I spent some time yesterday with my best friend in the whole world, Hope the Dog. I'm lying. My best friend in the world, actually, is one Little Stevie Seaweed, but that goes without saying. Anyway, the reaction of this animal to my presence is one of the most heart-warming things that has ever happened to me. It's an absolute explosion of love. It is love expressed physically. She acts like she thought she was never going to see me ever again every time she stops by.
Which brings me back this morning to one of my favorite go-to topics: what the hell is love anyhow? In my family of origin it was such a restrained emotion, very defined and doled out with great discretion and reluctance and only to people who fit a narrow criterion. Don't get me wrong - I knew I was loved but it was often flat and dull and emotionless, something that was expected of everyone, befitting a conservative, religious family. This is what I had when I was launched out into the broader world. Aware of the concept but constrained between tight guardrails.
While I began to tell people that I loved them in a much more relaxed way several years ago it was the death of my sponsor Ken that really rocketed me into the Fifth Dimension. I've spoken about the details of his death before - this deeply Catholic, profoundly conservative guy whose beliefs offended me so much that for a few years I spent more time arguing with him than looking for the similarities in our respective programs. This changed after a while and we had a great friendship. It was when he was close to death at the end, bedridden, taking morphine for the pain, that he began to say that he now understood God as an expression of pure love. This really struck home with me; so much so that I now use it as a suggestion to anyone struggling with the idea of God or a Higher Power. With a little Hope the Dog imagery thrown in to make it even simpler. Who can get pissed at the idea of pure love?
Later I had this interaction with a man who was a good friend many years ago, a man that I hadn't spoken with for thirty years, maybe more. Someone asked him if he knew me and he replied: "Yes, he's a good friend. In fact, he's one of my best friends." This struck at my core - like Ken's awakening - rocketing me into a different (and better, c'mon!) interpretation of love. My buddy talks about this incredibly long, incredibly thin, but incredibly strong thread that connects old friends over time and distance, that it's hard to snap this thread even with disuse.
I have gotten to the point where love takes on so many different forms and guises. I can't tell you how deeply, deeply satisfying this is. It has allowed me to step out of the restrictive box and begin to tell all kinds of people that I love them. It has shown me that there are so many forms and types of love with different degrees of intensity and intimacy and this freedom has allowed me to feel and also to express this weird-ass emotion much more freely and with a total unconcern as to whether it's reciprocated or expressed. None of my business what you're feeling. I sense it most of the time but not always and I am so okay with that fact. Other people undoubtedly have their own definitions of what it is that might not jive with mine.
Hey, how about that shit?
I try to jot down one special thing I'm grateful for every day and I'm struck by the fact that it is almost always a live human being. There are a few dead human beings in there and the occasional great travel experience or delicious type of cake but it's mostly people I see or talk to and where I can express this emotion. It's the essence of life, isn't it?
Back to Saint Frank: "To seek to love rather than be loved."