Geoffrey wrote: ↑Mon Apr 04, 2022 6:33 pm
[photo title] "only the unloved hate"...
I disagree with this statement, for it conflates two completely different issues that are not necessarily related. "Hate" is simply a very strong emotion in reaction to things (and/or people) that one finds to be repulsive, intolerable, unacceptable, etc.. -- it is a very intense and passionate form of dislike (loathing, abhorrence, detestation, etc...). A person's capacity to feel hate does not (or does not necessarily) have anything to do with how other people may or may not feel about them, but it does have everything to do with the passion and intensity of one's own emotions.
I would suggest that if a person can feel love with passion and intensity, then they can also feel hate with passion and intensity, but I am speaking purely from my own personal experience, for I love a lot of things, with great passion and intensity, but I also hate a lot of things with equal passion and intensity. Mind you, I love a lot more things than I hate, but still, hate is very much a part of my emotional being.
I always find it odd when people tell me that they do not hate anything, which usually occurs in response to my saying that I hate something: they react as if they feel that it is somehow wrong or unacceptable or even incomprehensible to "hate" something, for they seem genuinely surprised or otherwise taken aback from my saying so. I have never understood their reaction, and it makes me wonder if they actually love anything, and/or if they are even capable of the intensity of emotions that I feel. Maybe they simply don't care enough about anything to feel deep emotional reactions to it, positive or negative, love or hate -- that is, perhaps they are rather emotionally apathetic, such that nothing ever stirs them enough to feel an emotion as strong as hate (which, again, makes me wonder if they feel any emotions strongly, or at least, as strongly as I do).
But, that's just me -- YMMV.
On other subjects, I like the Beethoven/Ukraine flag/peace picture. Beethoven himself yearned for peace, equality, freedom, and universal brotherhood-sisterhood, which is the theme of the "Ode to Joy" chorus in his Ninth Symphony, including these wonderful lines:
"You millions, I embrace you. This kiss is for all the world!"
(from the German:
"Seid umschlungen, Millionen! Diesen Kuß der ganzen Welt!")
I suspect that Beethoven hated a few things -- he strikes me as a guy who felt emotions passionately and intensely.