respect is to respect him. The best way to teach someone to love is by loving him. And you don’t
force the love or trust or respect on him—after all, that would make those things conditional—
you simply give them, understanding that at some point, the adolescent’s bargaining will fail and
he’ll understand the value of unconditionality when he’s ready.
31
When parents and teachers fail, it’s usually because they themselves are stuck at an
adolescent level of values. They, too, see the world in transactional terms. They, too, bargain
love for sex, loyalty for affection, respect for obedience. In fact, they likely bargain with their
kids for affection, love, or respect. They think this is normal, so the kid grows up thinking it’s
normal. And the shitty, shallow, transactional parent/child relationship is then replicated when
the kid goes out and forms relationships in the world, because
he then becomes a teacher or
parent and imparts his adolescent values on children, causing the whole mess to continue for
another generation.
Once older, adolescent-minded people will move through the world assuming that all human
relationships are a never-ending trade agreement, that intimacy is no more than a feigned sense
of knowing the other person for the mutual benefit of each one, that everyone is a means to some
selfish end. And instead of recognizing that their problems are rooted in the transactional
approach to the world itself, they will assume that the only problem is that it took them so long to
do the transactions correctly.
It’s difficult to act unconditionally. You love someone knowing you may not be loved in
return, but you do it anyway. You trust someone even though you realize you might get hurt or
screwed over. That’s because to act unconditionally requires some degree of faith—faith that it’s
the right thing to do even if it results in more pain, even if it doesn’t work out for you or the
other person.
Making the leap of faith into a virtuous adulthood requires not just an ability to endure pain,
but also the courage to abandon hope, to let go of the desire for things always to be better or
more pleasant or a ton of fun. Your Thinking Brain will tell you that this is illogical, that your
assumptions must inevitably be wrong in some way. Yet, you do it anyway. Your Feeling Brain
will procrastinate and freak out about the pain of brutal honesty, the vulnerability that comes
with loving someone, the fear that comes from humility. Yet, you do it anyway.
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