According to Buddhism, There are four
elements of true love.
The first is maître. Which can be translated
as loving-kindness or benevolence.
Loving-kindness is not only the desire to make someone happy, to bring joy to a
beloved person; it is the ability to bring joy and happiness to the person you
love, because even if your intention is to love this person, your love might
make him or her suffer.
Training is needed in order to love properly;
and to be able to give happiness and joy, must practice deep looking directed
toward the person you love. Because if you do not understand this person,
you cannot love properly.
Understanding is the essence of love. If you cannot understand, you can’t love.
That is the message of the Buddha. If a husband, for example, does not
understand his wife’s deepest troubles, her deepest aspirations, if he does not
understand her suffering, he will not be able to love her in the right way.
Without understanding, love is an impossible thing. What must we do in order to
understand a person? We must have time; we must practice looking deeply into
this person. We must be there, attentive; we must observe, we must look deeply.
And the fruit of this looking deeply is called understanding. Love is a true
thing if it is made up of a substance called understanding.
The second element of true love is compassion,
karuna. This is not only the desire to ease the pain of another person, but the
ability to do so. You must practice deep looking in order to gain a good
understanding of the nature of the suffering of this person, in order to be
able to help him or her to change. Knowledge and understanding are always at
the root of the practice. The practice of understanding is the practice of
meditation. To meditate is to look deeply into the heart of things.
The third element of true love is
joy, mudita. If there is no joy in love, it is not true love. If you are
suffering all the time, if you cry all the time, and if you make the person you
love cry, this is not really love-it is even the opposite. If there is no joy
in your love, you can be sure that it is not true love.
The fourth element is upeksha,
equanimity or freedom. In true love, you attain freedom. When you love, you
bring freedom to the person you love. If the opposite is true, it is not true
love. You must love in such a way that the person you love feels free, not only
outside but also inside. “Dear one, do you have enough space in your heart and
all around you?” This is an intelligent question for testing out whether your
love is something real.
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