You can’t live halfway between love and indifference. One or the other has to win in the end.
I’ve been thinking about this more and more lately because I continue to struggle to love in the ways I’d like to. A year ago this week, I wrote something fairly long about love in the broadest sense — and it’s something I’m still trying to come to terms with.
The natural way of this world is to ultimately experience something worse than hate. It’s for indifference, but it’s broader than that. The way of the world leads to a cold, hardened and callous heart. Hate can sometimes be part of it, but in its most extreme form, it’s indifference and a complete lack of feeling anything.
I believe we ultimately face two choices.
On one side, there is turmoil, anger, envy and judgment. Most “realistic people” — who have had their hearts hardened by disappointment in others — default to living closer to hate than to love, but ultimately they settle into a cold indifference.

Why do loving parents let schools teach kids to be conformists?
Is ‘galvanic skin response’ a way to measure how much kids learn?
Love & Hope — Episode 5:
Noise of culture isn’t evil, but it drowns out what really matters
I’m trying to do something new — and I don’t know what to call it
Change sometimes happens slowly, not in the grand leap that we want
I still have trouble accepting that my idealized world doesn’t exist
Face the facts: U.S. Constitution is dead document with no meaning