Love.
It's a word with baggage. An overused word. A word applied to fabric softener and dish detergent, to songs and fast food, sports teams and automobile parts and that one particular shade of vermillion.
We love clothing and cosmetics and movies and tv shows and certain brands of cracker (but not those other ones - those other ones are horrible!).
Sometimes we say "I love you" like it's painful. Like we're ashamed of it.
In our cultural (of the Western sort, particularly USA style), we have an idea what it means to love, and maybe even categorize it a little, but mostly we don't think about it awfully much. We're shy of feeling it, terrible at and terrified of saying it, and generally wish we had more of it while simultaneously pretending that we're just fine without it thankyouverymuch.
Recently, the Evil Genius, his father, and I were discussing the use (or, rather, misuse) of "philia" as it is often appended to words. That led to looking up words for love, particularly Greek words, which led to...well...this post.
It has been a minute since I read about or studied Greek (except their food, of which I am a devotee), so I only vaguely remembered that there are a handful of different types of love in the ancient Greek world, and I couldn't recall more than a couple of them, so I hopped on down the rabbit hole of the Internetz and found myself a list that seems, to my faulty memory, to be complete. No need to disillusion me. I am contemplating rearranging my vocabulary to include these words, because who doesn't need more verbal tools? No need to disillusion me there, either.
Folks, je vouz presenter le list of love words. I hope you find 'em handy and help spread the...er...love.
Eros - romantic, passionate love. You know, cheesy romance novel love. Passion, lust, pleasure, yes please and thank you. Interestingly, it seems this was a terrifying kind of love to the ancient Greeks because it meant losing control, loss of free will, an unthinking drive to frolic among the wildflowers and make with the whoopee, ohhh, yeahhh. Intense romantic and sexual feelings that demanded action, baby!!! Eros can wreak havoc, rob one of sense, and bring a body to their knees. It is a conflagration that is as likely to consume and leave nothing but ash behind as it is to settle into something more easily felt, experienced, and lived with. I dread this love, because on the rare occasions I've brushed against its edges, it has been disastrous. This one, for me, is to be endured until it, hopefully, ebbs or ends.
Philia - affectionate love. This is the friendly love, a platonic love that doesn't require or even want, really, any sort of physical attraction. This is a gentle, warming love. I can relate strongly to this one. I philia my friends so hard!
Agape - a selfless, universal love. This is the love for the stranger, for nature, for deity. It is an abstract kind of love. Sometimes it feels - gently - overwhelming. Agape is unconditional, boundlessly compassionate, infinitely empathetic. It is a love extended to all, and I mean all. I grok this one deeply - this love suffuses me to bursting. It is my salvation and my curse.
Storge - love of/for the familiar. This is a protective, kinship kind of love, what we feel for family and, occasionally, translates to patriotism. It's a love of loyalty, of what we know, of the puzzle into which our weird, curvy parts fit perfectly. I have an enormous storge for my family, both the born into and the chosen into.
Mania - obsessive love. This is the love that can turn into anger, violence, and destruction with hardly any effort. In fact, it takes more effort to keep it from becoming those things. This is stalking kind of love. This is co-dependency, jealousy, and violence. This is the toxic love that poisons, devours, and kills. This is the love that teaches us that not all love is such a good thing. I think I've dipped my toes into this kind of love, but thankfully never fully immersed in it.
Ludus - playful love. This is a sweet, funny kind of love. It's the teasing love of flirting with a crush, the affection between new lovers who laugh, joke, float along on a wave of endorphins and happy little discoveries. You know, the annoying kind of love! Yeah, I want some, too.
Pragma - enduring love. Pragma is a love built on a strong foundation of commitment, understanding, the long haul. It's a love that has gone through some shit, learned to compromise, found patience and tolerance, and matured. I have witnessed this love, and envy those who experience it.
Philautia - self love. No, not that kind of self love. Or, well, why not that kind of self love? But really, this is the kind of love that speaks of appreciation for self, of knowing, of caring for one's self. This is the kind of love that turns inward yet help connect us to others - as we learn to love ourselves, quirks and peccadillos and all, we learn to love and appreciate others. Like many, I'm working on this one.
I'm going to add a link, here, to a non-Greek post about another kind of love - perfect love - because I think it's pertinent.
I don't think any of the above loves stand alone. I believe that we can experience constant combinations and evolutions of the emotion, which is probably why we find it so confusing. Love is one wild ride, but it's a wild ride that we want, need, to experience if we are to live fully.
I agape you, and now Imma go storge my kids and philia the cats. How's your love life?
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