Fighting With Love
Although I was a young teenager during the Vietnam war, people often ask if I ever served in the military. I say no, but I did get all my combat experience during my first marriage. Of course I’m looking for a cheap laugh, but there really is some truth to it. Learning how to fight, whether in war or peace, is the prerequisite to winning any conflict because battles are won in training and not on the battlefield. A fighter, soldier or champion doesn’t win by shear muscle or determination but by the hours, weeks, months and years they spend preparing for action.
Our battles as men don’t have to be physical or competitive to require a regimented discipline to be victorious, but we still need to continually develop the discipline of our internal character so we don’t get caught up in the heat of a moment by saying or doing something we’ll regret.
Regardless of the type of conflict, training and self-control is critical to averting the escalation of emotions that can make matters worse. Unless you’ve trained yourself to “fight”, then it’s easy to get caught up in the emotional turbulence when destructive accusations and frustrations are flying from every direction like trailers in a tornado.
The first rule of battle is stick to your training and your battle plan or you will be vulnerable to defeat. The defeat of your dignity, integrity, and self-respect. So what is the one crucial element needed to prevent the failure of character you work so hard to maintain and want others to admire?
Love.
Now hear me out, I don’t mean the love most think of as mushy, passive, or submissive. I mean the omnipotence of a love that compels you to give up your life for another. The love that forgives to protect a relationship. A love that is an action and never an emotion. I’m talking about real love, not the love that is only felt when everything is going your way.
As I look to foundational truths to guide my behavior, I look to the historical biblical writings of 1st Corinthians, chapter 13 which describes authentic love. “Love is patient, love is kind. It is not easily angered and keeps no record of wrongs, etc.” Nowhere in this description of love does it say “Love FEELS patient, love FEELS kind” nor does love FEEL anything else for that matter. We have it backwards, feelings are not the trigger that determines our actions but merely the byproduct of the actions we choose. Choose to fight with the power of love.
What about those who are difficult to love? It’s a choice. As you “lift” heavier burdens, you build the strength and stamina needed to be able to conquer the bigger issues in life. Unless you use the correct technique (1st Corinthians 13) you will never rise to the occasion, but only fall to the level of your training. Your commitment to prepare will determine your ability to defend your territory, and your territory as a man of honor would be your significant other, or children, or friendships, or anyone else who is worth protecting and fighting for.
What if you don’t feel the emotion needed to respond in love? My friend, these are your moments of growth towards being a better man. It is then you will be at the perfect place to experience what it is to truly love without the impulsive emotion to compel you to be patient, humble, calm, and many other admirable attributes. The most powerful demonstration of your love will be when it’s done by will and not by emotion.
Cyrus the Great (600-530 BC) said: “Soft lands breeds soft men; wondrous fruits of the earth and valiant warriors grow not from the same soil” meaning that unless we as men learn to struggle through, and overcome our own battles, we become and perpetuate soft men. Is that the legacy you want?