Love and the Beauty of Hurt
“What is love?” I have tried to
answer this question for as long as I remember. I know many of my Christian
friends would say “God is love”. I respect your answer but sorry your answer is
too vague and too broad to be applied. Some of my theologian friends would
define it based on the Koine Greek words used in the New Testament to describe
love. In the Greek New Testament love could be “agape”, “philia”or “eria” (“agapos”,
“philos” or “eros” when used as a verb). “Agape” is for selfless, altruistic
and unconditional love. “Philia” is for brotherly or common love, and “eros” is
for romantic love. I would agree to these exegetical definitions but still
there is a lot more to it.
Love is the most overused and
abused word these days. The millennial uses it describe almost every feeling. When
you travel on taxi you will hear songs, “I love you more than I can say”, “One
love” or “Do you love me?” Love has been nothing but a universal replacer for every
good feeling we have. It basically means “I feel good about…” I do not commit
to say that I agree with the millennial definition of love.
What made me write today is that
recently I experienced “hurt”. I feel I have made myself vulnerable to the extent
to be hurt by people I love. Here is the very problem: I do not differentiate
between the head and the heart. For many people the heart is the epicenter of
love while the head is the tower of knowledge. “You love with your heart,” they
say. No! I do not agree with that statement. For to me, the head and the heart
are the same. I love with my head. I love with knowledge. I love with
calculation. That has been my understanding. How could I be hurt?
I couldn’t explain my
recent feelings. If hurt is real and true, then follows love. Unless someone is
in love why would they be hurt? Love takes risks. One of the risks love takes
is called expectation. As we love someone, we are naturally expecting to be
loved. When the expectations are not met, we will be hurt. This is the proper
calculation. Hence, heart and head have to be different. You cannot calculate
the risks on your head and be ready. There is no preparation to love someone.
You just do it, right? That is how normal people think.
I do not believe in this. I’m a
thinker. For me the head and the heart are the same. I cannot take risks to
love someone without calculating the risks and be ready for it. In order to
avoid taking risks, I mostly end up loving someone superficially. I’m afraid of
commitments. If I committed to love someone I’m afraid that I will get hurt
eventually. I don’t want to get hurt. This has been me for most of the days
until recently.
“Philos” - “Eros” - “Agapos” – My Story
Most psychologists agree that human
beings experience love in stages. Childhood age is the age of “philos” where
children love everyone with brotherly, sisterly, motherly and fatherly love. The
psychosocial theory of Sigmund Freud also relates children as a loving machine.
They love everyone they see as friends. For children there is only “philia”, if
not hate. There is no middle ground.
Teenage, however, is a transition
from “philos” to “eros”. With secondary sexual characteristics in development,
they find themselves trying to get out of the mask of “philia” to enjoy “eros”,
romantic love. The transition will not always be smooth and it highly depends
on the influence of parents, peers and siblings. Teenagers want to enjoy “eros”
so much that they will forget and undermine “philia”. Family love and
attachment starts to decrease and they will tie with their peers, not with “philia”
but with competition. Falling in love in teenage years, especially for boys, is
very common and the weirdest feeling of all.
Let me be brutally honest with
you. Yes, I have experienced “eros”. The
first time I experienced this form of love was when I was a grade 7 student. There
was this girl, the smartest student of our class who was also a Muslim, and I
liked her. I was a Christian but I was also a twelve years old Christian. Stop
judging!
My twelve years old mind was able
to like a girl. I experienced “eros” for the first time. The weirdest part is
that I never even understood what it meant “to love”. I didn’t know the goal of
loving her. I just liked her. The mind of 12 years teenagers work this way. They
don’t need to be rational to experience “eros”. I was driven by the biopychosocial
need around me. Do not judge your children if they experience such love. Guide
them. Teach them how to take care of such feelings. Thank God I never told her.
The fire age of 17-21 is the age
of multiple “eros”. Now we experience “eros” reasonably. Most of the time the
reason is to gain sexual gratification. This is the time of transition too.
Youngsters at this age will start to ask the meaning of life. This is the point
where they come to understand what it means to love unconditionally. They want
to discover altruistic form of love. They want to experience “agape”. They won’t
be satisfied by “eros” anymore. This is the age where many decide to become
missionaries or to join military. “eros” alone will not be the driving force
anymore.
After the age of 21, people start
to make balance between “philia”, “eros and “agape”. They want to have a normal
and stable friendship with their peers. They want to have selfless love for
their country or God. They also will eventually fall in love with opposite sex.
I’m now 2 months away from
celebrating my 24th birthday. I’m trying to live creating balance with
“philia”,”eros” and “agape”. I do have a good-to-normal “philia” with my
friends. I do have a good-to-normal “agape” to God and to people. What about “eros”?
That’s the point I want to talk about.
Love Takes Risk
Three years ago I took a one-week
Bible class on God’s love with a UK preacher, Robin Sanderson. Pastor Robin
would say again and again that God took risk when he chose to love us. “What?
Why would God take risks to love us his tiny creatures?” was the question in my
head. Three years from that lecture I now understand that God is the most
vulnerable being.
God took risk to love his tiny
creature to which he gave free will. The key word here is “free will”. God is
hurt because people are free to choose whatever they want. We can despise God
and reject his offer or we can love him. The fact that we have free will puts
God in a vulnerable position. There are many instances where we read God’s
frustrations (the sign of being hurt) in the Bible.
We are hurt by the people we love
because they have free will. Normally we are hurt on two bases one is if the
person we love (“eros” or “philos”) rejects our offer. Second is that the
person accepts our offer but walks away in the middle of the journey. The second
one is where people experience “broken-heart syndrome”. In light of this, I am
thankful that I didn’t experience the second kind of hurt. No one walked away
from my life. Why? The answer is because I didn’t take the risk to let anyone
in.
The New Normal
Recently, I experience hurt. Here
is what happened: There is this person I very much like. I mean really like. I’ve
spent much time with that person than anyone for the last one year. When I
befriended this person I calculated every risk from distance. I didn’t make big
statements. I didn’t even consider that person to be “the best” as a friend. Even
when I felt I had feelings for that person, I just knew that was a time framed
feeling. One day the feeling will expire when we move apart because of jobs or
other issues.
Was the feeling “eros” or “philos”? I choose “philos”
for much of the days. However, recently I came to understood that it has to be
more than “philos”, somewhere between “philos” and “eros”. Can we get a middle
ground Koine Greek word, please?
I haven’t told the person whether
I love the person with “eros” or “philos” yet. I choose not to tell the person right
this time. I want to be hurt. I want to experience what it means to be hurt. I
also want to believe the heart and the head are not the same. Even if I felt I
calculated the risks, it was way beyond that. Love is something uncalculable.
Hurt is a blessing. Hurt is
beautiful. If you cannot experience hurt, there is no way you know that you are
in love with anyone or anything. Has someone hurt you? You should rest in the
fact that you are a fire – proven lover.
The Scary Truth
When talking about being hurt, I
shall not forget the ever difficult question I encounter. “Have I hurt anyone?”
Most of us don’t want to hurt anyone. As much as experiencing hurt is
beautiful, to hurt someone is evil. The scary truth is yes, I have hurt many
people. I have failed to make to the expectations of many people who love me.
I’m deeply saddened by the fact
that at times I have failed to love back the people who loved me. I wish I
could love them. I wish I could do whatever it takes to please them. I couldn’t.
This breaks my hurt more than the hurt of being not loved by someone. “Eros” is
exclusive and sensitive. You cannot just fall in love with every person. For this
reason you will hurt some of them. You will also hurt by the others. This is
life.
The scariest of all truth of hurt
is that I have continuously hurt the person who loved me most, God. I have hurt
God in many ways. This is not “eros” or “philos”. This is “agapos”, an unconditional
love. Though hurt by the tiny creature, he still sticks to the covenant he made
at the cross. He loves us. You may have hurt God. You may have disobeyed him.
You may have walked away in the middle of the journey with him. The truth is
that He still loves you. He loves me. He loves us! He took all the risks that
we might reject him someday when he considered sending his one only Son to die
for us. This is love. This is “agapos”.
Coming back to the question in
the introduction, “What is love?” I would answer it saying “Love is taking all
the risks to have someone in your journey.” I would love to take risks to have
the person who hurt me recently in my journey. Would that happen? We’ll see.
Amazing!
ReplyDeleteBeautifully Said!!
ReplyDeleteVery courteous and cogitative.
ReplyDeleteKeep it up!!
Keep it up bro
ReplyDeleteHats off! for you bro. Thank you!
ReplyDelete