There’s A Fourth Kind Of Love You Probably Never Knew Existed

The word love means many things to many people. No one seems to agree on how many different types of love there are, and that’s not even considering religious, spiritual, and philosophical points of view on the subject.

In an Elephant Journal article, writer and spiritual practitioner/coach Kristin Luce discusses three types of love that we’re all familiar with and one that some may not know.

Here are the four kinds of love:

1. Loving kindness

This is when we’re loving and kind towards ourselves. Or, as Luce puts it, “It is a lack of self-aggression and a gentleness toward all that arises from within us as well — a welcoming.”

2. Compassion

This is when our hearts break when we see someone else suffer, and we empathize with what they’re going through.

3. Sympathetic joy

This love is when we’re happy for others, including our enemies. Luce says, “I feel joy when you feel joy, no matter what our relationship.”

4. Equanimity

One way to describe equanimity is the feeling that you don’t mind what happens or have the ability to see without being caught by what you see. Luce says, “The fourth kind of love is one very big, ‘Okay. Yes, I accept.’ It is not dismissive, distancing, or sarcastic. It is relentlessly and ruthlessly real.”

Equanimity might not be logical, but not everything that happens is. “It [equanimity] is a radical opening of acceptance to what is. If we go further, it is more than just ‘Okay,’ It is a ‘yes’ to everything that happens.”

Let’s break it down further. The English word equanimity translates into two Pali words used by the Buddha. Each represents a different aspect of equanimity.

The first word translated as equanimity is upekkha, meaning to look over. It refers to the equanimity that comes from the power of observation, the ability to see without being caught by what we see. This power can give one a great sense of peace.

Upekkha can also mean the peace that comes from seeing the bigger picture or seeing with understanding and patience.

Think of a grandmother’s love; she clearly loves her grandchildren, but her experiences with her own children make her less likely to be caught up in her grandchildren’s lives.

The second word that’s often translated as equanimity is tatramajjhattata, a compound word made up of the phrase Tatra, meaning “there,” Majjha, meaning “middle,” and Tata, meaning to “stand” or “pose.” Put all the words together, and you get to stand in the middle of all this or remain balanced in the middle of whatever is happening.

This centeredness comes from inner strength, stability, calm, well-being, and integrity.

Luce writes, “When we open to equanimity, we become open to everything. We stop picking and choosing based on what we like and don’t like. We stop separating ourselves in an attempt to feel less than.” When having equanimity, our relationships improve.

“With equanimity, we become unchained from the burden of having to judge, manage, figure out or fix anything anymore,” Luce says. “Relationships become beautiful, exciting, and changeable; in a sense, they are not personal, just like the weather.”

Equanimity allows us to feel the other types of love more genuinely and honestly, without negativity. Luce writes, “We just love ourselves for no reason. We are just compassionate for no reason. We are just happy for others for no reason and when it doesn’t even make sense. Equanimity is the secret ingredient that makes the bread rise.”

Originally written by Christine Schoenwald on YourTango

Featured image via cottonbro studio on Pexels

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