I believe every human being is capable of loving someone, while at the same time, acting in ways that are selfish and contrary to love.
Yeah, noooooo.
Love isn't a feeling, it's action. It's a verb. How you feel about someone doesn't amount to a hill of beans if you're not treating them with care. My H was absolutely enamored of me and put me on a pedestal, but he was also cheating, or hiding that he had cheated, at the same time. Feeling warm and fuzzy about someone and wanting something from them is not love. Giving is where the love really is.
I'm not a religious person, but I think 1 Corinthians 13 describes love perfectly. It literally saved my marriage:
Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.
I mean, we've all seen that a thousand times, but it came to me in a daily affirmation email about three weeks into our separation and it hit me hard, especially the part about being self-seeking. I knew that what my H had been doing wasn't loving, obviously, but also what I was doing was not loving. I wanted his attention - good or bad, just pay attention to me, dammit! - and the return of his adoration and his allegiance, and I wanted to yell at him. A lot. I was manically clawing at him to give me something, anything.
It really shook me, and I decided to write him a note with the verse and my take on it, and my realizations, and stick it on his windshield. He had been asking me to just chill and leave him alone to think, so writing the note felt a little like crossing a boundary, but it was crossed with peace offering. Here, take this gift. I don't want anything from you in return.
It got him thinking about what love is, too, and how he had not been loving with anyone. AND it shed light on how the AP was not being loving to him either by not respecting his request to be left alone, or respecting that he was hurting and not jubilant like she was about the end of his marriage. It was a major turning point.
My shift in how I thought about love and gave love led to his shift in how he thought and gave love. It saved us. It changed how we give love to each other permanently.
I had largely forgotten about this. Thanks for the reminder!
ETA: THIS is real love in a nutshell, and yes I'm quoting myself: lol
Here, take this gift. I don't want anything from you in return.
[This message edited by SacredSoul33 at 3:38 PM, Wednesday, February 28th]