Of course loving someone doesn’t mean I'll automatically forgive any of their transgressions against me, quite the opposite in fact, it means I'll go to great lengths to make them understand what they've done and why it was wrong.
What Cognisant said.
Caveat: Those of us on the "really can't deal with emotions very well" end of the scale need to be careful who ends up lavished with "unconditional love." It can be like a faucet in a nightmare: You turn it on but it won't turn off. Speaking logically, it's sometimes, in some ways, just asking to be abused.
That doesn't make any sense. If it's unconditional love, it's inherently everlasting. Something cannot be unconditional and have an expiration date, as the expiration date is itself a condition.For me unconditional love is transitory, a moment lasting a blink or even months.
Maybe it's a personal thing?I do not know if we have a choice in whom we actually love. I agree with Adaire in this matter.
If you unconditionally love someone; you hardly have a choice in the matter. If you could chose, then surely their would be a point at some extrema where it would revoked. Unconditional love is when you cannot bring yourself to stop loving someone, though you desperately want to. Even though you hate them, even if they are the worst type of person. It's really not as pretty of an emotion/state as most people would have you believe.
The antithesis of love is not hate, but apathy and indifference. The people you love and hate have some form of emotional power over you. If they still retain power over you despite your best efforts, then you love or hate them unconditionally(most likely both).
In my own case I can only be sure I love one person unconditionally; but that's only because the other ones I love have not yet been so cruel as to test the limit.
I don't know if I believe in "unconditional love", but I think there is something we tend to call "unconditional love". I think it's more like "responsibility love". I think when people feel an obligation or responsibility to another person or creature (for instance, pets), we have an unconditional love for them. But it's an agreement of responsibility and the more responsible we feel for the them the more we "love" them.
For instance, a pet can do bad things, like pee on the carpet, tear things up, etc... but we might not hold them responsible. They are our responsibility and sometimes we find that it's our fault when something goes wrong. With a child that sense is even more so. A child does something bad and we don't just get rid of them. We try to understand them, we try to teach them, we try to help them... Sometimes this is ideal to women as a sort of relationship, they want someone to be (feel) responsible for them.
But then I wonder what sort of respect this is? I mean the more you respect someone, do you feel responsible for them? That's kind of a confusing thing to me.
I have a tendency towards such relationships having been brought up with an over-inflated sense of my power over other people due to being held responsible for every emotion my mother felt. I knew this when she said things like 'you make me unhappy because you [insert virtually everything I did/thought/felt that wasn't what she had decided I should be doing/thinking/feeling]'. This gives a child an overinflated sense of control over others. Children who grow up in households with parents who take responsibility for their own emotions etc. do not lay this stuff on their children so you are less likely to think you have to feel responsible for others when you become an adult.
Very interesting. I think with most people it's quite the opposite, but honestly, your take on transgressions from loved ones seems much more logical.
That doesn't make any sense. If it's unconditional love, it's inherently everlasting. Something cannot be unconditional and have an expiration date, as the expiration date is itself a condition.
Transitory, meaning short-lived or temporary, meaning it has an end.I didn't say it had an expiration date. I said it was transitory.
Transitory, meaning short-lived or temporary, meaning it has an end.
Unconditional isn't just a word you can attach to anything, it has meaning.Correct.
I can say I have loved unconditionally. I can also say I'm happy. I can't say every moment of my life is happy.
Loving ones self is an example conditional love (More commonly referred to as simply 'love'). If love of ones self was unconditional, there would be no surgeries, beauty products, or many other things.So the issue is: can there be unconditional Love as opposed to its 'opposite' (conditional Love)?
I would affirm my prior statement. That if one removes the condition of Choice from Love - it becomes unconditional....(?)
It is a matter of Self. Freud wrote about the concept of Body Image, how one's body image most likely contains other individuals. re: "I would rather have an arm amputated that 'lose' on of my children" is a statement denoting the relative importance of "body parts"...
Is someone or something a part of you? Then if you love your Self, you love them (unconditionally)
Unconditional isn't just a word you can attach to anything, it has meaning.
That's like saying you're giving something away for free for $10. Given the fact that you're charging, it's not free. It doesn't make any sense in the context you use it in.
Loving ones self is an example conditional love (More commonly referred to as simply 'love'). If love of ones self was unconditional, there would be no surgeries, beauty products, or many other things.
Loving ones self is an example conditional love (More commonly referred to as simply 'love'). If love of ones self was unconditional, there would be no surgeries, beauty products, or many other things.
This assumes that it needs to be shipped, in which case you are still getting whatever has been given for free, but you just need to have it transported to you.Actually people give stuff away for free for $10 all the time, "We are giving away samples for free, all you pay is shipping and handling." :P
'Unconditional' is inherently eternal, due to the fact that time is itself a condition. Furthermore, if it's completely boundless, then there is nothing conceivable that could cause it to end. If it did end, that obviously happened under certain conditions (i.e. making it conditional).Unconditional isn't eternal. It merely states I am not putting conditions on it. Unconditional is not constant. The sun doesn't shine unconditionally (it is an ackward and bordering on nonsensical phrase) though in human lifespans it could be said to shine eternally. There are times I loved someone unconditionally, I suppose it could even be said that I still love them though I don't associate with them.
Different? Yes.Truth! and therein lies perhaps the major challenge of our existence - to learn how to honestly love our Selves. We, as humans, are bombarded by input from our environment, which basically has one message "You are inadequate and not worthy of loving!" Virtually all advertisements use this ploy the viewer is led to believe that somehow they become less inadequate by purchasing the advertised product. Needless to say almost all social institutions preach this message. In school, you are inadequate if you do not get "A's, As a teenager you are inadequate if you do not get laid, drunk or high often enough.
Needless to say, if everyone believed that he or she were adequate and worthy of loving JUST AS HE OR SHE IS, we would live in a different world...
My argument is that if love of ones self was unconditional such things would have no demand. If someone loves themselves unconditionally and has a burnt face, why would they waste time and money on surgery when they already love everything about themselves?So a burn victim wouldn't love themself if they got facial reconstruction done? That is if your argument about unconditional is unconditional.
What makes up ones self is ones body. The idea of self in generated in the brain (which is a part of ones body), but if you get stabbed in the leg you (you as in yourself) get stabbed.420MuNkEy: There's a difference between loving one's Self and loving one's body. I generally do not care much about my body: it's like my car. It gets me places and hasn't given me too many problems. I have occasional body issues, but they don't change how I feel about me. Me-- that is, my Self-- is a different matter, and I have a lot of difficulty doing what Da Blob has advocated: simply liking and accepting my own being for what I am. Body/health issues are sometimes an expression for dislike of the Self, but in some cases they are simply shallow aesthetic concerns, unrelated to deeper issues of Self love, hatred or indifference. And that is clearly the category someone with an inflamed appendix-- or, quite likely, a burn vitim-- seeking medical intervention falls into.
I agree, the idea of ones 'self' is not purely limited to the physical, but that concept of self almost always includes the entirety of ones body.The brain is only a part of one's body. I could lose a leg and have it replaced with a prothesis, and still be me, my Self. Indeed, I could probably have all my memories placed into a robotic body, given the appropriate advancement of technology, and still be myself. If our Self is based upon a mixture of our memories (which influence our opinions, our own codes of ethics, and our convictions), our perception of the world, and our own innate personality traits, then the only parts of the body innate to the Self would be the input organs (all sensing organs) and our brains. Everything else can be replaced with no consequence to the Self, assuming no major health issues came of the replacement.
Also, this is getting kind of off-topic.![]()
An infant is not aware of the concept of 'self' (as demonstrated by the mirror test and rouge test experiments). Maybe you are using 'self' in a different way than I am. I'd roughly define 'self' as the sum of ones being.Re: Self and Body. A person's Freudian body image really does not concern the physical body as much as the emotional body. There is a stage of life where the division or discernment that One's body is a separate 'thing' has not yet occurred... An infant thinks that a breast/bottle is a part of its Self (as well as the person holding the bottle or offering the breast...) This 'primitive' POV gains inertia and continues for quite a while into childhood and perhaps even into adulthood at an unconscious level...
'Unconditional' is inherently eternal, due to the fact that time is itself a condition. Furthermore, if it's completely boundless, then there is nothing conceivable that could cause it to end. If it did end, that obviously happened under certain conditions (i.e. making it conditional).
Also, we know the life of the sun is finite, so anyone making a statement as to it being eternal is either exaggerating or falsifying information.
My argument is that if love of ones self was unconditional such things would have no demand. If someone loves themselves unconditionally and has a burnt face, why would they waste time and money on surgery when they already love everything about themselves?
I guess I'm in the same boat as Ombat. My parents never made me responsible for their emotions. They were responsible for me and my decisions, which I found very irritating. So... eventually it was easier to adjust how much I communicated with them and what I communicated with them.
I feel like that's pretty normal though.
My mom grew up in a situation where her parents hardly took responsibility for her. Both my parents were kind of that way though.
After reading your replies, it's painfully obvious that you either skimmed my replies or completely misunderstood them. Either way, I'm not going to bother debating this subject with you anymore, as it will just lead in circlesWhen you asked me about the transitory thing did you intend anything other than to pontificate?
By the way science tends to view even the life of the universe as finite. One definition of eternal is enduring. It seems pretty reasonable to call a star eternal if you can call anything eternal.
I stand by my original assertion that it is transitory for me. I suppose if you must push your point then I think even now for those I have had unconditional love I still have such for them, even though one at least wounded me greatly. Perhaps wishing it were otherwise is the impetus for my comment of it being transitory. The strength of such, as with anything, varies and I feel it more weakly than once.
A person that really loves themself unconditionally wouldn't let the ruin of their face after reconstruction stop them from doing the things they like doing or going in public. Such reconstructions are far from perfect.
Taking cosmetics as an example, I think for many it is a sort of social ritual that signals the anticipation of an evening out.
For cosmetic surgery there are professional reasons to get work done. Stippers with larger breasts statistically earn more money. Television personalities are expected to have perfect teeth and hair. Women with overly large breasts will get reductions to improve their well being.
You seem to be making a very wide generalization that has a kind of pop culture truth to it.
Same with my mom. Her mother pretty much treated her like an alien, which is why I believe she overcompensates. She's told me that she wanted to be the opposite of her mother, and she is.
I suppose I feel lucky, in a way, but I think it's had some negative impacts. I've been conditioned to have an over-inflated sense of ego (my mom was also constantly trying to boost my confidence because I was born with a sight impairment) so I act arrogant, but actually think I'm worthless. I don't think this kind of "unconditional" loving is healthy if taken too far.
After reading your replies, it's painfully obvious that you either skimmed my replies or completely misunderstood them. Either way, I'm not going to bother debating this subject with you anymore, as it will just lead in circles![]()
There isn't one thing that exists that isn't conditional. That's not stretching a word to it's extreme, that's just using it correctly without exaggerating. You love someone under the conditions required to sustain love. You may not be consciously aware that you have conditions, but they are there nonetheless.The idea of unconditional love is that you don't put conditions on it. That idea is an important one as give people a very important question to ask themself. For example, is the message I send my kid that I love him but only when he excels at sports.