up with his girlfriend of over a year.  Some of us might be tempted to say, "Welcome to the club, kid."  But how far can we take this bitter attitude before love and faithfulness appear to be nothing more than a beautiful myth at best, and a sorry joke at worst?    Indeed, the club of the broken hearted becomes a counter-witness to the very stirrings of love.  You hear people say, "I've been in a relationship like that before - and I won't be making that mistake again."  And yet, how difficult it is to truly grasp someone else's defects before all their charm wears off.  And how often people who have been in a "destructive" relationship tend to move on only to find themselves in another "destructive" relationship.

Of course, when things don't work out, we like to play the blame game.  Who is to blame?  ...Who isn't to blame?  And that depends on a lot of things of course.  If you are being abused for example, please don't make up excuses for the one who is abusing you.  Abuse is not just physical of course, it can also be verbal, or psychological.  I've often wondered if manipulation is a form of abuse, and I think that even manipulation could be considered abuse, but only when it is conscious.  Unconscious manipulation is something we all do to a greater or lesser extent because of our selfishness.  Children are a good example of unconscious manipulation.  They try everything to get what they want, and then they continue using behavior that works because it allows them to continue to get what they want.  Manipulation could also be called, "pushing someone's buttons," which is a form of abuse when it is done consciously.  When it is done unconsciously, and the manipulative person is able to realize that their words or deeds are manipulative, they are then able to chose another form of behavior.  There are still other kinds of manipulative personalities that are problematic though, and they would be the compulsively manipulative kinds of personalities.  And people who are compulsively manipulative, though it may be unconscious, could indeed create an abusive relationship if the other person is unable to rise above their tactics - which requires a certain level of emotional detachment and intelligence.  Unfortunately, I think we could all classify ourselves as unconsciously and compulsively manipulative to a greater or lesser extent.  So... what to do... what to do...

Well... if we are manipulating someone, it is because we are trying to get something from them that they did not necessarily intend to give.  Or it is because we are trying to get them to say something that they did not really intend to say.  Manipulation is getting someone to do what you want them to do whether or not they really want to do it.  Putting enough pressure in the right places to get them to move, in total disregard of their own personal freedom.  And when it comes to love, we can become very manipulative.  Being the reason for/cause of someone else's actions or words can very closely resemble being the meaning/purpose of their lives.

The problem comes in when, after a certain amount of time together, two people who loved each other feel as if "The love is gone" (to quote the Muppet's Christmas Carol.)  This is the moment when we feel as if we have to resort to manipulation to get from the other person what we feel we need to be able to continue in the relationship.  And if manipulation is the only way left, it not only poses a  problem for our conscience, but for our very existence.  It is intolerable to continue to chose to live next to someone, as a companion, for whom our own existence does not seem important.  If a husband feels like he is uninteresting, unimportant, or of no great significance in the eyes of his wife, how long can he continue like that?  And how long can they continue like that if the feeling is mutual?  Especially if the children are grown and gone, and there is nothing left to distract their lives from that painful reality!

If both persons want the relationship to work, but can't seem to get it to work, there is an interesting guide that Dr. Gary Chapman came up with.  He writes and teaches something he calls the "Five Love Languages."  While the approach is above all psychological, I think it merits a philosophical analysis as well.  Love is not just affective, it also requires an act of intelligence.  True love requires a cooperation between one's mind and one's heart, where the mind becomes the servant of love.

In future blogs, I would like to examine each of the five love languages according to Gary Chapman (physical touch, kind words, quality time, gift giving, and service), to see if these intuitions can help us understand the affective dimension of the human person more profoundly.  For example, why are there only five love languages?  Could there be more?  Is there a connection between one's senses and the love languages?  Does God use all five love languages to communicate with us?


Thursday, December 24, 2009

The Meaning of Christmas

'Tis the Season!  Well, since everyone is passing around messages about the meaning of Christmas, I thought I would add my own.  Not because it is my own, but because it is a meaning that is not proclaimed very often in today's world.  Christmas, for many, is Jesus' Birthday and as corny as that may sound it is true.  Christmas is the season for giving, which is also true - just as God gave us his beloved Son because he loved us, we are inspired to give what is most valuable to us to those whom we love.  And Christmas is also the time of year where we sense the need, or at least the attraction to give to those "less fortunate than ourselves."  Something we can only do by becoming "poor with the poor."  Just as Jesus lowered himself to take on our broken humanity, in order to give us a share in his Divinity.  He became poor so that by His poverty we might become rich.

The air is thick with the Spirit of Christmas.  Just this morning I was reminded of a song that we sang a couple of Advents ago in Laredo, "Love, the Guest, Is On His Way."  So when I saw "Christmas Cleaning" written on the schedule this morning, I was less annoyed than I would usually be.   Even with all the preparations, and services we provide for one another, the goal of Christmas is to receive someone, "The Guest" - Jesus, Emmanuel, God with us.  And Jesus comes to us through everyone we meet, but at Christmas he wants to come to us as a Child.  Puer natus est nobis!  Et filius datus nobis!  A child is born for us!  A son is given us!  Rings out the ancient Latin text of the Christmas Midnight Mass.  God becomes a baby, the Creator is born of his creature, the one who governs the universe entrusts himself to the care of a young virgin.  What kind of crazy stunt is that?  What is God trying to do?  Why does the All-powerful One become the most fragile and vulnerable of creatures?

This is the mystery of love.  The innocent gaze of a child, a child who has yet to experience any hurt or rejection gives himself completely to anyone who will accept him.  The eyes of a baby do not judge, they do not compare or hold you to any standards, the pure and simple gaze of a baby lifts your heart and mind and is a source of joy.  This is how God wants us to be able to receive Him at Christmas, as a gift, as an unexpected source of joy.

The meaning of Christmas, and indeed the meaning of all Christian feasts and celebrations, is first contemplative.  Before we change what we do, we must change how we see things.  That is why we say that the Christian life is contemplative before it is anything else.  What does that mean?  It means that our faith, which is a gift, allows us to look at things from God's point of view.  Faith should give us a deeper perspective on life.  The purpose of faith is not just to get saved, we are saved by grace.  Faith is the knowledge of Jesus, faith is knowing Christ.  And this knowledge, of who He is and of what he has done, changes the way a Christian sees the world.  Christ had human eyes so that we too may see the world from God's perspective.

God's joy is knowing God.  And when God knows himself, it is completely different from our own self-knowledge.  When God gazes upon himself, it is like us when we see someone we love.  God is his own alter-ego, and our pride makes us wish we were like Him.  But our fulfillment will never be face to face with our navel.  It is face to face with another, and ultimately, with "The Other."  This is why Jesus, why the Word of God, became flesh.  To teach us the loving face to face with God.  So let us contemplate the "Divine Babe," the Word made Flesh, the Light born of Light before the world was formed.

This Christmas, let us receive the gift of God.  Let us enjoy the gift of a new perspective, and fix our gaze on the "Tiny little baby" whose eyes reveal the light of God.

Merry Christmas!

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Chapter closing on lone Laredo bookstore - Retail - msnbc.com

Chapter closing on lone Laredo bookstore - Retail - msnbc.com

This is extremely sad. This is depressing, and this is an obvious sign that SOMETHING IS NOT RIGHT. I understand that books are becoming less and less where we get our information. But this is just too disturbing.