From 6acb216dcac34871382172982a9efe7267bb45fa Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: ishanrai05 Date: Fri, 15 Feb 2019 04:16:03 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Minor edits to Love article --- _posts/2019-02-14-on-love.md | 58 +++++++++++++++++++----------------- 1 file changed, 31 insertions(+), 27 deletions(-) diff --git a/_posts/2019-02-14-on-love.md b/_posts/2019-02-14-on-love.md index dd0f979..8580616 100644 --- a/_posts/2019-02-14-on-love.md +++ b/_posts/2019-02-14-on-love.md @@ -10,31 +10,34 @@ excerpt: "It is not who you are underneath, it’s what you do that defines you" Disclaimers/ Assumptions central to the hypothesis presented under: -True love does exist (why else would we write this?). -“It is not who you are underneath, it’s what you do that defines you” - Rachel Dawes, Batman Begins (i.e. actions take precedence over emotions and intentions). -This is an idealized overview of a rather complex emotion, written by two authors who have never been in a relationship themselves. They have, however, been accommodating of contradicting and diverse viewpoints while concocting this checklist. +1. True love does exist (why else would we write this?). +2. *“It is not who you are underneath, it’s what you do that defines you”* - Rachel Dawes, Batman Begins (i.e. actions take precedence over emotions and intentions). +3. This is an idealized overview of a rather complex emotion, written by two authors who have **_never_** been in a relationship themselves. They have, however, been accommodating of contradicting and diverse viewpoints while concocting this checklist. Follow it at your own peril. -He sees her at work every day; her low, mellifluous voice soothes him over the cacophony of ringing phones. He watches, gasping, enthralled by her bewitching smile. She gracefully tucks her straight, auburn hair behind her ears. A sigh escapes his lips; he’s new to the place, and she feels awfully familiar. +*He sees her at work every day; her low, mellifluous voice soothes him over the cacophony of ringing phones. He watches, gasping, enthralled by her bewitching smile. She gracefully tucks her straight, auburn hair behind her ears. A sigh escapes his lips; he’s new to the place, and she feels awfully familiar.* -She catches him looking at her. He quickly looks away, blushing. +*She catches him looking at her. He quickly looks away, blushing.* -He tries to think of the last time someone made him blush. He marvels at her perfection. There couldn’t possibly be anything he’d want to change about her. +*He tries to think of the last time someone made him blush. He marvels at her perfection. There couldn’t possibly be anything he’d want to change about her.* -Is this love? +Is *this* love? If you’ve been watching too many Hollywood movies, perhaps it is. + If you prefer Bollywood, a buffet of stalkerish tendencies, threats to slit wrists, letters written in blood, and an undying enthusiasm can be said to constitute this emotion. + If you’ve grown up in an orthodox Indian household, love is embodied in the act of the patriarch bringing home the bread, or the act of chiding children when they do something “wrong”, never being openly expressed. + If you’ve been particularly unlucky, continuous emotional and physical abuse can also seem to be manifestations of a deeply-rooted love. ![On-love](/images/posts/love2.png){: style="width:70%;height:auto"} But none of us have a singular, isolated mode of existence; we are a part of many miscible worlds, armed with a power to introspect, retrospect, and theorize. Our conceptions of love are shaped by the many relationships we observe, as well as external sources (movies, books and music). There are potentially infinite ideas emanating from these sources; it is only upon introspection - upon evaluating each idea against the filter of our intuition - that additions or amendments are made. These, in turn, influence the way we express love. -It becomes important, at this point, to expose a rather troublesome impostor: Infatuation. +It becomes important, at this point, to expose a rather troublesome impostor: *Infatuation*. The narrative in the opening paragraphs encapsulates the illusion of love. The rather unthinking and indiscriminate overuse of the word ‘love’ has rendered people’s ability to tell apart ‘infatuation’ from ‘love’, useless. Perhaps infatuation is love in its infancy - but that’s where the overlap ends. @@ -53,56 +56,57 @@ Another less accepted feature of love is the **conscious ignorance of flaws Perhaps the best attribute of love is its **unconditional nature**. Although the expectation of a “reward” might exist, the person is okay with his/her love not being reciprocated; sadness may be the eventual outcome, but it is deemed to be worth it (i.e. the person continues to act on their love - refer assumption no. 1). -And lastly, the self-sacrificial nature of love. Doing things that are inconvenient or avoidable just because it means something to the other person/ benefits them in some way is a particularly irrational characteristic of love +And lastly, the **self-sacrificial** nature of love. Doing things that are inconvenient or avoidable just because it means something to the other person/ benefits them in some way is a particularly irrational characteristic of love -The duration of love is not always indicative of its “trueness”; i.e. true love and lasting love are discernibly different. Lasting love can only be cultured when true love is supplemented by compatibility. +*The duration of love is not always indicative of its “trueness”; i.e. true love and lasting love are discernibly different. Lasting love can only be cultured when true love is supplemented by compatibility.* What, then, is compatibility? Two models come to mind: (i) The MBTI model: The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator is a “psychometric instrument” that draws on the theories of Carl Jung (but has faced flak for being pseudo-scientific, having poor reliability and poor validity). Various parties have drawn on the theory to propose “ideal pairings”, the basic principle of which is stated under: -“The partner that we choose for ourselves will have a very different approach to dealing with the world. If we are laid-back and indecisive, our partner will be structured and decisive. If we are reserved, our partner will be outgoing. For all of our apparent differences, we will share a common vision of what's truly important in life.” - The Personality Page +*“The partner that we choose for ourselves will have a very different approach to dealing with the world. If we are laid-back and indecisive, our partner will be structured and decisive. If we are reserved, our partner will be outgoing. For all of our apparent differences, we will share a common vision of what's truly important in life.”* - The Personality Page -(ii) Games People Play: Eric Berne’s book analyses how two people in a relationship “transact”, drawing on the theories of Sigmund Freud. Given below is an extract from a popular tabloid: +(ii) *Games People Play*: Eric Berne’s book analyses how two people in a relationship “transact”, drawing on the theories of Sigmund Freud. Given below is an extract from a popular tabloid: “His theory argued that every person has three “ego states”: -• The parent: What you've been taught +- The parent: What you've been taught -• The child: What you have felt +- The child: What you have felt -• The adult: What you have learned +- The adult: What you have learned When two people are really compatible, they connect along each tier. Pearson [a Couples Therapist] gave us a few questions for figuring out compatibility at each level: -• The parent: Do you have similar values and beliefs about the world? +- The parent: Do you have similar values and beliefs about the world? -• The child: Do you have fun together? Can you be spontaneous? Do you think your partner's attractive? Do you like to travel together? +- The child: Do you have fun together? Can you be spontaneous? Do you think your partner's attractive? Do you like to travel together? -• The adult: Does each person think the other is bright? Are you good at solving problems together?” +- The adult: Does each person think the other is bright? Are you good at solving problems together?” -The Independent +    -    The Independent Both models stress on having outward differences (a response to our desire for completion, also adding an element of excitement) while having deeply-rooted similarities (i.e. values) and shared long-term goals (which keep them together). -“In this terrifying world, all we have are the connections we make.” -BoJack Horseman +> *“In this terrifying world, all we have are the connections we make.”* +> +>     -    *BoJack Horseman* Perhaps love (the way we have defined it) does not exist. Perhaps love is incredibly selfish, egotistical, and extremely conditional. The thought that humans are incapable of this idealistic model of love is equal parts reassuring and saddening. Or, perhaps, “true love” does exist - only, it comes with swords sheathed in scabbards of red and gold. People shy away from relationships that might cause them pain; it is this very fear that keeps them from experiencing the sort of pain that might ultimately give way to the spring of love. Kahlil Gibran captures it best : -“When love beckons to you, follow him, though his ways are hard and steep. And when his wings enfold you yield to him, though the sword hidden among his pinions may wound you.” +*“When **_love_** beckons to you, follow him, though his ways are hard and steep. And when his wings enfold you yield to him, though the sword hidden among his pinions may wound you.”*
-1In this context, a rational act is one which has a reason stateable explicitly in objective terms. Irrationality, therefore, implies that - although a reason might exist - it is not known well enough to be put into words +######1In this context, a rational act is one which has a reason stateable explicitly in objective terms. Irrationality, therefore, implies that - although a reason might exist - it is not known well enough to be put into words -2Flaws can be taken to mean any mixture of the following: +######2Flaws can be taken to mean any mixture of the following: -(i) Idiosyncrasies/characteristics that you can live without +######(i) Idiosyncrasies/characteristics that you can live without -(ii) Idiosyncrasies/characteristics that the world finds irksome, but are accepted by the person in question +######(ii) Idiosyncrasies/characteristics that the world finds irksome, but are accepted by the person in question -(iii) Idiosyncrasies/characteristics that when found in other people may prove irksome, but are acceptable when found in this person +######(iii) Idiosyncrasies/characteristics that when found in other people may prove irksome, but are acceptable when found in this person