Consider the parent and the child. The parent who gives the child everything—no limits, no bedtimes, no “no”—is not loving. They are indulging their own need to be the adored, omnipotent provider. The parent who casts off their own fear of being hated, who says “You cannot run into the street” or “You must share,” is performing a small, daily castration of the child’s primal will. The child weeps. The child feels the loss of omnipotence. And that loss is the first lesson in how to be with others.
To encounter the phrase “castration is love” is to be immediately repelled. The modern mind, steeped in the language of self-help, boundary-setting, and empowerment, hears only violence. Castration is the ultimate violation of agency, the theft of power, the reduction of the phallus—and by extension, the self—to a wound. castration-is-love
That is the severing that saves. That is the wound that works. That is love. Consider the parent and the child
Yet, buried within this grotesque paradox lies one of the most profound spiritual and psychological truths about mature love. Not the love of greeting cards or Hollywood’s three-act structure, but the love that shapes —the love that limits, prunes, and kills so that something greater might live. The parent who casts off their own fear