The experience of beauty can be so intense for me that it hurts my heart — but it’s a joyful hurt that is full of the pleasure of experiencing something which is completely true and real.
I first encountered this idea when I was too young to understand it. A Star Trek episode quoted a line from English poet George Herbert which asked, “Is there in truth no beauty?”
I spent a lot of time pondering that line, because it felt important in an irrational way. As I read the various English romantic poets in college, I started seeing a glimmer of understanding, but I still wasn’t there.
I read about how the Greeks equated beauty and truth. I read the English poet John Keats’ line, “Beauty is truth and truth is beauty.”
And then when I experienced a deeper form of mature love, it all suddenly made sense. I still couldn’t explain the reasoning, but I could suddenly feel it. When I experience transcendent beauty — of the kind I experienced when I photographed this sunset Monday night — I experience something about truth.

A warm and loving heart can finally turn to cold indifference
Is ‘galvanic skin response’ a way to measure how much kids learn?
Our choices determine whether we die alone or surrounded by love
I’m waiting for life to begin, but I’m feeling lost and alone tonight
How does modern culture escape ‘little boxes made of ticky tacky’?
Without meaning, most are blind to rot destroying their own lives
Why does the mainstream ignore those whose predictions were right?