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What would you do if you could only love?
This week’s newsletter explores one of the most profound and difficult questions of the human experience — what does it actually mean to love without condition? Not “I will stay no matter what,” but something more precise: “My commitment to your dignity and well-being doesn’t disappear when you’re difficult.”
I talk about what unconditional love costs us, why our modern world makes it so hard, and why I believe it’s still the most worthy pursuit. As a Christian, love is the core principle — it’s all what Jesus represents. And Roger Ebert put it beautifully: “We must try to contribute joy to the world. That is true no matter what our problems, our health, our circumstances.”
Unconditional love is a practice, not a destination. But the intention to love without condition changes you. And everyone you touch.
By Destwin J. AdoteyWhat would you do if you could only love?
This week’s newsletter explores one of the most profound and difficult questions of the human experience — what does it actually mean to love without condition? Not “I will stay no matter what,” but something more precise: “My commitment to your dignity and well-being doesn’t disappear when you’re difficult.”
I talk about what unconditional love costs us, why our modern world makes it so hard, and why I believe it’s still the most worthy pursuit. As a Christian, love is the core principle — it’s all what Jesus represents. And Roger Ebert put it beautifully: “We must try to contribute joy to the world. That is true no matter what our problems, our health, our circumstances.”
Unconditional love is a practice, not a destination. But the intention to love without condition changes you. And everyone you touch.