This week’s blog posts have explored the four faces of our heart, according to Buddhist teachings (click here), and the direct or “far” enemies of those faces, which prevent us from living in state of unselfish love (click here).

I suggested that far enemies are relatively easy to identify because they are the polar opposite of the virtuous faces of our heart.

Much harder to notice are enemies of the heart referred to as “near” enemies, disguised faces of the heart that subtly and cunningly masquerade as virtuous qualities. For every healthy face of my heart, there’s a sneaky quality that tries to show up as the positive trait.

Below are the four healthy faces of the heart along with their near enemies:

1. Loving-kindness –> Attachment
2. Compassion –> Pity
3. Appreciative joy –> Comparison and hypocritical approval
4. Equanimity –> Indifference

If experiencing loving-kindness toward another requires that I get what I want from the relationship, this becomes a form of unhealthy attachment. It may feel a lot like love, but eventually it manifests as insecure clinging, fear and the desire to control. I have learned the hard way how devious this near enemy can be: For years, I mistook my need to control my “perfect family” for loving-kindness – until the “perfect” family imploded. Loving-kindness wants the best for others; attachments to achieve my ego’s own needs may masquerade as love, but actually corrodes it.

What do I feel when I see filthy disgruntled homeless persons huddled on a street corner? If it’s compassion, I see them as equals and hold them close to my heart, much as I would comfort a dear friend. Pity, on the other hand, suggests that even if I think I’m feeling compassion for them, but I see myself as superior and apart from them – out there – it’s likely to be compassion’s sneaky near enemy, pity.

Appreciative joy is the delight I feel when I see the happiness of others. If I find myself checking to see whether I have as much, or less, or more than another, then my seeming joy in the success or contentment of others is most likely hypocritical.

Equanimity’s near enemy is indifference. Equanimity means that when something overwhelming happens in my life or in the life of others, I feel it deeply but I don’t allow it to complete derail me. Indifference may look the same on the surface, but the detached and stoic calmness comes from a place of not caring.

For all four faces of the heart, the loving quality and its near enemy may appear to be the same, but they are actually opposites. The near enemy parades as the other and is often mistaken for the other. But it operates in a space of subtle self-deception, defending the ego in a desperate struggle for survival and control. Attachment masquerades as loving-kindness, pity as compassion, hypocritical approval as appreciative joy, and indifference as equanimity.

In all cases, only we can do the hard work of determining whether we’re showing up lovingly or whether a near enemy is rearing its ugly head. No one else can discern this for us. And we can easily fool ourselves – for a while. Eventually, the joy or suffering in our lives will expose our deepest truth.

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