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On
Love
by Kent Nerbern Minnesota
It
is a mystery why we fall in love. It is a mystery how it happens. It is
a mystery when it comes. It is a mystery why some loves grow, and it is
a mystery why some loves fail. You can analyze this mystery and look for
reasons and causes, but you will never do any more than take the life
out of the experience.
Love is more than the sum of the interests and attractions and commonalities
that two people share. And just as life itself is a gift that comes and
goes in its time, the coming of love must be taken as an unfathomable
gift that cannot be questioned in its ways.
You need to treat what love brings you with kindness. If you find yourself
in love with someone who does not love you, be gentle with yourself. There
is nothing wrong with you. Love just didnt choose to rest in the
other persons heart.
If you find someone else in love with you toward whom you feel no love,
feel honored that love came and called at your door, but gently refuse
the gift you cannot return. Do not take advantage; do not cause pain.
How you deal with love is how love will deal with you, and all our hearts
feel the same pains and joys, even if our lives and ways are very different.
If you fall in love with another who falls in love with you, and then
love chooses to leave, do not try to reclaim it or to assess blame. Let
it go. There is a reason and there is a meaning. You will know it in time,
but time itself will choose the moment.
Remember this and keep it in your heart. You dont choose love. Love
chooses you. All you can really do is accept it for all its mystery when
it comes into your life. Feel the way it fills you to overflowing, then
reach out and give it away. Give it back to the person who brought it
to you. Give it to others who seem poor in spirit. Give it to the world
around you in any way you can.
Love has its own time, its own season, and its own reasons for coming
and going. You cannot bribe it or coerce it or reason it into staying.
If it chooses to leave your heart or the heart of your lover, there is
nothing you can do and nothing you should do. Be glad that it came to
live for a moment in your life. If you keep your heart open, it will surely
come again.
Excerpted
with permission from Simple Truths: Clear & Gentle Guidance
on the Big Issues in Life, 2005, New World Library, Novato, CA.
Kent
Nerburn is an author, sculptor and educator who has been deeply involved
in Native American issues and education. Nerburn is also the author of
Letters to My Son, a book of essays written as a gift to his son and Neither
Wolf Nor Dog: On Forgotten Roads, winner of the Minnesota Book Award for
1995. He lives with his wife, Louise, and their son Nik, in Northern Minnesota.
His website is
www.kentnerburn.com.
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