We learn to create a "perfect image" of how love should look. We then try to manipulate our partners to fit that image. When they fail (as they inevitably do), we blame them. Ruiz calls this the "Dream of Hell"—a relationship based on control, expectation, and emotional bargaining. “We are taught that love is supposed to be painful. We learn that we have to fight for love, that we have to prove ourselves worthy of love.” The core antagonist of this book is not a bad partner, but fear . Ruiz describes the human mind as a fertile garden. Love is the flower, but fear is a virus that turns that flower into a poisonous weed.
You don’t need someone else to love you. You need to stop rejecting yourself. When you master that, love becomes not a need, but a luxury you share. la maestria del amor miguel ruiz
If you are tired of turning love into a battlefield and are ready to turn it into a sanctuary, Miguel Ruiz’s The Mastery of Love is the quiet, stern, loving voice you need to hear. We learn to create a "perfect image" of how love should look
Most relationships fail not because of money, distance, or infidelity, but because of the internal emotional poison we carry: jealousy, unworthiness, and the desperate need to be "right." Ruiz challenges the reader to look in the mirror and ask: Do I love myself? Because, as he famously states, you cannot give what you don’t have. Ruiz calls this the "Dream of Hell"—a relationship