A better way to talk about love | Mandy Len Catron

318,402 views ・ 2017-01-27

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:00
Translator: Leslie Gauthier Reviewer: Camille Martínez
0
0
7000
00:12
OK, so today I want to talk about how we talk about love.
1
12553
4300
00:17
And specifically,
2
17237
1150
00:18
I want to talk about what's wrong with how we talk about love.
3
18411
3435
00:22
Most of us will probably fall in love a few times
4
22673
3407
00:26
over the course of our lives,
5
26104
1465
00:27
and in the English language, this metaphor, falling,
6
27593
4210
00:31
is really the main way that we talk about that experience.
7
31827
3014
00:35
I don't know about you,
8
35592
1151
00:36
but when I conceptualize this metaphor,
9
36767
1927
00:38
what I picture is straight out of a cartoon --
10
38718
2878
00:42
like there's a man,
11
42076
1296
00:43
he's walking down the sidewalk,
12
43396
1717
00:45
without realizing it, he crosses over an open manhole,
13
45137
3112
00:48
and he just plummets into the sewer below.
14
48273
3661
00:51
And I picture it this way because falling is not jumping.
15
51958
4080
00:56
Falling is accidental,
16
56769
2032
00:58
it's uncontrollable.
17
58825
1902
01:00
It's something that happens to us without our consent.
18
60751
3525
01:04
And this --
19
64300
1193
01:05
this is the main way we talk about starting a new relationship.
20
65517
3567
01:10
I am a writer and I'm also an English teacher,
21
70336
3767
01:14
which means I think about words for a living.
22
74127
2285
01:16
You could say that I get paid to argue that the language we use matters,
23
76436
4150
01:20
and I would like to argue that many of the metaphors we use
24
80610
4200
01:24
to talk about love --
25
84834
1567
01:26
maybe even most of them --
26
86425
1823
01:28
are a problem.
27
88272
1401
01:30
So, in love, we fall.
28
90700
1893
01:33
We're struck.
29
93766
1465
01:35
We are crushed.
30
95255
1396
01:37
We swoon.
31
97331
1370
01:39
We burn with passion.
32
99186
1797
01:41
Love makes us crazy,
33
101738
1977
01:43
and it makes us sick.
34
103739
1564
01:45
Our hearts ache,
35
105796
1360
01:47
and then they break.
36
107180
2006
01:50
So our metaphors equate the experience of loving someone
37
110226
3144
01:53
to extreme violence or illness.
38
113394
2653
01:56
(Laughter)
39
116071
2085
01:59
They do.
40
119101
1151
02:00
And they position us as the victims
41
120276
1983
02:02
of unforeseen and totally unavoidable circumstances.
42
122283
3359
02:06
My favorite one of these is "smitten,"
43
126547
2723
02:09
which is the past participle of the word "smite."
44
129294
2854
02:12
And if you look this word up in the dictionary --
45
132172
3068
02:15
(Laughter)
46
135264
1024
02:16
you will see that it can be defined as both "grievous affliction,"
47
136312
4518
02:20
and, "to be very much in love."
48
140854
2851
02:25
I tend to associate the word "smite" with a very particular context,
49
145716
3344
02:29
which is the Old Testament.
50
149084
1564
02:31
In the Book of Exodus alone, there are 16 references to smiting,
51
151560
4748
02:36
which is the word that the Bible uses for the vengeance of an angry God.
52
156332
3773
02:40
(Laughter)
53
160129
1721
02:41
Here we are using the same word to talk about love
54
161874
2705
02:44
that we use to explain a plague of locusts.
55
164603
2426
02:47
(Laughter)
56
167053
1028
02:48
Right?
57
168105
1256
02:49
So, how did this happen?
58
169385
2092
02:51
How have we come to associate love with great pain and suffering?
59
171501
3991
02:55
And why do we talk about this ostensibly good experience
60
175516
3989
02:59
as if we are victims?
61
179529
2104
03:02
These are difficult questions,
62
182556
1691
03:04
but I have some theories.
63
184271
1646
03:05
And to think this through,
64
185941
1239
03:07
I want to focus on one metaphor in particular,
65
187204
2628
03:09
which is the idea of love as madness.
66
189856
2171
03:13
When I first started researching romantic love,
67
193088
2707
03:15
I found these madness metaphors everywhere.
68
195819
2761
03:18
The history of Western culture
69
198604
2103
03:20
is full of language that equates love to mental illness.
70
200731
3937
03:25
These are just a few examples.
71
205440
1927
03:27
William Shakespeare:
72
207391
1343
03:28
"Love is merely a madness,"
73
208758
1433
03:30
from "As You Like It."
74
210215
1317
03:32
Friedrich Nietzsche:
75
212092
1257
03:33
"There is always some madness in love."
76
213373
2503
03:36
"Got me looking, got me looking so crazy in love -- "
77
216559
2866
03:39
(Laughter)
78
219449
2069
03:41
from the great philosopher, Beyoncé Knowles.
79
221542
2598
03:44
(Laughter)
80
224164
1461
03:47
I fell in love for the first time when I was 20,
81
227083
2834
03:49
and it was a pretty turbulent relationship right from the start.
82
229941
3179
03:53
And it was long distance for the first couple of years,
83
233459
3205
03:56
so for me that meant very high highs and very low lows.
84
236688
4596
04:01
I can remember one moment in particular.
85
241794
2204
04:04
I was sitting on a bed in a hostel in South America,
86
244580
3345
04:07
and I was watching the person I love walk out the door.
87
247949
3696
04:12
And it was late,
88
252151
1613
04:13
it was nearly midnight,
89
253788
1260
04:15
we'd gotten into an argument over dinner,
90
255072
1977
04:17
and when we got back to our room,
91
257073
1949
04:19
he threw his things in the bag and stormed out.
92
259046
2725
04:23
While I can no longer remember what that argument was about,
93
263141
3259
04:26
I very clearly remember how I felt watching him leave.
94
266424
4055
04:31
I was 22, it was my first time in the developing world,
95
271122
3545
04:35
and I was totally alone.
96
275424
2255
04:38
I had another week until my flight home,
97
278412
3367
04:41
and I knew the name of the town that I was in,
98
281803
2368
04:44
and the name of the city that I needed to get to to fly out,
99
284195
3583
04:47
but I had no idea how to get around.
100
287802
3256
04:51
I had no guidebook and very little money,
101
291842
3177
04:55
and I spoke no Spanish.
102
295043
1770
04:57
Someone more adventurous than me
103
297547
2097
04:59
might have seen this as a moment of opportunity,
104
299668
2430
05:02
but I just froze.
105
302122
1830
05:04
I just sat there.
106
304406
1817
05:06
And then I burst into tears.
107
306738
2043
05:09
But despite my panic,
108
309357
2371
05:11
some small voice in my head thought,
109
311752
2570
05:14
"Wow. That was dramatic.
110
314346
2337
05:16
I must really be doing this love thing right."
111
316707
2699
05:19
(Laughter)
112
319430
1788
05:21
Because some part of me wanted to feel miserable in love.
113
321242
4520
05:26
And it sounds so strange to me now, but at 22,
114
326226
3440
05:29
I longed to have dramatic experiences,
115
329690
3145
05:32
and in that moment, I was irrational and furious and devastated,
116
332859
5198
05:38
and weirdly enough,
117
338081
1224
05:39
I thought that this somehow legitimized the feelings I had
118
339329
3376
05:42
for the guy who had just left me.
119
342729
1839
05:46
I think on some level I wanted to feel a little bit crazy,
120
346163
4363
05:50
because I thought that that was how love worked.
121
350550
3532
05:55
This really should not be surprising,
122
355141
1807
05:56
considering that according to Wikipedia,
123
356972
2454
05:59
there are eight films,
124
359450
2273
06:01
14 songs,
125
361747
1997
06:03
two albums and one novel with the title "Crazy Love."
126
363768
3197
06:07
About half an hour later, he came back to our room.
127
367837
3126
06:10
We made up.
128
370987
1151
06:12
We spent another mostly happy week traveling together.
129
372162
2817
06:15
And then, when I got home,
130
375003
1432
06:16
I thought, "That was so terrible and so great.
131
376459
4984
06:21
This must be a real romance."
132
381989
1715
06:25
I expected my first love to feel like madness,
133
385006
2700
06:27
and of course, it met that expectation very well.
134
387730
3780
06:31
But loving someone like that --
135
391941
1691
06:33
as if my entire well-being depended on him loving me back --
136
393656
4095
06:37
was not very good for me
137
397775
2093
06:39
or for him.
138
399892
1150
06:41
But I suspect this experience of love is not that unusual.
139
401850
3701
06:46
Most of us do feel a bit mad in the early stages of romantic love.
140
406026
4211
06:50
In fact, there is research to confirm that this is somewhat normal,
141
410815
3816
06:55
because, neurochemically speaking,
142
415280
1886
06:57
romantic love and mental illness are not that easily distinguished.
143
417190
4562
07:03
This is true.
144
423046
1151
07:04
This study from 1999 used blood tests
145
424221
4559
07:08
to confirm that the serotonin levels of the newly in love
146
428804
3094
07:11
very closely resembled the serotonin levels
147
431922
2797
07:14
of people who had been diagnosed with obsessive-compulsive disorder.
148
434743
3305
07:18
(Laughter)
149
438072
1008
07:19
Yes, and low levels of serotonin
150
439104
2697
07:21
are also associated with seasonal affective disorder
151
441825
3602
07:25
and depression.
152
445451
1280
07:27
So there is some evidence
153
447687
2260
07:29
that love is associated with changes to our moods and our behaviors.
154
449971
4348
07:34
And there are other studies to confirm
155
454343
4007
07:38
that most relationships begin this way.
156
458374
3690
07:42
Researchers believe that the low levels of serotonin
157
462660
4163
07:46
is correlated with obsessive thinking about the object of love,
158
466847
4035
07:50
which is like this feeling that someone has set up camp in your brain.
159
470906
4058
07:54
And most of us feel this way when we first fall in love.
160
474988
2931
07:57
But the good news is, it doesn't always last that long --
161
477943
3126
08:01
usually from a few months to a couple of years.
162
481093
3173
08:05
When I got back from my trip to South America,
163
485352
2808
08:08
I spent a lot of time alone in my room,
164
488184
3577
08:11
checking my email,
165
491785
1340
08:13
desperate to hear from the guy I loved.
166
493149
2363
08:16
I decided that if my friends could not understand my grievous affliction,
167
496545
5348
08:21
then I did not need their friendship.
168
501917
1949
08:23
So I stopped hanging out with most of them.
169
503890
2083
08:26
And it was probably the most unhappy year of my life.
170
506387
4194
08:31
But I think I felt like it was my job to be miserable,
171
511086
4114
08:35
because if I could be miserable,
172
515849
1792
08:37
then I would prove how much I loved him.
173
517665
2667
08:40
And if I could prove it,
174
520356
1885
08:42
then we would have to end up together eventually.
175
522265
2954
08:46
This is the real madness,
176
526050
2088
08:48
because there is no cosmic rule
177
528162
2395
08:50
that says that great suffering equals great reward,
178
530581
3362
08:54
but we talk about love as if this is true.
179
534478
3904
08:59
Our experiences of love are both biological and cultural.
180
539463
3676
09:03
Our biology tells us that love is good
181
543774
2459
09:06
by activating these reward circuits in our brain,
182
546257
3154
09:09
and it tells us that love is painful when, after a fight or a breakup,
183
549435
4620
09:14
that neurochemical reward is withdrawn.
184
554079
2610
09:17
And in fact -- and maybe you've heard this --
185
557155
2442
09:19
neurochemically speaking,
186
559621
1844
09:21
going through a breakup is a lot like going through cocaine withdrawal,
187
561489
3434
09:25
which I find reassuring.
188
565675
1636
09:27
(Laughter)
189
567335
1150
09:29
And then our culture uses language
190
569066
2832
09:31
to shape and reinforce these ideas about love.
191
571922
2781
09:34
In this case, we're talking about metaphors about pain
192
574727
2624
09:37
and addiction and madness.
193
577375
1515
09:39
It's kind of an interesting feedback loop.
194
579826
2444
09:42
Love is powerful and at times painful,
195
582294
3517
09:45
and we express this in our words and stories,
196
585835
2765
09:49
but then our words and stories prime us
197
589182
2498
09:51
to expect love to be powerful and painful.
198
591704
3462
09:55
What's interesting to me is that all of this happens
199
595955
3173
09:59
in a culture that values lifelong monogamy.
200
599152
2723
10:02
It seems like we want it both ways:
201
602658
2061
10:04
we want love to feel like madness,
202
604743
2351
10:07
and we want it to last an entire lifetime.
203
607718
3146
10:11
That sounds terrible.
204
611561
1563
10:13
(Laughter)
205
613148
1529
10:15
To reconcile this,
206
615853
1596
10:17
we need to either change our culture or change our expectations.
207
617473
5025
10:23
So, imagine if we were all less passive in love.
208
623408
3593
10:27
If we were more assertive, more open-minded, more generous
209
627642
4146
10:31
and instead of falling in love,
210
631812
3301
10:35
we stepped into love.
211
635137
2225
10:38
I know that this is asking a lot,
212
638223
1929
10:40
but I'm not actually the first person to suggest this.
213
640176
3474
10:45
In their book, "Metaphors We Live By,"
214
645012
2509
10:47
linguists Mark Johnson and George Lakoff suggest a really interesting solution
215
647545
5114
10:52
to this dilemma,
216
652683
1218
10:54
which is to change our metaphors.
217
654491
2416
10:57
They argue that metaphors really do shape the way we experience the world,
218
657795
4417
11:03
and that they can even act as a guide for future actions,
219
663071
3498
11:06
like self-fulfilling prophecies.
220
666593
1888
11:09
Johnson and Lakoff suggest a new metaphor for love:
221
669489
3556
11:13
love as a collaborative work of art.
222
673977
2114
11:16
I really like this way of thinking about love.
223
676872
3050
11:21
Linguists talk about metaphors as having entailments,
224
681028
3522
11:24
which is essentially a way of considering all the implications of,
225
684574
3796
11:28
or ideas contained within, a given metaphor.
226
688394
2932
11:31
And Johnson and Lakoff talk about everything
227
691350
2909
11:34
that collaborating on a work of art entails:
228
694283
2152
11:36
effort, compromise, patience, shared goals.
229
696976
4155
11:41
These ideas align nicely with our cultural investment
230
701655
3830
11:45
in long-term romantic commitment,
231
705509
2073
11:47
but they also work well for other kinds of relationships --
232
707606
3611
11:52
short-term, casual, polyamorous, non-monogamous, asexual --
233
712020
5656
11:57
because this metaphor brings much more complex ideas
234
717700
3885
12:01
to the experience of loving someone.
235
721609
2040
12:04
So if love is a collaborative work of art,
236
724670
4394
12:09
then love is an aesthetic experience.
237
729088
3412
12:13
Love is unpredictable,
238
733524
1895
12:16
love is creative,
239
736153
2024
12:18
love requires communication and discipline,
240
738898
4133
12:23
it is frustrating and emotionally demanding.
241
743055
3189
12:26
And love involves both joy and pain.
242
746677
3350
12:30
Ultimately, each experience of love is different.
243
750742
3619
12:35
When I was younger,
244
755759
1627
12:37
it never occurred to me that I was allowed to demand more from love,
245
757410
4668
12:42
that I didn't have to just accept whatever love offered.
246
762102
3693
12:46
When 14-year-old Juliet first meets --
247
766775
3329
12:50
or, when 14-year-old Juliet cannot be with Romeo,
248
770128
3925
12:54
whom she has met four days ago,
249
774077
2637
12:56
she does not feel disappointed or angsty.
250
776738
3810
13:01
Where is she?
251
781022
1357
13:02
She wants to die.
252
782403
1294
13:04
Right?
253
784236
1151
13:05
And just as a refresher, at this point in the play,
254
785411
2469
13:07
act three of five,
255
787904
1308
13:09
Romeo is not dead.
256
789236
1821
13:11
He's alive,
257
791641
1340
13:13
he's healthy,
258
793005
1388
13:14
he's just been banished from the city.
259
794417
2194
13:17
I understand that 16th-century Verona is unlike contemporary North America,
260
797853
6001
13:23
and yet when I first read this play,
261
803878
2978
13:26
also at age 14,
262
806880
2393
13:29
Juliet's suffering made sense to me.
263
809297
2683
13:33
Reframing love as something I get to create with someone I admire,
264
813295
5357
13:38
rather than something that just happens to me
265
818676
2444
13:41
without my control or consent,
266
821144
2522
13:43
is empowering.
267
823690
1605
13:45
It's still hard.
268
825779
1618
13:47
Love still feels totally maddening and crushing some days,
269
827421
5532
13:52
and when I feel really frustrated,
270
832977
2115
13:55
I have to remind myself:
271
835116
1330
13:56
my job in this relationship is to talk to my partner
272
836995
3344
14:00
about what I want to make together.
273
840363
2051
14:03
This isn't easy, either.
274
843923
2334
14:06
But it's just so much better than the alternative,
275
846756
3447
14:10
which is that thing that feels like madness.
276
850672
2777
14:14
This version of love is not about winning or losing someone's affection.
277
854839
5357
14:20
Instead, it requires that you trust your partner
278
860761
3598
14:24
and talk about things when trusting feels difficult,
279
864383
3074
14:27
which sounds so simple,
280
867481
2446
14:29
but is actually a kind of revolutionary, radical act.
281
869951
4496
14:35
This is because you get to stop thinking about yourself
282
875062
3264
14:39
and what you're gaining or losing in your relationship,
283
879230
3141
14:42
and you get to start thinking about what you have to offer.
284
882395
3397
14:46
This version of love allows us to say things like,
285
886811
3405
14:50
"Hey, we're not very good collaborators. Maybe this isn't for us."
286
890240
4830
14:55
Or, "That relationship was shorter than I had planned,
287
895733
3861
14:59
but it was still kind of beautiful."
288
899618
2172
15:02
The beautiful thing about the collaborative work of art
289
902836
2790
15:05
is that it will not paint or draw or sculpt itself.
290
905650
2891
15:09
This version of love allows us to decide what it looks like.
291
909098
3911
15:13
Thank you.
292
913033
1151
15:14
(Applause)
293
914208
2023
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7