A LOVE THAT IS REAL
- GODSAVEME
- Feb 15
- 4 min read
Updated: Mar 15
Editorial Avenue No. 17: 15th February 2025
What is love?
"Love is but love, and it transcends the world of limitations," would answer the poet. There seems to be no universal definition of it in this world. "Love is of the nature of the incandescent," would probably insinuate the philosopher. For all peers of the land, love is but a word. Love is but a contract. Love is but a muse. And that love—it feels so pure, it is gentle, it is always kind. But at the end of the day, we would ask anew: What is the nature of this love that you all speak so fondly about?
Love on the brain could indeed just be love, and within this statement itself lies one of the greatest fundamental truths of human experience on Earth. For to have felt or touched the immanence of love in one’s life is just that: it remains an experience of something that is inherently real, without necessarily being part of your version of realness. And despite that, the experience of being loved and loving someone back remains profoundly transformative. Love will always be a pivotal part of your existence, for without love, there would have been no drive to exist—both in your symbolic capacity to envision future events and in your actual capacity to make those events possible in your present. But a love that is real is of a much different essence. A love that is real means that it has become visibly manifest in the very real spaces that human beings occupy, yet it does not need to be part of those human realities for it to necessarily exist. A love that is so real that it has existed even before existence came into being/ness—that is the love that you deeply miss and crave in the silence of your mind.
Love on Earth has come to be seen in a highly reductionist manner. The complexity and ingenuity of its essence are often lost in the massive overproduction of a myriad of themes, tools, and emotions—all seeking to emulate the nature of love without truly being part of it. Love eventually lost its true meaning and the power behind that meaning as humans became increasingly advanced in the fabrication of both sense and significance. Yet, we do not deny that human beings love each other sincerely and profoundly. It would be madness to disregard the mutual feelings of bonding, care, and preservation that arise when love is experienced—no matter its shape or form, whether it be the bond between mother and child, the lovers’ feverish desire to belong to one another, or the genuine respect and upliftment that friendship brings into one’s life. But the point of focus is precisely that: we experience the realness of love. Love is not the one experiencing us. And that is necessary for your understanding of how love manifests in your lives.
For, if the love we experience were truly as real as we believed it to be, we would not feel pain, nor would we seek to replace it with a different object of desire or fulfilment when the person we once cared about ceases to be. That is where the nuance lies—for love does not hurt. Love, in its purest essence, has only one quality: it heals that which seems impossible to heal. How, then, could one associate your very real humanness with the real beingness of Love? It starts with the process of re-signification in your mind of what your human existence actually entails. As human beings, there is a tendency to oversimplify who you are as well as to associate your destiny with the evolutionary principles of birth, progress, and death.
But beyond being just a human having an experience, you are also part of a human culture and human ethics. A culture that, by its very design, is inherently driven by cosmic ways of being. The best of humanity’s blueprint is expressed when it naturally thinks of and seeks out the highest good for all forms of life on Earth. As for a human culture’s ethical mindset, it is naturally founded on the divine reasoning of the absolute good. Choosing to do good may become ambivalent, as there is inevitably a part of the good that will get lost with the unmasking of the darkness, but the principle of absolute good comes with the necessary ethical markers of divine mercy, divine forgiveness, and divine reconciliation. And within this trinity lies the purity of the intellect of love—a love that is real, for all that it touches is in turn imbued with the energy of life.
Love is love.

***
End note:
Our monthly editorials are pure channellings received from Heaven. The administrative team responsible for their transcription has the duty to publish each of these editorials on the fifteenth of each month. This date is symbolic as it aligns with the 15th of September 2023, official birth date of the web platform of the Centre accredited under the name "God Save Me". More than just being an editorial, "The Editorial Avenue" is a sacred avenue that is opened up to humanity in order to allow all to reconnect with the Light as God cares for everyone.
Comments