Have you ever found the love you thought you wanted but then lost the relationship because you picked it apart — and ultimately lost the love — because the other person wasn’t perfect? We do that because we get comfortable having something we wanted and then we start demanding more. We refuse to get clear about which things matter and which things don’t, so we give up the things that really matter because of a pointless pursuit of achieving the perfect life that our ego wants.
(The episode originally planned for this week has been moved to next week. I was too sick to record a new episode this week, so I used something for this week which I had already recorded.)
Preview of new week’s show: If love is so great, then why do some of our worst hurts come from our romantic relationships? Why is it that some people are hurt so badly by lost love — or by relationships they should leave, relationships that are supposed to bring them joy — that they harden their hearts and swear they’ll never love again?
It’s because counterfeit love feels just like the real thing — at first.
Love is the most powerful and healing force the world has ever known, but its closest counterfeit might be the most destructive force we encounter. We’re going to talk about how we keep failing into those painful and destructive patterns, next week on Love and Hope.

A haunting question: ‘Where is love now, out here in the dark?’
Getting better at all I do is only way to fight ‘imposter syndrome’
If majority rule is such a great idea, why don’t we vote on toothpaste?
Economic Man needs no heart, because love and God are dead
What do you love enough to want once more before life slips away?
My love of ‘fur friends’ stems from the callousness I saw in my father
Is this what happens when you teach children there are no absolutes?
Flashy ‘stimulus’ projects conceal truth that the state destroys wealth