TLDR: Falling in love is more than an emotional experience—it can be a doorway to mystical awareness and direct contact with the sacred. When we love, we temporarily transcend the isolated self and glimpse a reality that mystics have always pointed to: that separation is an illusion, and connection is our true nature. This talk explores how romantic love, when understood deeply, reveals the same truths that meditation and spiritual practice unveil.
What Happens in the Moment of Falling in Love?
When we fall in love, something shifts in our perception of reality. The lover becomes everything—the entire universe seems to condense into the beloved. This is not merely sentiment or biology. According to Alan Watts' perspective, which forms the core of this discussion, falling in love is a spontaneous break in the illusion of separateness that normally governs our waking consciousness.
In ordinary awareness, we experience ourselves as isolated subjects observing an objective world. There is "me" and there is "everything else." But when love strikes, this boundary dissolves. The beloved is no longer experienced as "other." Instead, there is a merging, a sense of union that feels both terrifying and deeply true. This temporary dissolution of the boundary between self and other is precisely what mystics describe when they speak of enlightenment or awakening.
How Does Love Mirror Mystical Experience?
Mystical experience, across all wisdom traditions, involves a direct perception that the separate self is an illusion. The mystic realizes that the boundary between "I" and "the world" is a learned construct, not fundamental reality. In that moment, there is only one life happening—not "my life" separate from "your life," but one continuous flow of existence experiencing itself through multiple forms.
Falling in love offers an involuntary taste of this realization. Without any spiritual practice or intellectual understanding, the person in love stumbles into the state that contemplatives spend years trying to cultivate. For a moment, you experience the unity that is always present but usually hidden by the mind's habit of splitting experience into subject and object, self and other.
Why Does This Vision Feel So Profound?
The reason falling in love feels so significant is that it resonates with the deepest truth about existence. When you touch that state of union, you touch reality as it actually is. The intensity of emotion—the joy, the sense of meaning, the feeling that finally something true has happened—comes from the alignment of consciousness with what is actually so.
This is why every culture and tradition celebrates love. Love is not sentimental; it is metaphysical. It is a momentary awakening to the nature of existence itself. When you love someone, you are experiencing, however briefly and without formal understanding, what the mystic recognizes and stabilizes through practice.
What Separates Romantic Love From Attachment?
There is an important distinction here. The mystical quality of love—the vision of unity and connection—can degrade into ordinary attachment and possession. When the mind reasserts control, when fear enters and the ego tries to hold onto the experience, love becomes something else. It becomes an emotion that can be hurt, that can demand and cling.
The original vision—the glimpse of union, the sense that separation is false—may persist as a memory, but it gets covered over by the mind's tendency to objectify and control. Instead of simply being in union, we try to own the other person. Instead of celebrating the merging of self, we become anxious about maintaining it. This is where romantic love, even the most genuine kind, often becomes complicated and painful.
Can We Sustain the Mystical Vision in Love?
The question then arises: is it possible to maintain the clarity and union of the original mystical opening while also engaging in the practical, relational aspects of partnership? The teaching suggests that this requires a shift in understanding. As long as we believe that the other person is truly separate from us, truly "other," we will alternate between union and fear, between connection and isolation.
But if the mystical vision—the knowledge that separation is appearance, not reality—can be sustained, then love becomes something different. It becomes less about what we can get from the other person and more about the simple fact of their existence being continuous with our own. The beloved is not someone to acquire or control, but an extension of one's own being, which is also an extension of the universal consciousness.
How Does This Teaching Relate to Spiritual Practice?
For many people, falling in love is their first and most powerful direct experience of the truths that spiritual practice points to. This is significant. It means that mystical experience is not foreign to human consciousness; it is something we already know, already recognize as real. The problem is not that enlightenment is distant or unnatural—the problem is that we keep returning to the illusion of separation after each glimpse of unity.
Spiritual disciplines—meditation, prayer, contemplative practice—can be understood as methods to stabilize and deepen the state that love reveals involuntarily. Rather than waiting for the accident of falling in love, the practitioner deliberately cultivates the conditions for this perception to arise and persist. The peace, clarity, and sense of union that define mystical experience are available not just in romantic moments, but as the ongoing texture of awareness itself.
Why Is This Vision So Rare in Modern Life?
Our culture is trained to reinforce the illusion of separateness. Education, economics, and entertainment all emphasize individual achievement, competition, and the protection of the isolated self. We are taught that the boundary between "me" and "the world" is absolute and that anything beyond that boundary is either threat or resource to exploit.
Given this conditioning, the spontaneous breaking of that boundary through love can feel shocking. It seems to contradict everything we have been taught about how reality works. Yet the fact that we can love, that we can experience genuine union even if briefly, proves that the separateness is not fundamental. It is a useful fiction, a way of organizing experience, but not the deepest truth.
What Does This Mean for How We Love?
If romantic love is a doorway to mystical awareness, then the cultivation of love becomes a spiritual practice in itself. This does not mean we should become passive or lose discrimination in relationships. Rather, it means bringing the clarity and presence that characterize mystical vision into the lived experience of loving someone.
This involves recognizing the beloved as not fundamentally separate from you, seeing their joy as your joy and their suffering as your suffering, not from obligation but from direct perception. It means allowing the original vision of union to continue informing the relationship, even as practical, psychological, and emotional aspects of partnership also unfold.
When love is understood this way, the beloved becomes a mirror for your own true nature. They are not someone to possess but someone through whom you continue to glimpse the unity that love first revealed to you. The relationship becomes both more intimate and more free—intimate because it is rooted in the recognition of non-separation, and free because there is no longer a desperate clinging born of fear that the other is truly other.
Where to Go From Here
If you resonate with the idea that love can be a gateway to mystical experience, consider examining your own experience of love. When you have loved deeply, what did you recognize about the nature of that experience? Was there a sense of boundaries dissolving? A feeling that the division between self and other was revealed as something other than absolute?
From here, you might explore practices that deepen and stabilize this recognition. Meditation on the interconnectedness of all beings, contemplation on the nature of consciousness, or simply the practice of loving attention to all beings as extensions of your own awareness, can all help sustain the vision that romantic love offers as a glimpse.
The core teaching is simple but radical: the love you are capable of experiencing is not just an emotion—it is a revelation of what is true about existence. By honoring that truth, by consciously cultivating the consciousness it points to, the mystical vision becomes not a fleeting moment in romance, but the stable ground of your life.



