(Madisyn Taylor)
Often in our lives, we fall prey to the idea of a thing rather than actually experiencing the thing itself. We see this at play in our love lives and in the love lives of our friends, our family, and even fictional characters. The conceptualizing, depiction, and pursuit of true love are multimillion-dollar industries in the modern world. However, very little of what is offered actually leads us to an authentic experience of love. Moreover, as we grasp for what we think we want and fail to find it, we may suffer and bring suffering to others. When this is the case, when we suffer more than we feel healed, we can be fairly certain that what we have found is not love but something else.
When we feel anxious, excited, nervous, and thrilled, we are probably experiencing romance, not love … Romance may lead to love, but it may also fade without blossoming into anything more than a flirtation. If we cling to it and try to make it more, we might find ourselves pining for a fantasy, or worse, stuck in a relationship that was never meant to last.
Real love is identifiable by the way it makes us feel. Love should feel good. There is a peaceful quality to an authentic experience of love that penetrates to our core, touching a part of ourselves that has always been there. True love activates this inner being, filling us with warmth and light. An authentic experience of love does not ask us to look a certain way, drive a certain car, or have a certain job. It takes us as we are, no changes required. When people truly love us, their love for us awakens our love for ourselves. They remind us that what we seek outside of ourselves is a mirror image of the lover within. In this way, true love never makes us feel needy or lacking or anxious. Instead, true love empowers us with its implicit message that we are, always have been, and always will be, made of love.
My Thoughts:
So, love has to be perfect then (?) … I think not.
Looking at the concept of love though rose-tinted glasses is almost the ideal way to keep us away from finding it.
I agree that love should not be controlling in a negative way, but there is never going to be perfect harmony in everything when two people, that are often different in more ways than they are similar, with their own personality and ideals of how things should be will always clash over some things. As it should be. It would be a very dull existence if we all thought exactly the same.
As far as I am concerned love is all about a lot of compromises.
The trick is, as far as I am concerned that if there is an inbuild gut fear of losing someone, even if there are disagreements then the utopian concept of perfect love is nil-and-void.