Mandy Len Catron: A better way to talk about love
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about how we talk about love.
with how we talk about love.
fall in love a few times
this metaphor, falling,
talk about that experience.
out of a cartoon --
over an open manhole,
because falling is not jumping.
without our consent.
about starting a new relationship.
an English teacher,
about words for a living.
to argue that the language we use matters,
that many of the metaphors we use
the experience of loving someone
unavoidable circumstances.
of the word "smite."
in the dictionary --
as both "grievous affliction,"
with a very particular context,
there are 16 references to smiting,
for the vengeance of an angry God.
to talk about love
a plague of locusts.
with great pain and suffering?
this ostensibly good experience
metaphor in particular,
researching romantic love,
metaphors everywhere.
love to mental illness.
so crazy in love -- "
Beyoncé Knowles.
time when I was 20,
relationship right from the start.
for the first couple of years,
and very low lows.
in a hostel in South America,
I love walk out the door.
and stormed out.
what that argument was about,
how I felt watching him leave.
in the developing world,
of the town that I was in,
that I needed to get to to fly out,
a moment of opportunity,
this love thing right."
wanted to feel miserable in love.
to me now, but at 22,
and furious and devastated,
legitimized the feelings I had
to feel a little bit crazy,
that was how loved worked.
with the title "Crazy Love."
he came back to our room.
happy week traveling together.
terrible and so great.
to feel like madness,
that expectation very well.
on him loving me back --
is not that unusual.
in the early stages of romantic love.
that this is somewhat normal,
are not that easily distinguished.
levels of the newly in love
the serotonin levels
with obsessive-compulsive disorder.
with seasonal affective disorder
to our moods and our behaviors.
that the low levels of serotonin
about the object of love,
has set up camp in your brain.
when we first fall in love.
it doesn't always last that long --
to a couple of years.
to South America,
understand my grievous affliction,
with most of them.
unhappy year of my life.
it was my job to be miserable,
together eventually.
equals great reward,
are both biological and cultural.
circuits in our brain,
when, after a fight or a breakup,
you've heard this --
like going through cocaine withdrawal,
these ideas about love.
about metaphors about pain
in our words and stories,
is that all of this happens
lifelong monogamy.
or change our expectations.
less passive in love.
more open-minded, more generous
the first person to suggest this.
suggest a really interesting solution
the way we experience the world,
as a guide for future actions,
a new metaphor for love:
of thinking about love.
as having entailments,
all the implications of,
within, a given metaphor.
talk about everything
on a work of art entails:
patience, shared goals.
with our cultural investment
for other kinds of relationships --
non-monogamous, asexual --
much more complex ideas
and discipline,
and emotionally demanding.
of love is different.
to demand more from love,
whatever love offered.
cannot be with Romeo,
at this point in the play,
is unlike contemporary North America,
I get to create with someone I admire,
that just happens to me
and crushing some days,
is to talk to my partner
than the alternative,
that feels like madness.
or losing someone's affection.
that you trust your partner
when trusting feels difficult,
of revolutionary, radical act.
thinking about yourself
or losing in your relationship,
about what you have to offer.
allows us to say things like,
Maybe this isn't for us."
was shorter than I had planned,
about the collaborative work of art
or draw or sculpt itself.
to decide what it looks like.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Mandy Len Catron - WriterMandy Len Catron explores love stories.
Why you should listen
Originally from Appalachian Virginia, Mandy Len Catron is a writer living and working in Vancouver, British Columbia. Her book How to Fall in Love with Anyone, is available for preorder on Amazon. Catron's writing has appeared in the New York Times, The Washington Post, and The Walrus, as well as literary journals and anthologies. She writes about love and love stories at The Love Story Project and teaches English and creative writing at the University of British Columbia. Her article "To Fall in Love with Anyone, Do This" was one of the most popular articles published by the New York Times in 2015.
Mandy Len Catron | Speaker | TED.com