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       # 2024-11-14 - All About Love by bell hooks
       
       A friend recommended this book to me.  My friend liked the story
       about bell hooks having a dream that she would meet the love of her
       life.  Then at a conference, she met a man who eerily resembled the
       love of her dream.  They really hit it off.  Later she discovered
       that he was married, and she felt confused and disappointed.  How
       could he be such an identical match to her dream, but unavailable?
       It wasn't until later that she realized that it was a missed
       opportunity.  She had been attached to the idea that it would be a
       romantic type of love, when it could have been a different and
       equally important love.
       
       I personally did not enjoy this book as much as The Will To Change.
       I had trouble identifying with many of the author's perspectives and
       points.  But as they say in yoga philosophy, keep what helps and
       discard the rest.
       
   DIR The Will To Change by bell hooks
       
       I liked the idea of having a "love ethic" where a person is
       determined to choose life instead of death and committed to nurturing
       the conditions so that love can exist.  I like the idea that this
       love ethic is not compatible with a culture of domination.
       
       I disagree with the idea that love is the will to extend oneself for
       the purpose of nurturing one's own or another's spiritual growth.
       For example, i loved my grandmother dearly.  This love uplifted me.
       Because i cared about my grandmother, i was willing to do dirty jobs
       that would normally be unpleasant.  I was focused on her well-being
       rather than my own pleasure.  This doesn't mean that i was committed
       to her spiritual growth or even to my own.  I just cared.
       
       I disagree with the idea that love cannot coexist with abuse.  As
       finite human beings we cannot be purely one thing or another.  Love
       will always have a degree of abuse in it, and abuse will always have
       a degree of love.  This means that we are always redeemable. I admit
       that the abuse is not love, and it diminishes love.  In order to be
       more loving, one would need to be less abusive.
       
       What follows are excerpts from the book.
       
       # Introduction
       
       There are not many public discussions of love in our culture right
       now. At best, popular culture is the one domain in which our longing
       for love is talked about.
       
       As spokesperson for a disillusioned generation, Elizabeth Wurtzel
       asserts in Bitch: In Praise of Difficult Women: "None of us are
       getting better at loving: we are getting more scared of it. We were
       not given good skills to begin with, and the choices we make have
       tended only to reinforce our sense that it is hopeless and useless."
       
       It is far easier to talk about loss than it is to talk about love. It
       is easier to articulate the pain of love's absence than to describe
       its presence and meaning in our lives.
       
       # Chapter 1
       
       I spent years searching for a meaningful definition of the word
       "love," and was deeply relieved when I found one in psychiatrist
       M. Scott Peck's classic self-help book The Road Less Traveled, first
       published in 1978. Echoing the work of Erich Fromm, he defines love
       as "the will to extend one's self for the purpose of nurturing one's
       own or another's spiritual growth." Explaining further, he continues:
       "Love is as love does. Love is an act of will--namely, both an
       intention and an action. Will also implies choice. We do not have to
       love. We choose to love." Since the choice must be made to nurture
       growth, this definition counters the more widely accepted assumption
       that we love instinctually.
       
       When we understand love as the will to nurture our own and another's
       spiritual growth, it becomes clear that we cannot claim to love if we
       are hurtful and abusive. Love and abuse cannot coexist. Abuse and
       neglect are, by definition, the opposites of nurturance and care.
       
       Most of us find it difficult to accept a definition of love that says
       we are never loved in a context where there is abuse. Most
       psychologically and/or physically abused children have been taught by
       parenting adults that love can coexist with abuse.
       
       In order to change the lovelessness in my primary relationships, I
       had to first learn anew the meaning of love and from there learn how
       to be loving. Embracing a definition of love that was clear was the
       first step in the process.
       
       To begin by always thinking of love as an action rather than a
       feeling is one way in which anyone using the word in this manner
       automatically assumes accountability and responsibility. ... We are
       often taught we have no control over our "feelings." Yet most of us
       accept that we choose our actions, that intention and will inform
       what we do. We also accept that our actions have consequences. To
       think of actions shaping feelings is one way we rid ourselves of
       conventionally accepted assumptions...
       
       # Chapter 2
       
       One of the most important social myths we must debunk if we are to
       become a more loving culture is the one that teaches parents that
       abuse and neglect can coexist with love. Abuse and neglect negate
       love. Care and affirmation, the opposite of abuse and humiliation,
       are the foundation of love. No one can rightfully claim to be loving
       when behaving abusively. Yet parents do this all the time in our
       culture.
       
       # Chapter 3
       
       It is no accident that when we first learn about justice and fair
       play as children it is usually in a context where the issue is one of
       telling the truth. The heart of justice is truth telling, seeing
       ourselves and the world the way it is rather than the way we want it
       to be.
       
       Estrangement from feelings makes it easier for men to lie because
       they are often in a trance state, utilizing survival strategies of
       asserting manhood that they learned as boys. This inability to
       connect with others carries with it an inability to assume
       responsibility for causing pain.
       
       While privacy strengthens all our bonds, secrecy weakens and damages
       connection. Lerner points out that we do not usually "know the
       emotional costs of keeping a secret" until the truth is disclosed.
       Usually, secrecy involves lying. And lying is always the setting for
       potential betrayal and violation of trust.
       
       [The reason for secrecy is often because it is not safe to disclose
       the secret.  To do so would result in futher harm and injury.]
       
       Widespread cultural acceptance of lying is a primary reason many of
       us will never know love. It is impossible to nurture one's own or
       another's spiritual growth when the core of one's being and identity
       is shrouded in secrecy and lies. Trusting that another person always
       intends your good, having a core foundation of loving practice,
       cannot exist within a context of deception.
       
       When we hear another person's thoughts, beliefs, and feelings, it is
       more difficult to project on to them our perceptions of who they are.
       It is harder to be manipulative.
       
       To be loving we willingly hear each other's truth and, most
       important, we affirm the value of truth telling. Lies may make people
       feel better, but they do not help them to know love.
       
       # Chapter 4
       
       Commitment to truth telling lays the groundwork for the openness and
       honesty that is the heartbeat of love. When we can see ourselves as
       we truly are and accept ourselves, we build the necessary foundation
       for self-love.
       
       Using a working definition of love that tells us it is the action we
       take on behalf of our own or another's spiritual growth provides us
       with a beginning blueprint for working on the issue of self-love.
       When we see love as a combination of trust, commitment, care,
       respect, knowledge, and responsibility, we can work on developing
       these qualities or, if they are already a part of who we are, we can
       learn to extend them to ourselves.
       
       The wounded heart learns self-love by first overcoming low
       self-esteem. Nathaniel Branden's lengthy work Six Pillars of
       Self-Esteem highlights important dimensions of self-esteem, "the
       practice of living consciously, self-acceptance, self-responsibility,
       self-assertiveness, living purposefully and the practice of personal
       integrity." Living consciously means we think critically about
       ourselves and the world we live in. We dare to ask ourselves the
       basic questions who, what, when, where, and why. Answering these
       questions usually provides us with a level of awareness that
       enlightens.
       
       
       The more we accept ourselves, the better prepared we are to take
       responsibility in all areas of our lives. Commenting on this third
       pillar of self-esteem, Branden defines self-responsibility as the
       willingness "to take responsibility for my actions and the attainment
       of my goals--for my life and well-being." ... Taking responsibility
       means that in the face of barriers we still have the capacity to
       invent our lives, to shape our destinies in ways that maximize our
       well-being.
       
       Doing a job well, even if we do not enjoy what we are doing, means
       that we leave it with a feeling of well-being, our self-esteem
       intact. That self-esteem aids us when we go in search of a job that
       can be more fulfilling.
       
       Folks who are out of the paid workforce, women and men who do unpaid
       work in the home, as well as all other happily unemployed people, are
       often doing what they want to do. While they are not rewarded by an
       income, their day-to-day life often provides more satisfaction than
       it would if they worked at a high-paying job in a stressful and
       dehumanizing environment. ... They are their own bosses, setting the
       terms of their labor and the measure of their reward. More than any
       of us, they have the freedom to develop right livelihood.
       
       One of the best guides to how to be self-loving is to give ourselves
       the love we are often dreaming about receiving from others.
       
       # Chapter 5
       
       Living life in touch with divine spirit lets us see the light of love
       in all living beings. ... A culture that is dead to love can only be
       resurrected by spiritual awakening.
       
       Usually, fundamentalists, be they Christian, Muslim, or any faith,
       shape and interpret religious thought to make it conform to and
       legitimize a conservative status quo. Fundamentalist thinkers use
       religion to justify supporting imperialism, militarism, sexism,
       racism, homophobia. They deny the unifying message of love that is at
       the heart of every major religious tradition.
       
       No wonder then that so many people who claim to believe in religious
       teachings do not allow their habits of being to reflect these
       beliefs. For example, the Christian church remains one of the most
       racially segregated institutions in our society.
       
       Spiritual life is first and foremost about commitment to a way of
       thinking and behaving that honors principles of inter-being and
       interconnectedness. When I speak of the spiritual, I refer to the
       recognition within everyone that there is a place of mystery in our
       lives where forces that are beyond human desire or will alter
       circumstances and/or guide and direct us.
       
       When we begin to experience the sacred in our everyday lives we bring
       to mundane tasks a quality of concentration and engagement that lifts
       the spirit. We recognize divine spirit everywhere. This is especially
       true when we face difficulties. So many people turn to spiritual
       thinking only when they experience difficulties, hoping that the
       sorrow or pain will just miraculously disappear. Usually, they find
       that the place of suffering--the place where we are broken in spirit,
       when accepted and embraced, is also a place of peace and possibility.
       Our sufferings do not magically end; instead we are able to wisely
       alchemically recycle them. They become the abundant waste that we use
       to make new growth possible.
       
       # Chapter 6
       
       Awakening to love can happen only as we let go of our obsession with
       power and domination. ... The underlying values of a culture and its
       ethics shape and inform the way we speak and act. A love ethic
       presupposes that everyone has the right to be free, to live fully and
       well. To bring a love ethic to every dimension of our lives, our
       society would need to embrace change.
       
       Commitment to a love ethic transforms our lives by offering us a
       different set of values to live by. In large and small ways, we make
       choices based on a belief that honesty, openness, and personal
       integrity need to be expressed in public and private decisions.
       
       Embracing a love ethic means that we utilize all the dimensions of
       love--care, commitment, trust, responsibility, respect, and
       knowledge--in our everyday lives. We can successfully do this only by
       cultivating awareness. Being aware enables us to critically examine
       our actions to see what is needed so that we can give care, be
       responsible, show respect, and indicate a willingness to learn.
       Understanding knowledge as an essential element of love is vital
       because we are daily bombarded with messages that tell us love is
       about mystery, about that which cannot be known. We see movies in
       which people are represented as being in love who never talk with one
       another, who fall into bed without ever discussing their bodies,
       their sexual needs, their likes and dislikes. Indeed, the message
       received from the mass media is that knowledge makes love less
       compelling; that it is ignorance that gives love its erotic and
       transgressive edge. These messages are often brought to us by
       profiteering producers who have no clue about the art of loving, who
       substitute their mystified visions because they do not really know
       how to genuinely portray loving interaction.
       
       To live our lives based on the principles of a love ethic (showing
       care, respect, knowledge, integrity, and the will to cooperate), we
       have to be courageous. Learning how to face our fears is one way we
       embrace love. Our fear may not go away, but it will not stand in the
       way.
       
       # Chapter 7
       
       While emotional needs are difficult, and often are impossible to
       satisfy, material desires are easier to fulfill. Our nation fell into
       the trap of pathological narcissim in the wake of wars that brought
       economic bounty while undermining the vision of freedom and justice
       essential to sustaining democracy.
       
       Relationships of intimacy and closeness are destroyed as the addicted
       individual participates in a greedy search for satisfaction. Greed
       characterizes the nature of this pursuit because it is unending; the
       desire is ongoing and can never be fully satisfied.
       
       The need for instant gratification is a component of greed.
       
       Concurrently, when it comes to matters of the heart we are encouraged
       to treat partners as though they were objects we can pick up, use,
       and then discard and dispose of at will, with the one criteria being
       whether or not individualistic desires are satisfied.
       
       When greedy consumption is the order of the day, dehumanization
       becomes acceptable. Then, treating people like objects is not only
       acceptable but is required behavior.
       
       I once asked a rich man, who had only recently attained his status,
       what he liked most about his new wealth. He said that he liked seeing
       what money could make people do, how it could make them shift and
       violate their values. He personified the culture of greed. His
       pleasure in being wealthy was grounded in the desire to not only have
       more than others but to use that power to degrade and humiliate them.
       To maintain and satisfy greed, one must support domination. And the
       world of domination is always a world without love.
       
       Greed subsumes love and compassion; living simply makes room for
       them. Living simply is the primary way everyone can resist greed
       every day.
       
       We can all resist the temptation of greed. We can work to change
       public policy, electing leaders who are honest and progressive. We
       can turn off the television set. We can show respect for love. To
       save our planet we can stop thoughtless waste. We can recycle and
       support ecologically advanced survival strategies. We can celebrate
       and honor communalism and interdependency by sharing resources. All
       these gestures show a respect and a gratitude for life. When we value
       the delaying of gratification and take responsibility for our
       actions, we simplify our emotional universe. Living simply makes
       loving simple.
       
       # Chapter 8
       
       To ensure human survival everywhere in the world, females and males
       organize themselves into communities. Communities sustain life--not
       nuclear families, or the "couple," and certainly not the rugged
       individualist. There is no better place to learn the art of loving
       than in community.
       
       Replacing the family community with a more privatized small
       autocratic unit helped increase alienation and made abuses of power
       more possible.
       
       [Fewer people to hear you scream.]
       
       The failure of the patriarchal nuclear family has been utterly
       documented. Exposed as dysfunctional more often than not, as a place
       of emotional chaos, neglect, and abuse, only those in denial continue
       to insist that this is the best environment for raising children.
       
       Research by anthropologists and sociologists indicates that small
       privatized units, especially those organized around patriarchal
       thinking, are unhealthy environments for everyone. Globally,
       enlightened, healthy parenting is best realized within the context of
       community and extended family networks.
       
       When children are taught to enjoy quiet time, to be alone with their
       thoughts and reveries, they carry this skill into adulthood.
       Individuals young and old striving to overcome fears of being alone
       often choose meditation practice as a way to embrace solitude.
       
       The willingness to sacrifice is a necessary dimension of loving
       practice and living in community. None of us can have things our way
       all the time. Giving up something is one way we sustain a commitment
       to the collective well-being.
       
       # Chapter 10
       
       Few of us enter romantic relationships able to receive love. We fall
       into romantic attachments doomed to replay familiar family dramas.
       
       If you do not know what you feel, then it is difficult to choose
       love; it is better to fall. Then you do not have to be responsible
       for your actions.
       
       I learned that we may meet a true love and that our lives may be
       transformed by such an encounter even when it does not lead to sexual
       pleasure, committed bonding, or even sustained contact. The myth of
       true love--that fairy-tale vision of two souls who meet, join, and
       live happily thereafter--is the stuff of childhood fantasy. Yet many
       of us, female and male, carry these fantasies into adulthood and are
       unable to cope with the reality of what it means either to have an
       intense life-altering connection that will not lead to an ongoing
       relationship or to be in a relationship. True love does not always
       lead to happily ever after, and even when it does, sustaining love
       still takes work.
       
       The heartbeat of true love is the willingness to reflect on one's
       actions, and to process and communicate this reflection with the
       loved one.
       
       # Chapter 11
       
       Love makes us feel more alive. Living in a state of lovelessness we
       feel we might as well be dead; everything within us is silent and
       still. We are unmoved. "Soul murder" is the term psychoanalysts use
       to describe this state of living death. It echoes the biblical
       declaration that "anyone who does not know love is still in death."
       Cultures of domination court death. Hence the ongoing fascination
       with violence, the false insistence that it is natural for the strong
       to prey upon the weak, for the more powerful to prey upon the
       powerless.
       
       Much contemporary visionary work on death and dying has highlighted
       learning how to love.
       
       Just as the dying are often carted off so that the process of dying
       will be witnessed by only a select few, grieving individuals are
       encouraged to let themselves go only in private, in appropriate
       settings away from the rest of us. Sustained grief is particularly
       disturbing in a culture that offers a quick fix for any pain.
       
       Love knows no shame. To be loving is to be open to grief, to be
       touched by sorrow, even sorrow that is unending. The way we grieve is
       informed by whether we know love. Since loving lets us let go of so
       much fear, it also guides our grief. When we lose someone we love, we
       can grieve without shame.
       
       In its deepest sense, grief is a burning of the heart, an intense
       heat that gives us solace and release. When we deny the full
       expression of our grief, it lays like a weight on our hearts, causing
       emotional pain and physical ailments.
       
       The only way to live that life where, as Edith Piaf sings, we
       "regret nothing" is by awakening to an awareness of the value of
       right livelihood and right action. Understanding that death is always
       with us can serve as the faithful reminder that the time to do what
       we feel called to do is always now and not in some distant and
       unimagined future.
       
       To be here now does not mean that we do not make plans but that we
       learn to give the making of future plans only a small amount of
       energy. And once future plans are made, we release our attachment to
       them.
       
       # Chapter 12
       
       Growing up is, at heart, the process of learning to take
       responsibility for whatever happens in your life. To choose growth is
       to embrace a love that heals.
       
       Healthy families resolve conflict without coercion, shaming, or
       violence. When we collectively move our culture in the direction of
       love, we may see these loving families represented more in the mass
       media. They will become more visible in all walks of daily life.
       Hopefully, we will then listen to these stories with the same
       intensity that we have when we listen to narratives of violent pain
       and abuse. When this happens, the visible happiness of functional
       families will become part of our collective consciousness.
       
       Life without communion in love with others would be less fulfilling
       no matter the extent of one's self-love.
       
       The rugged individual who relies on no one else is a figure who can
       only exist in a culture of domination where a privileged few use more
       of the world's resources than the many who must daily do without.
       Worship of individualism has in part led us to the unhealthy culture
       of narcissism that is so all pervasive in our society.
       
       We cannot know love if we remain unable to surrender our attachment
       to power, if any feeling of vulnerability strikes terror in our hearts.
       
       # Chapter 13
       
       Our cultural passion for the angelic expresses our longing to be in
       paradise, to return on earth to a time of connectedness and goodwill,
       to a time when we were heart-whole.
       
       Woundedness is not a cause for shame, it is necessary for spiritual
       growth and awakening. 
       
       
       author: hooks, bell, 1952-2021
  TEXT detail: gopher://gopherpedia.com/0/Bell_hooks
       LOC:    BF575.L8 H655
       tags:   book,love,non-fiction,philosophy
       title:  All About Love
       
       # Tags
       
   DIR book
   DIR love
   DIR non-fiction
   DIR philosophy