

This article is an excerpt from the Shortform book guide to "Loving What Is" by Byron Katie. Shortform has the world's best summaries and analyses of books you should be reading.
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What is Byron Katie’s Loving What Is about? What is the key message to take away from the book?
In Loving What Is, Byron Katie argues that life experiences don’t cause emotional pain, only resistant thoughts that judge experiences as somehow wrong or unwanted do. Therefore, releasing resistant thoughts allows you to accept and feel at peace with life, no matter what happens.
Below is a brief overview of Loving What Is: Four Questions That Can Change Your Life by Byron Katie.
Loving What Is: Four Questions That Can Change Your Life
It’s a simple fact that life’s full of problems and challenges that you’d rather not face. If you’re like most people, you probably assume that you’re supposed to feel emotional pain when things don’t go the way you want—and that it’s not possible to feel positive emotions unless your experiences improve.
But what if there’s a way to feel positive no matter what happens in your life? In Loving What Is, Byron Katie argues all negative emotions spring from resistant thoughts about experiences, not from the experiences themselves. Therefore, the only way to achieve inner peace is to release resistant thoughts and accept each moment that occurs.
This guide discusses Katie’s advice for accepting life and achieving inner peace in two parts. In the first part, we’ll explain her argument that all negative emotions spring from resistant thoughts about life experiences. In the second part, we’ll present Katie’s step-by-step method for releasing resistant thoughts about any unwanted situations in your life.
Part 1: Inner Peace Comes From Accepting That Life Is Inherently Perfect
Katie argues that you have no real reason to feel emotional pain. She explains that every moment that occurs is inherently good—there is no such thing as a bad experience. Her reasoning for this is as follows: Only things that are meant to happen happen. And, anything that’s meant to happen is good. Therefore, everything that happens is good.
Understanding this concept allows you to accept and feel at peace with every moment that occurs, regardless of what happens.
Inner Turmoil Comes From Wanting Life to Be Different From What It Is
Since every experience is inherently good, why is it that certain experiences make us feel negative emotions such as sadness, anxiety, or anger? According to Katie, it’s not the experiences that make you feel pain. Rather, all your negative emotions spring from resistant thoughts that judge these experiences as wrong or unwanted.
These resistant thoughts distort the truth of reality (that it is inherently perfect) by preventing you from seeing the good in your experiences. The more resistant thoughts you think about your experiences, the more you fail to see what’s good about them. As a result, you easily find even more reasons to feel unhappy about your experiences—and this is why you feel negative emotions.
Examples of resistant thoughts include blaming others for not behaving in ways that you believe they should, complaining about things because you think they should be different, and worrying about all of the bad things that might happen.
Katie clarifies why resistant thoughts lie at the root of all negative emotions by explaining how they:
- Cause you to misinterpret reality
- Convince you that reality must change before you can accept it
Let’s explore these two effects in detail.
Effect #1: Resistant Thoughts Cause You to Misinterpret Reality
Katie argues that resistant thoughts keep you mired in a world of possibilities that don’t exist: Instead of focusing your mind on what has happened or is happening, they focus your mind on what should have happened, could have happened, or might happen.
These thoughts keep you locked in an imaginary narrative that has nothing to do with reality. As a result, they cloud your judgment and prevent you from clearly perceiving, interpreting, and responding to the situation as it is.
According to Katie, the more you let your internal narrative blind you, the more you misperceive and misinterpret reality as bad. This causes you to engage in emotional reactions and behaviors that exacerbate your negative feelings and prolong your emotional pain.
Example: It’s your birthday and your partner hasn’t yet mentioned it. You assume that she’s forgotten about you, and this upsets you. Since you’re upset, you can’t think clearly about how much she cares about you—instead, you focus on all the ways she neglects your needs. This exacerbates your negative feelings and causes you to emotionally withdraw from her. As it turns out, your partner didn’t mention your birthday because she’s planning a surprise for you—which means you don’t have a real reason to feel pained by the experience. Only your misinterpretation of her behavior, coupled with your negative internal narrative, creates and prolongs your pain.
Effect #2: Resistant Thoughts Convince You That Reality Must Change Before You Can Accept It
Katie explains that while resistant thoughts distort the truth of reality and are therefore the cause of your emotional pain, you often don’t realize this—because those very same resistant thoughts convince you that something external is to blame for your emotional discomfort. So, to seek relief from your emotional discomfort, you attempt to exert control over and change things you can’t control, such as other people or external circumstances.
However, she argues, it’s impossible to control anything that’s outside of yourself—the people and situations in your life are never going to change no matter how many resistant thoughts you think about them. Attempting to do so just fuels additional resistant thoughts (for example, “I hate this because it should be different!”) that prevent you from accepting and making the best of your circumstances.
Example: Each time your roommate leaves dirty dishes in the sink you get angry and snap at him. You believe that he’s to blame for your anger and that he must change his behavior so that you can feel better. However, no matter how angry you feel, or how often you lash out at him, he continues to leave dirty dishes in the sink. Because you don’t see the truth—that only your resistant thoughts about the dishes in the sink make you angry—you allow your negative emotions to escalate and fail to find peace with the situation.
Part 2: A Step-by-Step Process to Release Resistant Thoughts
We’ve just explained Katie’s argument that all negative emotions spring from resistant thoughts about experiences, not from the experiences themselves. It follows then that the only way to accept and feel at peace with your experiences is to release the resistant thoughts you have about those experiences.
But, how can you release resistant thoughts, especially when there’s a situation in your life that you find difficult to accept or feel good about? Katie suggests that you can achieve this by practicing a three-part process:
- Write down your thoughts about the situation.
- Ask yourself four particular questions to explore your thoughts.
- Reframe your thoughts until you feel at peace with the situation.
Let’s explore each of these steps in more detail.
Step #1: Write Down Your Thoughts About Your Situation
The first step toward achieving inner peace involves writing down resistant thoughts about a specific situation. Katie claims that you’ll have more success with her three-step process if you write down your thoughts, rather than if you try to list them mentally.
This is because your mind doesn’t like change: Once you’ve made a habit of thinking resistant thoughts, your mind becomes so attached to them that it doesn’t want to let go of your negative perspective. To protect this perspective, your mind releases a stream of unfocused defensive thoughts to interrupt any attempts you make to change your feelings. It does this to convince you that you’re right to hold onto your resistant thoughts and the emotional pain that they incur.
On the other hand, Katie claims, writing down your thoughts will focus your mind only on what you’ve written and reduce these mental interruptions.
To complete this first step, she suggests that you think about something in your life that you’re unhappy about. This might be related to something that’s happening in your life now, a memory from the past, or a worry about the future. Then, write short simple sentences to honestly express how you feel about the situation.
Example #1: “My children never help with the chores because they don’t respect me.”

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Here's what you'll find in our full Loving What Is summary:
- How to investigate resistant thoughts that trigger emotional discomfort
- A step-by-step process to release resistant thoughts
- How to accept and feel at peace with yourself and others