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LOVE IS A MANY SPLENDORED THING

ARIS P. AÑONUEVO, SSS                                              

SEXUALITY AND INTEGRATION


LOVE IS A MANY SPLENDORED THING
A Reflection on the chapter Metaphysical Analysis of Love
From the book Love and Responsibility by Karol Wojtyla

          “Love is a many splendored thing, it’s the April rose that grows only in the spring….” So goes a song about love. It is a classic and it still rings true even after many generations from the time it was first heard. Love has many faces; it is a complex reality which has been the subject of great thinkers and writers of times past yet so simple and pure that it can make a poet out of an illiterate man. Love is a universal experience. Without love, according to a book entitled “The Name of the Rose,” life would be peaceful and tranquil, yet so dull. Love keeps us going, it makes the world go round!

            When was the last time I fell in love anyway? My mind wandered as I was browsing through the given material. The feeling became alive once more as if it were only yesterday when I professed my love to a girl I had my eye on way back in college. I could only smile at the memories of sleepless night thinking about her, the weekends which seemed to drag so slow, the thrill of looking into her brown eyes, the warmth of her touch and the sweetness of her smile. And then, the agony of defeat when she chose someone else. Perhaps I was very young then, unable to handle the strange feelings flooding into my consciousness. I admit I became a sentimental fool, I was all emotions. It was all about admiring the qualities and attributes that she possessed that are not in me. She seemed to fill that which is missing in me. When she turned me down I vowed never to invest too much emotion on love anymore. I’d be more detached, and practical. This resolution led me to read articles about body language, subtle seduction techniques, how to flirt. In short, I wanted to be more rational about love, never putting a woman on a pedestal, else, she would just run further away. There were times when I asked myself whether I still have the capacity to love genuinely.

            What is love? This has always been my question and this is also a question I am often asked about. My experiences of rejection early in life made me feel love as something to be scared about. I was contented of loving from a distance since it shields me from pain. When I am in the presence of my friends I am an outstanding wit but in her presence I am reduced to some incomprehensible grunts. Ah, a typical ‘torpe’ that I was. Teen agers of today are luckier with the technologies available. Back then, love letters got torn to shreds even before the message has been read. That was love for me, choosing to admire in silence, because in my silence there is no rejection.

            As I grew a little bit older, I encountered a broader definition of love. It went this way: “Love is a series of good intentions put into action by a lover to his/her beloved without counting the cost.” It is not enough, I was told, to love at a distance, it must be expressed in words, manifested in deeds, (no wonder I have been plagued by pimple back then, it was a case of unspoken love), without asking nor demanding something in return. I stood by this definition for years now even if I feel something one-sided about it. It seems to lean towards martyrdom, to

love and get hurt because it is better than not loving at all. It is all self giving. What about the giver?  Must he/she always give himself/herself in love because of the commitment to do so? It seemed to me that such a definition is devoid of the “kilig factor.”

            Having loved and lost before, I too, took an active part in this unending search for the meaning of what love is. Karol Wojtyla’s work came just at a right time. By far it is the most comprehensive work that I encountered in this subject. It opened up new dimensions and broadened my views. I found it even surprising that love is metaphysical. No wonder it is so hard to define it using simple categories. There points were he was able to put into words some thoughts that are struggling within me for utterance. And still others remind me of what others writers wrote in simpler language. Love, I realized, is not static, nor is it love at all to see everything from a distance. Love is that which transforms and improves the soul (P. Coelho).  Love is dynamic, a process which follows a pattern, it contains essential elements to be called such. When do love begin? Comradeship can be a seedbed for love since it is a ground where men and women could get in contact with each other thereby becoming aware of each other’s presence. It can yield situations where physical attraction are triggered and become a starting point of something that is deep. If it is shallow and based only on the outside, it can be easily turned of in the blink of an eye. When we are attracted, we say, we fall to a person. And when it waxed, we fall out of it. But when our attraction turns and grows into a desire, a longing for a person, we say that we have fallen in love. Desire can have selfish connotations but Wojtyla points out the desire that is connected to our need for companionship, for someone to fill the gap between our fingers. Bringing it further, I remember Nancy Van Pelt who said something like, “We don’t fall in love, we climb into it.” Climbing into love is another interesting dimension. When one gets over the emotions and great desire to be happy with another person, when being in love has faded, so to say, only love remains. This happens when a person desire also for what is good for the other. This is goodwill, a conscious act, a series of good intentions put into action. We seem to have gone back to my old definition. But let me assure you it will no longer lead to what I called martyrdom of sort. For Karol Wojtyla spoke of reciprocity because loving is not a one-way street, it is indeed a dynamic process and therefore it has to be reciprocated in order to be complete. “Unequited love is condemned first to stagnation, then to gradual extinction.” It is not something that exist in both persons involved but it exist between those persons. Two becomes one. Now there is an answer to the lovers’ cry, “Why is there ‘you’ and ‘me’ but there can never be ‘us’?” Love is not looking at one another but looking at one direction. This mutual relationship between two persons is called love. Mutual relationship, give and take, so to speak is what describes friendship. This reminds me of Princess Diana’s advice to his son William, “Marry your best friend.” No wonder priests would always advice newlywed couples to treat their spouse as their best friend for life.


To God be the glory.

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