TL;DR: Valarie Kaur articulates a practice called "tend the wound" that begins with wonder—genuine curiosity about even those we disagree with or who have caused harm. Rather than viewing difficult people as monsters, Kaur teaches that all humans are wounded beings deserving of spacious inquiry. When we develop enough internal spaciousness to ask "why?" instead of judge, a portal opens and deep listening becomes possible. This is not passivity but a radical reimagining of how we relate to opponents—political, familial, and otherwise. Kaur's own journey through deep pain into wisdom illustrates that transformation happens when we allow the wound to become a womb, creating space for rebirth.
What does love beginning with wonder really mean?
Kaur grounds her teaching in a simple but radical premise: "Love begins with wonder. To wonder about each other" (0:00). This is not sentimental or abstract. Wonder here means genuine curiosity—the willingness to actually be puzzled by another person's existence and motivations. It is the opposite of assumption.
In practice, this shifts how we approach conflict. Most frameworks for dealing with disagreement move straight to judgment, debate, or avoidance. Kaur's approach asks first: who is this person, and why do they see the world as they do? This pause—this wondering—is the entry point to any genuine encounter.
How can we practice love with people who have hurt us?
Kaur does not speak from theory alone. She describes a specific practice: "It's called tend the wound. I have sat with people who have hurt me. I have sat with people who have killed members of my community in hate" (12:00-21:00). This is not metaphorical. As an activist and teacher working in the Sikh community, particularly after anti-Muslim and anti-Sikh violence in the United States, Kaur has literally engaged with people responsible for serious harm.
What she learned from those encounters is this: "There are no such thing as monsters in this world. There are only human beings who are wounded" (24:00-27:00). This is perhaps the most difficult part of her teaching to embody. Monsters are easier to fight because they can be defeated from the outside. Wounded human beings require a different response: understanding, presence, and inquiry.
What is spaciousness, and why does it matter in conflict?
Central to Kaur's approach is the concept of "spaciousness inside of you" (29:00). Spaciousness is not passivity. It is an internal capacity—room enough to hold both your own pain and your curiosity about another's. When you can ask "why?" with genuine interest rather than defensiveness, something shifts.
This internal space is where inquiry can happen: "If you have enough spaciousness inside of you to wonder about them, okay, why? Why do they say that? Then that might be information to sit and listen" (29:00-36:00). The key phrase is "information to sit and listen." Spaciousness creates the conditions where listening becomes possible, and listening is where transformation can begin.
What happens when deep listening opens a portal?
Kaur describes the moment when genuine inquiry meets openness: "And when that happens, it's like a portal opens up in the universe. A process of deep listening begins" (38:00-42:00). This is not metaphorical decoration. In dialogue work, mediation, and reconciliation, there are real turning points—moments where defensiveness suddenly loosens and both people become more present.
When a portal opens, the dynamic shifts from combat to connection. Both parties are no longer locked in predetermined roles. New information, emotion, and humanity can enter. Deep listening means hearing not just words but the fears, grief, and hopes beneath them.
How does pain lead to wisdom?
When asked how she came to her teaching, Kaur's answer is direct: "I've been through a lot of pain" (48:00). She then introduces one of her most memorable reframes: "You got to go through the wound and the wound becomes a womb and then you get rebirth on the other side" (50:00-53:00).
This metaphor is not about suffering being good. It is about transformation. A wound can remain raw, infected, and closed off. Or it can become a womb—a space of incubation where something new is being gestated. The pain itself is the material of growth. Rebirth is not forgetting the wound; it is integrating it into a larger, more compassionate view of yourself and others.
What makes this practice revolutionary?
Kaur's framing of this as "revolutionary love" is deliberate. In a polarized moment, choosing wonder over judgment, choosing spaciousness over certainty, is a radical act. It is revolutionary because it disrupts the feedback loops of retaliation and dehumanization that typically govern how groups at odds treat each other.
The practice applies everywhere: to political opponents, but also to "your husband or the uncle at the kitchen table" (9:00-12:00). The person closest to you can become your opponent just as readily as someone you've never met. The practice of tending the wound—beginning with wonder—scales from intimate family conflict to systemic injustice.
Where to go from here
Kaur's teaching invites immediate application. The next time you encounter someone with whom you disagree—in conversation, on social media, in the news—pause and practice wonder. Ask yourself: what questions could I ask this person? What might they be afraid of? What wound might they be carrying? Can I make space inside myself to listen, even if I don't change my mind?
This is not about agreement or reconciliation in every case. It is about reclaiming your own humanity by refusing to collapse another person into a category or enemy. It is about recognizing that the "opponent" in front of you is not a static thing but a human being capable of change—because all humans are. And if you yourself have gone from wound to womb to rebirth, you already know this is possible.



