All That Love Might Ask

Love is a bias found beneath the surface of clear rationality. It’s true for the long haul, and for the new seeds of love too.
For at least a dozen Sundays since I’d met Luiz, we’d hung around after church to talk. He’d even slipped me a note with his number on it one week. I spent a full two hours trying to decide how to write a one-line text message.
When I heard he’d be in a speech competition, it caught my interest. As a regular attender of a Toastmasters club, he and another man would compete to give the most humorous speech.
On the day of the competition, I stepped into the dim backroom of the Italian restaurant where their group met. I spotted Luiz and waved before taking a seat to watch the events unfold. The tables formed three sides of a square, with the fourth side open for the podium. Each chair faced the center. In the group of 25 or so, the room held more than strangers. I noticed Luiz’s sister and another woman from church. A man with a balding dome and a mustache gave his speech first. He spoke like the kind of uncle any kid would like to have and captured the room well.
Then Luiz gave his speech about a childhood moment of self-consciousness. The joy in his face was what mesmerized me. He spoke with exuberance and I didn’t want to miss a second of how it shaped his bearing, or the way his eyes danced when he smiled.
When it was over, in my delight to have witnessed the moment, it took me a minute to realize that the president of this Toastmasters club expected each person there to offer an evaluation one by one around the room. All of two more people would be offering their thoughts before it would be my turn.
In my whole eighteen years, I’d never had to offer feedback on a speech before. I tried to catch fragments of what was said by the people who went before me but my thoughts raced too fast to catch much. I tried to mentally categorize what the elements of a speech might be, but everything I learned in speech class vanished from my brain. What could I say about Luiz’s presentation?
How do you put language to the way a voice sounds?
Something about pacing?
His eyes.
Oh dear.
The moment arrived and I was asked which speech I liked best. The president’s pen hovered in the air ready to note my answer.
“I liked Luiz’s speech best.”
While my answer was different from those who answered before me, it was entirely truthful.
I could at least lean on the truth.
“And why did you like Luiz’s speech best?” he asked.
“I liked Luiz’s speech because I like Luiz.” I tried to act as if the matter was settled and looked on to the next person.
The man forced his pen flat on the podium and pursed his lips sternly before responding. “I will not allow for any bias in this Toastmasters club.”
I followed my gut. “I’m so sorry but…I don’t think my bias can be helped.”
This got an annoyed eye roll from the club president, but it also brought a smile from Luiz with eyes that crinkled in the corners. After dinner, he walked me to my car. Though he wasn’t named the winner, he said he felt like one.
When I got his invite the next morning to go out for lunch, I didn’t take two hours to reply. Soon, we were seated at Jason’s Deli, table for two—I’m so glad objectivity didn’t win the competition.
Today, I call him Nano and we have three kids. And a refusal to be starkly rational may leave us with uncertain moments, but it’s essential to the mix that makes up a life of love. The long-haul of love needs a determination to shed clinical approaches, especially when it’s tricky.
Maybe there’s a type of bias that shows the magic the human soul was made to be. Maybe embracing it a few thousand times over is all that love might ask—to bear all things, believe all things, hope all things, endure all things (1 Cor. 13:7).









