The Mastery of Love
September 2007 - Book of The Month
The Mastery of
Love, by Don Miguel Ruiz
This book is a
recommendation truly as a follow-up to his earlier
work, The Four
Agreements. When the message this
earlier book is received and embodied, it has the power
to transform your life in the most empowering of ways.
While I am not far into it, I sense a similar potency
in The Mastery of
Love. If you have ever wanted
to understand love as an action and purposeful way of
life, you'll gain insights from this book.
Excerpt:
I want you to imagine
that you live on a planet where everyone has a skin
disease. For two or three thousand years, the people on
your planet have suffered the same disease: Their
entire bodies are covered by wounds that are infected,
and those wounds really hurt when you touch them. Of
course, they believe this is a normal physiology of the
skin. Even the medical books describe this disease as a
normal condition. When the people are born, their skin
is healthy, but around three or four years of age, the
first wounds start to appear. By the time they are
teenagers, there are wounds all over their bodies.
Can you imagine how these people are going to treat
each other? In order to relate with one another, they
have to protect their wounds. They hardly ever touch
each other’s skin because it is too painful. If by
accident you touch someone’s skin, it is so painful
that right away she gets angry and touches your skin,
just to get even. Still, the instinct to love is so
strong that you pay a high price to have relationships
with others.
Well, imagine that a miracle occurs one day. You awake
and your skin is completely healed. There are no wounds
anymore, and it doesn’t hurt to be touched. Healthy
skin you can touch feels wonderful because the skin is
made for perception. Can you imagine yourself with
healthy skin in a world where everyone has a skin
disease? You cannot touch others because it hurts them,
and no one touches you because they make the assumption
that it will hurt you.
If you can imagine this, perhaps you can understand
that someone from another planet who came to visit us
would have a similar experience with humans. But it
isn’t our skin that is full of wounds. What thevisitor
would discover is that the human mind issick with a
disease called fear. Just like the description of the
infected skin, the emotional body is full ofwounds, and
these wounds are infected with emotional poison. The
manifestation of the disease of fear is anger, hate,
sadness, envy, and hypocrisy; the result of the disease
is all the emotions that make humans suffer.
...
Imagine that you could visit a planet where everyone
has a different kind of emotional mind. The way they
relate to each other is always in happiness, always in
love, always in peace. Now imagine that one day you
awake on this planet, and you no longer have wounds in
your emotional body. You are no longer afraid to be who
you are. Whatever someone says about you, whatever they
do, you don’t take it personally, and it doesn’t hurt
anymore. You no longer need to protect yourself. You
are not afraid to love, to share, to open your heart.
But no one else is like you. How can you relate with
people who are emotionally wounded and sick with
fear?
More Info &
Excerpts