Appreciation

botanical-garden-1123939_640

“If you love a flower, don’t pick it up, because it will die, and cease to be what you love. So if you love a flower, let it be. Love is not about possession. Love is about appreciation.” – Osho

Love is a tricky word. The Greeks helped us out a bit by differentiating various kinds of love: Agape (love for everyone), Eros (sexual passion), Philia (deep friendship), Ludus (playful love, as between children), Pragma (long-standing love), and Philautia (self-love). Sorting it out is not so easy. If I say “I love you,” the context becomes important; sometimes miscommunication occurs when the intention does not match the expectation. Then there’s the problem of whether or not we can embody love.
During my early religious education, I was comforted by the instruction and reminder that God is Love. So if God is Love, what aspect of love does God represent?

Spiritual leaders seem to struggle with this question, and religious dogma may attempt to regulate the different aspects of love, as if they are separate. Agape may be love for everyone, but people placed into the category of “sinners” may be excluded, unless they agree to some conditions. When we really love everyone, we do what the late Dr. Wayne Dyer suggests, ” Look for the innocence in everyone, and then make that the only thing you see.”Focusing on a person’s innocence makes it difficult to indict the person for some “wrong-doing.”

Then there’s Eros or erotic love. To some, any attention to this form of love is a recipe for disaster. The Puritans were particularly concerned about this kind of love, but they’re not alone. Today, sexual passion is repressed, secluded from view, categorized according to who’s involved, and embedded in acts of power and force. Sexual passion has been distorted, used as a weapon, and has become an area of shame and transgressions. In short, sex has taken on a meaning that has nothing to do with Eros.

The distortion of erotic love has in some cases made Philia or deep friendship suspect or difficult to develop. One person can genuinely love another without a desire for sex. Television shows have encouraged this experience of Philia, but some cultures or religious communities insist on rules of engagement. I am however reminded that I grew up in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the city of “brotherly love.” The concept is still possible.

Ludus, playful love is restricted to children or young lovers, according to the Greeks. This restriction can keep us adults from finding the playful part of adulthood, and become closed and habitual; we sacrifice our creativity if we forget our playfulness.

Pragma, is the long-standing love, the deep understanding that develops between people in a long-term mature relationship. With these couples, what they have “between them”–memories, struggles, losses, triumphs — have established a special bond that is both loving and “pragmatic.”

Philautia is the often sought-after self-love. We struggle with appropriate ways to love ourselves, but we often feel more comfortable trying to love another person from a depleted sense of self-love. Such an undertaking rarely is sustainable. We have to love ourselves in order to love other people, because we cannot give away something we don’t have.

All of the six aspects of love create a full experience of love in life. God is in all these forms of love. When we are aware that All-That-Is, what we call God in some communities, cannot fall outside of any of these aspects of love, we are able to give up the labels and the false separations.

We are an expression of the Universal Intelligence that is love. The energy of love is All-That-Is. We are love in all its forms and the opportunity for Love to express itself in the world. If we deny any aspect of this love we are not fully aware of ourselves. Commit to being fully who you are. You are the love of everyone; the sexual passion of creation, the brotherly and sisterly love that produces compassion and comfort; the child’s play that puts you in touch with joy; the unconditional love of deep relationship; and the heart-opening awareness of the loving true self. You are that, all of it. Appreciate the love that you are.

Peace, love and blessings,
Ndidi

6 thoughts on “Appreciation

  1. “Philautia is the often sought-after self-love. We struggle with appropriate ways to love ourselves, but we often feel more comfortable trying to love another person from a depleted sense of self-love. Such an undertaking rarely is sustainable. We have to love ourselves in order to love other people, because we cannot give away something we don’t have.”
    This description reminds me of the biblical scripture ” Love thy neighbor as thyself.” Having been raised in the Christian faith of the baptist church, I heard and read this scripture often as a daily affirmation and intent for all of my deeds of living life, love thy neighbor, love my neighbor, show appreciation for my neighbor, serve my neighbor. Then one day several decades later, I hear something I didn’t hear before, “… as thyself.” In retrospect, I was so busy doing what I believed to be good deeds in service to helping others, supporting others, taking care of others, directing others, guiding others, etc. until I realized I was giving my energy away without the assurance that it would be replenished; that others would do for me at the same level I believed I was doing for them. I expected tandem, reciprocity, and it wasn’t present as often as I desired. In my experience when I realized that I was giving more love as appreciation for others than I gave to myself. I was lost as to how to love myself, truly love myself. I had not practiced. It became a journey, a quest to act for self and for others simultaneously, a victor without the victim.

      • Greetings, dear Ndidi! I thoroughly enjoy and benefit from your blog. I love to read and I love to write and I love creative writing. Your blog allows me the privilege of having fun, like on a playground as my inner child. In response to your query, this is how my spirit speaks: A journey is a journal of the mind; a daily walk of observations, involvements causing feelings that we seek to reconcile; finding balance through these experiences is like riding an ocean wave; we seek to keep our head above water; to ride the wave and not drown; and if we submerge, we grab that surf board of life and get back on, wounded, worn, torn, then we re-energize; we feel that we have conquered life once again. It’s the course of the mind, until we learn to calm it down, meditation/contemplation; and know that I am the wave and the wave is me, the journey of my mind.

  2. Thank you so much for your words. In this say and age when people use the word “love” with politics as opposed to as it relates to beings!

Leave a reply to Gloria Lawson Sylvester Cancel reply