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The Art of Loving

6 memorable lines from The Art of Loving by Erich Fromm, each with the idea behind it.

“Love is not a feeling — it is a practice, a skill, and a commitment.”

Fromm's foundational corrective: Western culture teaches that love is something you fall into. Fromm argues it's something you do.

“The capacity to love is dependent on the character development that precedes it.”

Fromm's demanding claim: you cannot love well if you have not developed yourself first. Immature people love immaturely.

“Love is the active care for the life and growth of another.”

Fromm's definition cuts through romantic idealization: love is not a feeling but a set of practices oriented toward another's wellbeing.

“The main stipulations for the art of loving are: discipline, concentration, patience, and supreme concern.”

Fromm treats love as a serious art requiring the same dedication as any craft — which is the opposite of how popular culture frames it.

“Immature love says 'I love you because I need you.' Mature love says 'I need you because I love you.'”

Fromm's distinction that most relationship advice ignores: the direction of causality matters enormously.

“Self-love is the foundation of the capacity to love others.”

Fromm's controversial claim: caring for your own wellbeing and growth is not selfish — it's the precondition for genuine care of others.