I always thought I knew the difference between the concept of understanding something and concept of feeling something. Wait, maybe that's not right. Is to "understand" to "know"? Is it appreciation? Acceptance? Intuitive reasoning with a propensity for irrational action? How can I say I know the difference between any set number of things without truly understanding the complexities of the subjects involved? For instance, I know what it is to love, and what it is to hate. I know how they feel, how the blood tastes in the back of my throat, or how it feels when I try and remember that last elusive sigh of pleasure.
Yet to a person who knows nothing of love or hate, what then do these feelings mean to them? We attach such words and complications to what we say and do, yet they are merely symbols representative of something else. The word "love" is not love itself, but rather a social signifier letting ourselves and those around us know what we are feeling and how we want to communicate that feeling. So while a word can be easily defined, I believe that what it represents cannot be so easily labeled. Nor should it be.
So how do we distinguish between love and hate? Truth and falsity? We depend so heavily on the definition of the word to encapsulate all of the things it could possibly represent, that it becomes easy to lose yourself in trying to simply define a feeling. The solution, funnily enough, it all boils down to faith, and not the ten hail Mary's and a side of biblical fury kind, but a faith in each other. A mutual understanding beyond the limitations of definitions.
When I say "I love you", I'm trusting that when you say it back, we are alluding to the same thing. That's because there are so many different kinds of love, and to quote some famous piece of work, find 1000 people, you'll find a 1001 different ways to love, because hell if the person doing the counting doesn't count too. There's love for friends, enemies, car salesmen, politicians, and families. Every time they say "I love you", it means something different, and the same goes for the ones saying it back to them.
And I've realized that when you say "I love you" to me, I'll never truly know exactly how you feel. Sure, I'll get the general idea, but I won't insult you by saying your deepest inner workings are so easily summed up by anyone but yourself. Based on habit, I can get pretty good at understanding your intentions, but I'm not naive enough to think that I can in any way define your unique feelings.
So I guess that's why trust is such an important thing in love. With hate, it doesn't matter if you hate me. Hate is personal, it's publicly private, and completely sustainable on its own. I can hate the world, but I don't need it to hate me back. Love, on the other hand, needs to be loved in return.
So when I say those three words, I believe that for a moment, our faith coincides. They line up for a brief moment and shine brightly in an abyss of uncertainty. You've become a light in my darkness, a beacon reminding me that reaching a hand out into the black needn't be so scary, so long as you know that someone is there to hold you up. So sure, I'll never know what love really is.
But that doesn't really matter, so long as you believe in it with me.