Campfire Conversations
Back in September, I wrote about meeting a man named Briddge Orius at the Returning Citizens luncheon in Norfolk, Virginia. We had maybe ten minutes together. We instantly connected over our mutual love of Ziggy Marley’s “Love is My Religion.” At the end of our conversation, he was recommended a book that would help shape some of my thinking. “Love” by Leo Buscaglia. He told me it was the book that taught him the importance of loving himself. At the end of our conversation, I asked if Briddge and his wife Cherrie would sit down with me for a Campfire Conversation. They said yes. This is that conversation. It’s also the first Campfire Conversation that is not one-on-one. It is with a married couple to boot. And I think you’ll hear why that matters. Because Briddge and Cherrie don’t just talk about love. They work it out in real time. They push back on each other. They disagree. They finish each other’s thoughts and then challenge those thoughts a sentence later. It’s love in practice, not theory. Perfectly Imperfect I need to tell you something about this episode. About sixty minutes into our conversation, I looked over and realized my phone had stopped recording. Storage was full. We’d been having one of the deepest conversations I’ve had on this adventure, and it wasn’t captured. We lost about fifty minutes of audio. In the moment, I had a choice. I could get frustrated, hold onto expectations for what this episode was supposed to be, and let it derail us. Or I could take a breath and trust that the conversation itself was the gift, not the recording of it. We regrouped. I cleared some space on my phone. And we picked it back up. What you’ll hear in this episode is the first seven minutes that were captured, then me bridging what was lost, and then forty-five minutes of conversation that picks up right where the energy left off. You’ll also notice the audio isn’t perfect in places. I have the technology for one-on-one conversations. This was three people and two lapel mics around a fire. That’s what happens when you try to have real conversations outside. Perfectly imperfect. Here’s why I’m telling you this. One of the themes from the lost portion of our conversation was expectations. Briddge put it simply: “Fear comes from expectations we’ve put on ourselves, on others, on our experience.” And there I was, living that lesson. If I had held onto expectations for what this conversation needed to be, I would have lost something far more valuable than audio. I would have lost the friendship that was blossoming right there at the fire. I got something better than a perfectly captured episode. I got two new friends. Love as Mirror, Compass, and Symptom When I asked Briddge and Cherrie how they define love, they each came at it differently. Briddge sees love as something you know before you can name it. “It’s like a feeling. You can’t really define it, but you know it. It’s like a connection. You can’t really describe it, but it’s there. It’s a lens. It’s a mirror. It’s the soul.” Cherrie sees it as understanding. “The reason why people have a problem defining it is because we don’t truly know what love is. For me, it’s more of an understanding. If I love a person, I’m going to extend that.” Then the conversation went somewhere I didn’t expect. They disagreed, right there at the fire, about whether love is born in us or developed. Cherrie believes we arrive with it. “We’re born with love. Real love. Authentic love that has not been conditioned or taught. If you truly love, that respect is automatic.” Briddge pushed back gently. “We do have love within us. It’s an internal thing. But that capacity within has to be developed. That’s why we have to grow into loving ourself.” I think they’re both right. And that tension between “love is already in us” and “love has to be grown” is one of the most honest things about this conversation. It’s the same question I’ve been wrestling with since I read Buscaglia’s book last fall. Cherrie also offered a framing I haven’t heard anyone use before. She compared love to an illness and feelings to symptoms. “Love is the actual thing. The feeling of love is a symptom. It’s something that can change. It can go away. But true love is not a feeling.” I keep coming back to that. If we mistake the symptoms for the thing itself, we’ll always be chasing feelings instead of tending something deeper. Can You Stop Loving Someone? At one point, the married couple dynamic caught fire. Briddge said he believes you can make the choice to stop growing in love with someone. Cherrie wasn’t having it. She pushed back immediately. “On a romantic level, but you can’t stop loving me.” Briddge held his ground. “As a loving person, I can’t stop loving anybody. But in the relationship, I can make the choice to stop growing in love with you.” Watching them work this out in front of me was something special. This wasn’t a debate for the sake of being right. It was two people who love each other deeply, wrestling with what that actually means when it gets complicated. And they didn’t resolve it neatly. They just kept going. That’s what love looks like in practice. Messy. Unfinished. And still moving. Leading with Love When It’s Hard The conversation took a turn when I asked a question I’ve been sitting with for months. If I’m leading with love, do I have to love the people who are causing harm in the world? Cherrie’s answer was immediate. “You still have to love them from a humanity or a human standpoint. You may not approve of what they’re doing, but that’s separate. Ask yourself what happened to them. What makes them do that. Because it’s something.” Then she shared a deeply personal story that I’ll let you discover in the episode. It involves forgiveness in a situation where most people might say forgiveness should not be given. And it demonstrates what it actually looks like to separate the person from the act. To love the human even when you can’t accept what they’ve done. Briddge followed with something equally direct. “If you choose to be a loving person, if you choose to be a person that leads with love, you’re gonna have to find love for them.” No escape hatch. No exceptions for the people who make it hard. That’s the commitment. Energy, Judgment, and What We’re Really Starving For Toward the end, the conversation shifted to energy and judgment. Cherrie talked about leaving a job because the negativity was changing who she was. “My energy was not what it used to be, and my team was feeling that. I told my husband, I can’t go back to that place.” Briddge was vulnerable about his own struggles. He talked about doing well around people but struggling when he’s alone. “When I’m alone, my energy is bad. But when I find people, because I’ve learned to value people so much, my energy with people is super bright. If you interact with me, you think I’m the coolest dude. But when you leave and I’m by myself, it’s a struggle.” I think a lot of people, especially men, will recognize that. The gap between how we show up in the world and what’s happening inside when no one’s watching. Briddge also named something I keep hearing in these conversations. “One of the most important things we can do is stop judging. Right now we’re at a state where everybody finds something wrong with everything. There’s no love when there’s judgment.” And Cherrie put her finger on something connected. “We no longer listen to understand. We listen to defend.” I think those two ideas go together. When we’re judging, we’re not curious. When we’re defending, we’re not listening. And without curiosity and listening, love doesn’t have room to do its work. Why This Matters This conversation is part of my Heart-Strong Adventure, a year-long exploration of where love and fear show up in our world, especially in the lives of men. What made this conversation different was the dynamic. Every other Campfire Conversation has been one-on-one. This was a married couple talking about love together. Sometimes agreeing. Sometimes pushing back. Always honest. And I think that’s what this whole adventure keeps teaching me. Love isn’t something you figure out alone. It’s something you practice with other people, especially the people closest to you. It’s a mirror. It’s a compass. It’s perfectly imperfect. Briddge brought his copy of Buscaglia’s “Love” to the fire and read a passage near the end. “Man has no choice but to love. For when he does not, he finds his alternatives lie in loneliness, destruction, and despair.” Look around. Loneliness. Destruction. Despair. Briddge is right. I think the reason is simple. Not enough love. If this conversation sparks something in you, I’d love to hear about it. And if someone comes to mind who might need to hear this, please share it with them. Because these conversations around the fire are how we change. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit adventure.heart-strong.org [https://adventure.heart-strong.org?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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