"Love is just another name for what never gets old". The beauty and magic of love is not in the fleeting feelings of heavy passion, but in deep bonds, attachment and commitment that is formed and grown over time.
This book talks about love in so many different ways: scientific, physical, psychological, even religious. There are theories on how humans developed this characteristic of deep, lasting attachment to others and how it is "a source of meaning in a meaningless world". And how if we go without it, we quite literally die. How attachments in our early childhood affect our behaviors and resiliency as adults, "how true independence requires that we become dependent on someone else," love is a source of pleasure as well as a kind of protection, the necessity of trust and vulnerability and how love is really at the center of all that we do and all that we are.
-Mental health is defined by how we cope.
-The essence of love is realizing someone matters more than you
-Happiness equals love full stop
-The loveless were 3 times more likely to have been diagnosed with mental illness, five times more likely to be unusually anxious and for times less likely to rely on mature adaptations when dealing with adversity. subjects from loving homes earned 50% more money over their careers
-loneliness kills
-Success means nothing if it's not shared
- life satisfaction = the capacity for loving relationships
- love never loses the capacity to transform what it touches
- the capacity for love turns out to be a great predictor of mortality
- limerence - the all consuming infatuation for another person usually after a brief meeting, is almost always an illusion
- Theory on why we have the most durable emotional attachment ever created is because humans have shorter gestation periods which requires longer care outside of the womb and taking care of children is arduous and ranked very unpleasant at times so we must have instincts to keep us tied to our children
- the importance of a present father was discussed and the huge benefits it has on the child's early intellectual development
- "Present" parenting is necessary to form a "secure base"
- attunement (when our bodies mirror another's with heartbeat, breathing rate, and blood chemistry etc...) happens automatically. Scenes of attunement are a brief vacation from the stresses of adulthood, a chance to lose ourselves in the most visceral delights of life, we are finally present in the moment (quality of time with your kids matters more than quantity)
- women with insecure avoidant attachments were much more likely to suppress their fears and not share information with their partner. the more anxious they were, the less they sought support
- "all of us from the cradle to the grave are happiest when life is organized as a series of excursions, long or short, from the secure base provided by our attachment figures
- we want to fall in love and keep falling but passion always fades. THE KEY is to keep relighting the candle "love isn't a feeling, it's a practice"
- healthy attachment leads to healthy sex, and trying things with someone you trust
- the best sex is about getting as close as we can, in th emost literal and emotional sense, to another human being
- the reality of love is that the perfect lover doesn't exist
- suggested that it matters more about similar tempers being together and less about similar people. this quality allows affection to grow over time (meta-emotional compatibility)
- problems should be solved before they fester. find a way to cope with differences
- empathy is an absolute necessity in every lasting relationship even when it feels like a sacrifice
- married people are statistically healthier and happier and higher resilience
- "partner responsiveness" is very important - the extent to which people believe their partners understand, validate and care for them
- like every other love, the love with God can change lives
- believing in Him means we are never alone, gives our lives structure. proved to lower stress, loneliness, depression
- God matters because he changes lives, not just scientifically for the health menefits
- "no matter how wrong things seem to be, they are all right"
- salvation is only the start of the never ending fight
- sharing his weakness was his last source of strength (on AA trying to replace a chemical dependence with a human one)
- "every separation is a link" (on us and God)
- joy is the overflowing consciousness of reality
- the love demanded to be something else, it demanded to be expressed beyond the expression of the participants. That excess energy, i think, is God, and I think it's God in us trying to return to its source. Excess energy
- "To turn from everything to one face is to find oneself face to face with everything" !!!!!!!
- faith, like love, is ultimately a private expereince, knowable from the inside only... you either know Him or you don't but you can't reason your way across the chasm of faith
- whoever lives in love lives in God and God in them
- love dies or else lovers die
- although love is the cuase of our purest joys, its inevitable loss is also responsible for our most intense suffering
- post traumatic growth "what doesn't kill us makes us stronger". Suffering can interrupt the busyness of our lives and make us ask what kind of life we were living and who do we want to be?
- hardship leads to something better when it's used as an opportunity for self-assessment
- pain becomes an engine of menaing
- the rupture of attachment makes us more determined than ever to attach ourselves to others
- "but we don't want to be safe. When it comes to love, we are reckless creatures. The tragedy is plain as day - everyone we love will die, unless we die first - but we live in denial of this truth, for that is the only way to feel alive. Thank God we never learn"
- memory sustains love. Intimacy is made possible by history, for the feeling of love is as much a memory as it is an experience
- the act of remembering changes the memory itself. becuase they're always changing, we can change them for the better (build something out of the ruins)
- people could not choose what to forget they ahd to find ways to live with what they remembered (nothing fixes a thing so intensely in the memory as the wish to forget it)
- "coherence" of memories is most important. How we recall it all together, the meaning we take from it, this is what we have the power to change!!!!!! "earned-secure". if you have an unstable childhood but make the most of it with how you remember it, the menaing you take from it, the stories you tell yourself about it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
- how you describe the past of a relationship predicts the future. A couple's ability to cope with unexpected turns is key. talk in "we's" and how the hardships make us better.
- before we make sense of the past, we need to revisit it, following the mind into all sorts of sentimental corners and nostalgic cul-de-sacs : both with talk and writing therapy
- revision = revealing
- confronting trauma = assimilating the event. put feeling into words. Touch those deepest emotions and thoughts you have, shape a new narrative
- our recollections could always be rewritten so do so until we find a version that gives us peace and solace
- telling stories over dinner helps children develop their ability to form coherent recollections = higher levels of emotional well-being and personal identity
- nothing lasts forever and the sooner we accept that the sooner we get to living
- stories of redemption are a higher indicator of happiness than just happy lives
- life is a complex mix of failures and success and it's good to rememebr that
- indifference is opposite of love, not hate. Hate and lvoe both persist. this is why you still remember your exs, you still stalk occaisonally or see the min your dreams