Unconditional Love
Feb. 19th, 2007 01:40 pmThis has crossed my mind a few times recently, and has been making enough of a clamor that I've decided to write at least some of it down. So here, I present to you my ramblings about unconditional love and why it's a dangerous ideal.
Seems like a simple enough concept: love that doesn't have any conditions on it. Loving someone unconditionally means that you love them and will continue to love them regardless of what they do/are. Anything else, to me, and it seems like it would become a misnomer. Furthermore, it seems like an all-or-nothing kind of thing; either you love everyone unconditionally, or you don't love anybody unconditionally. If you try to pick one person and say, "I love you unconditionally," then it's kind of an oxymoron. It can't be unconditional love because it comes with the condition that it only applies to them; if they were someone else you wouldn't love them anymore.
I do think it is possible to love unconditionally. But I also think that the type of love that it is possible for me to give unconditionally is... limited. It's a kind of general "I hope that you will continue to grow personally for your entire life," sentiment--and even that might turn out to be conditional; I might not be able to love someone like that if they made it their personal mission to turn my life into a living hell (and I don't care to experiment!)
Between that, and some of the other thinking that I've been doing about validation/getting my own needs met/taking care of myself, it seems like it would be unhealthy to try to make any more in-depth love unconditional. Disregarding the "can't love only one person unconditionally" statement from before, even trying to do that seems like it would not be a good plan. People change. If they start taking advantage of that love and using it to overrun my life, I'd basically just have to let them do it if I were sticking to the "Oh, I love them unconditionally so even though they're now a complete asshole it would betray our love if I tried to stop them." Even if they weren't being a complete asshole, this concept of unconditional love still seems like it's at least a next door neighbor to codependency, if not a housemate!
Thoughts?
Seems like a simple enough concept: love that doesn't have any conditions on it. Loving someone unconditionally means that you love them and will continue to love them regardless of what they do/are. Anything else, to me, and it seems like it would become a misnomer. Furthermore, it seems like an all-or-nothing kind of thing; either you love everyone unconditionally, or you don't love anybody unconditionally. If you try to pick one person and say, "I love you unconditionally," then it's kind of an oxymoron. It can't be unconditional love because it comes with the condition that it only applies to them; if they were someone else you wouldn't love them anymore.
I do think it is possible to love unconditionally. But I also think that the type of love that it is possible for me to give unconditionally is... limited. It's a kind of general "I hope that you will continue to grow personally for your entire life," sentiment--and even that might turn out to be conditional; I might not be able to love someone like that if they made it their personal mission to turn my life into a living hell (and I don't care to experiment!)
Between that, and some of the other thinking that I've been doing about validation/getting my own needs met/taking care of myself, it seems like it would be unhealthy to try to make any more in-depth love unconditional. Disregarding the "can't love only one person unconditionally" statement from before, even trying to do that seems like it would not be a good plan. People change. If they start taking advantage of that love and using it to overrun my life, I'd basically just have to let them do it if I were sticking to the "Oh, I love them unconditionally so even though they're now a complete asshole it would betray our love if I tried to stop them." Even if they weren't being a complete asshole, this concept of unconditional love still seems like it's at least a next door neighbor to codependency, if not a housemate!
Thoughts?
no subject
Date: 2007-02-19 11:00 pm (UTC)I also agree with your assessment of the (potential) problems of unconditonal love. Whether or not it's desirable to love someone you can't be around is another question, but for some people love does create a risk of being used. It may be those people need to work away from unconditional love, at least until they can set up better boundaries.
As for unconditional love having to include everyone, I see your point but I don't think most people use the term in that way. A possible middle ground is a friend of mine: few people earn her love, but once they do it's pretty far towards the "unconditional" ideal.