Freedumb wrote on Sep 6
th, 2014 at 12:19am:
This new girl, had absolutely nothing in common with my good friend, and no spark or "chemistry" occurred when they met, and even after they had gotten to know one another.
That's the problem with people today when it comes to "love." They want immediate "chemistry."
It's not that "love" can't involve chemistry. It's just that people think they need the drug-like high that hits them like a hammer. The feeling of being "loved," doesn't have to be something that hits you in a short period of time. It could develop over a longer period of time as you get to know each other and make sacrifices for each other.
If a woman cooked for me every day and my success in life depended on those meals she cooked for me, I would develop feelings of attachment toward her over time, probably even if she was ugly. The idea of someone making sacrifices for me every day is like a hole I am in danger of falling into. It's the idea that your life depends on someone else and that there is nothing you can do about it. You are trapped in this state of dependence and it scares you because it makes you feel vulnerable.
It's not the feeling that hits you like a hammer and gives you a drug-like high that I would regard as "love," but rather the little things you allow someone to do for you over a much longer period of time (possibly a whole decade or lifetime) that I would regard as love.
Love is like a plant. It takes time to grow. I think people who think of it as like a drug you can inject into your blood like a syringe (speaking metaphorically), that if you just don't feel it, that it isn't love, have got it all wrong.
Freedumb wrote on Sep 6
th, 2014 at 12:19am:
Perhaps they grew to love one another, but love is something that you just know it when you see it, even observing two people from afar.
I think that's precisely the problem with today's generation and its concept of love. It's about "liking" someone, not about caring for them. If even one person cares for the other, that is love. It's not a question of whether they have chemistry or whether they are attracted to or like each other. The "love" is in the "caring," because when someone cares about you, you can't help being drawn to them.
In the old days, if someone saved your life, you owed them your own.
Freedumb wrote on Sep 6
th, 2014 at 12:19am:
The question is, going by your personal experiences, do you believe that an emotional based love is real, and that it exists when it comes to a union/relationship, and if so, is it common or rare?
Human emotions are so unstable, if relationships depended on them, they wouldn't last. Human emotions are just a series of neural signals in your brain sustained by hormones. It is part electrical and part chemical. Once the hormones stop flowing, the neural signals representing those emotions will slowly die and disappear.
I think "love" should depend on what you "do" for another person rather than how you "feel." Referring back to that example about a woman cooking meals for me every day, the dedication and devotion that the act demonstrates would make me feel "loved." How that woman actually feels about the favours she does for me is actually irrelevant. For her, it might just be a monotonous chore. It's how I feel about the act that is important. The "love" is in the act, not the feelings you have independent of what others do. The love is in what do you and how you make others feel, not how you feel personally. The love comes from someone else. It is not in you.
Life is a series of continuous rituals that must be repeated over and over again and there is no reason why "love" can't be "ritualistic." There may be some emotion behind these rituals, but emotion is not enough. It is not enough to just feel. We must also act. Our emotions will cease without something to sustain them, so there must be some external stimulus to keep them going. "Ritual" and "emotion" must work together to create "love."
Freedumb wrote on Sep 6
th, 2014 at 12:19am:
Can it be true that a lot of relationships are based on finances or survival?
Survival and vulnerability is one way to win (and maybe keep) someone's heart. Put yourself or allow yourself to be put in a situation where you're vulnerable, in danger and need to be rescued or a situation where you need to be "loved" and "cared for" and you will naturally be drawn to the person who comes to your aid.
That's how affairs start! Two people find themselves with mutual needs. If you have everything you need and always feel safe, you probably won't develop an attraction for anyone because you don't need anyone.