(IMG) Rainbow hug
       
       The Art Of Loving by Erich Fromm
       published 1956
       
       Excerpts for Validation Day
       
       The most fundamental kind of love, which underlies all types of lov
       is brotherly/sisterly love.  By this i mean the sense of
       responsibility, care, respect, knowledge of any other human being, 
       wish to further their life.  This is the kind of love the Bible spe
       of when it says: love thy neighbor as thyself.  Brotherly/Sisterly
       love is love for all human beings; it is characterized by its very
       lack of exclusiveness.  If i have developed the capacity for love,
       then i cannot help loving my brothers/sisters.  In brotherly/sister
       love there is the experience of union with all humanity, of human
       solidarity, of human at-onement.  Brotherly/sisterly love is based 
       the experience that we are all one.  The differences in talents,
       intelligence, knowledge are negligible in comparison with the ident
       of the human core common to all humanity.  In order to experience t
       identity it is necessary to penetrate from the periphery to the cor
       If i perceive in another person mainly the surface, i perceive main
       the differences, that which separates us.  If i penetrate to the co
       i perceive our identity, the fact of our brotherhood/sisterhood.  .
       
       Brotherly/sisterly love is love between equals: but indeed, even as
       equals we are not always "equal"; inasmuch as we are human, we are 
       in need of help.  Today i, tomorrow you.  But this need of help doe
       not mean that the one is helpless, the other powerful.  Helplessnes
       is a transitory condition; the ability to stand and walk on one's o
       feet is the permanent and common one.
       
       Concentration is by far more difficult to practice in our culture, 
       which everything seems to act against the ability to concentrate. .
       Indeed, to be able to concentrate means to be able to be alone with
       oneself-and this ability is precisely a condition for the ability t
       love. ... Anyone who tries to be alone with theirself will discover
       how difficult it is. ... It would be helpful to practice a few very
       simple exercises, as, for instance, to sit in a relaxed position
       (neither slouching, nor rigid), to close one's eyes, and to try to
       see a white screen in front of one's eyes, and to try to remove all
       interfering pictures and thoughts, then to try to follow one's
       breathing; not to think about it, nor force it, but to follow it-an
       in doing so to sense it; furthermore try to have a sense of "I"; I 
       myself, as the center of my powers, as the creator of my world.  On
       should, at least, do such a concentration exercise every morning fo
       twenty minutes (and if possible longer) and every evening before
       going to bed.
       
       Besides such exercises, one must learn to be concentrated in
       everything one does, in listening to music, in reading a book, in
       talking to a person, in seeing a view.  The activity at this very
       moment must be the only thing that matters, to which one is fully
       given.  If one is concentrated, it matters little what one is doing
       the important, as well as the unimportant things assume a new
       dimension of reality, because they have one's full attention.  To
       learn concentration requires avoiding, as far as possible, trivial
       conversation, that is, conversation which is not genuine.  If two
       people talk about the growth of a tree they both know, or about the
       taste of bread they have just eaten together, or about a common
       experience in their job, such conversation can be relevant, provide
       they experience what they are talking about, and do not deal with i
       in an abstract way; on the other hand, a conversation can deal with
       matters of politics or religion and yet be trivial; this happens wh
       the two people talk in cliches, when their hearts are not in what
       they are saying. ...
       
       To be concentrated in relation to others means primarily being able
       listen. ...
       
       To be concentrated means to live fully in the present, in the here 
       now, and not to think of the next thing to be done, while i am doin
       something right now.  Needless to say that concentration must be
       practiced most of all by people who love each other.  They must lea
       to be close to each other without running away in the many ways whi
       this is customarily done. ...
       
       One cannot learn to concentrate without becoming sensitive to
       oneself.  ... One is aware, for instance, of a sense of tiredness o
       depression, and instead of giving in to it and supporting it by
       depressive thoughts which are always at hand, one asks oneself "wha
       happened?"  Why am i depressed?  The same is done by noticing when
       one is irritated or angry, or tending to daydreaming, or other esca
       activities.  In each of these instances the important thing is to b
       aware of them, and not to rationalize them in the thousand and one
       ways in which this can be done; furthermore, to be open to our own
       inner voice, which will tell us-often rather immediately-why we are
       anxious, depressed, or irritated. ...
       
       To love means to commit oneself without guarantee, to give oneself
       completely in the hope that our love will produce love in the loved
       person.  Love is an act of faith, and whoever is of little faith is
       also of little love.
       
       "You didn't know i was watching through the eyes of every person yo
       met, nor could you hear my voice in the wind.  But in your heart i
       await you, my love, forever." -Drunvalo
       
 (DIR) BenCollver - Phlog
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