So I read all the related posts on Marvin’s thread yesterday and then I left to go audit a beekeeping class (you read that correctly) and then I ended up thinking about life and different kinds of love in the context of bees. Bees only support and help each other. Every single thing a bee does is in service of its fellow bees. They sacrifice their lives basically to keep their colony intact.
But we’re not bees. We have these pesky feelings that come into play, and that quote that feelings make us act in ways that strengthen them is really so important, because our minds can work overtime to find justifications to allow us to act in ways that are against our best interest. The idea of agape love in a one on one relationship has always puzzled me because in a biblical context, it’s universal love and nothing to do with romantic partnership. The definition is also rooted in sacrifice, and sacrifice means to give up something of value for the good of another, to put the needs of others above our own. To do that in an extraordinary circumstance and make a sacrifice for the good of many (usually a one off thing or short duration and helps many people) is one thing. But to put one specific person’s needs above our own and to do so for a prolonged period plainly describes one aspect of the abusive marriage I was in. I guess what I’m saying is that, for me, agape love could potentially apply in terms of talking about “all MLCers” (as in love the sinner hate the sin), but it’s application to “your MLCer” or to individual relationships risks playing out as more trauma bonding and abuse than love. And it’s the people with trauma bonds who are going to be more inclined to want to cling to something like the idea of agape love because it allows the trauma bond to remain intact, and the scariest thing for a person frozen in trauma bond is anything that upsets the false comfort of the status quo. It’s why those with Stockholm syndrome love their captors. In situations where an MLCer has caused severe and even irreparable harm to another’s body, psyche, home, finances, the person undergoing a trauma response has already sacrificed enough.
I agree with what Marvin said on his thread, (paraphrasing) that with a solid sense of self and with empathy, there are times where we give up things that are not critical to help another adult, but to help another if it harms us is not love but more like martyrdom. And I believe things that are critical, like our well-being, physical safety, a regulated nervous system, those are the kinds of things we risk sacrificing early on when we don’t let go of a person who is actually performing the exact opposite of agape love. I feel the need to be explicit in saying that this is not a criticism of what anyone else chooses to do or me pushing a directive of what anyone should/must do, it’s just a thought I had while observing a bee colony. It occurred to me that if our feelings push us to act in ways that reinforce those feelings and do things that are not good for us, then the concept of agape love in the early days of dealing with a BD or any kind of breakup could potentially be used as a justification for not accepting what reality currently is as opposed to the way our feelings wish it to be.
🐝 🐝🐝And here’s Sheryl Crow duetting with a bee’s favorite singer:
🎶
https://youtu.be/FseuxxcTlvA?si=kIC0FqPPUqEnUx6e
The desire to be loved is the last illusion. Give it up and you shall be free. ~ Margaret Atwood