Mix-Up in Every Wife About Coldness & Warmth

Wives have been worried by the difference between the way they can be warm to their husband, and also feel cool and aloof. And wives have felt they could be too warm or “gushy,” also hotly angry—and not known how to make sense of that. THE MIX-UP IN EVERY WIFE ABOUT COLDNESS & WARMTH is the topic the Understanding Marriage! class will address on Saturday, March 10th, from 11:00 AM to 12:30 PM. The class is open to all women.

Consultants Barbara Allen, Anne Fielding, and Meryl Nietsch-Cooperman will discuss the following comprehending sentences from Poetry & Love, a lecture by Eli Siegel, founder of Aesthetic Realism:
“While people are looking for serenity in love, they want excitement. This is another way of saying we want to be cool and hot at the same time. The relation of coolness to warmth, cold to heat, is a relation in every person. It is a big thing in love. We can get too excited, or we can be-come cold, and most people are doing one or the other or making a bad mingling of both.”

Each woman will be learning about that in herself which makes for this “bad mingling.” She also learn that she has an aesthetic job: she deeply hopes to put together, make a beautiful one of, the opposites of coldness and warmth, serenity and excitement. What she wants is described in this principle, stated by Mr. Siegel: “All beauty is a making one of opposites, and the making one of opposites is what we are going after in ourselves.” For example, a wife needs to see she wants to put together warmth and cool¬ness the way a pianist does–who plays with passion and also with precision and care.











When: Sat., Mar. 10, 2018 at 11:00 am - 12:30 pm
Where: Aesthetic Realism Foundation
141 Greene St.
212-777-4490
Price: $10
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Wives have been worried by the difference between the way they can be warm to their husband, and also feel cool and aloof. And wives have felt they could be too warm or “gushy,” also hotly angry—and not known how to make sense of that. THE MIX-UP IN EVERY WIFE ABOUT COLDNESS & WARMTH is the topic the Understanding Marriage! class will address on Saturday, March 10th, from 11:00 AM to 12:30 PM. The class is open to all women.

Consultants Barbara Allen, Anne Fielding, and Meryl Nietsch-Cooperman will discuss the following comprehending sentences from Poetry & Love, a lecture by Eli Siegel, founder of Aesthetic Realism:
“While people are looking for serenity in love, they want excitement. This is another way of saying we want to be cool and hot at the same time. The relation of coolness to warmth, cold to heat, is a relation in every person. It is a big thing in love. We can get too excited, or we can be-come cold, and most people are doing one or the other or making a bad mingling of both.”

Each woman will be learning about that in herself which makes for this “bad mingling.” She also learn that she has an aesthetic job: she deeply hopes to put together, make a beautiful one of, the opposites of coldness and warmth, serenity and excitement. What she wants is described in this principle, stated by Mr. Siegel: “All beauty is a making one of opposites, and the making one of opposites is what we are going after in ourselves.” For example, a wife needs to see she wants to put together warmth and cool¬ness the way a pianist does–who plays with passion and also with precision and care.

Buy tickets/get more info now