Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are the first five?
1. Words of affirmation
2. Quality time
3. Receiving gifts
4. Acts of service
5. Physical touch
Though I personally don't buy into this approach because I have encountered too many people who have personality issues (maybe disorders, I'm not a psychiatrist) but will claim "Oh, it's just that my love language is receiving gifts!" But actually they are just very selfish. Or they'll claim their love language is "acts of service" only their acts of service are always inappropriate and unwanted, and they just have boundary and control issues. Etc.
So cheese sounds like a decent 6th category.
Alone time
That's self-love, not something you can share with another person.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are the first five?
1. Words of affirmation
2. Quality time
3. Receiving gifts
4. Acts of service
5. Physical touch
Though I personally don't buy into this approach because I have encountered too many people who have personality issues (maybe disorders, I'm not a psychiatrist) but will claim "Oh, it's just that my love language is receiving gifts!" But actually they are just very selfish. Or they'll claim their love language is "acts of service" only their acts of service are always inappropriate and unwanted, and they just have boundary and control issues. Etc.
So cheese sounds like a decent 6th category.
Alone time
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait, RECEIVING gifts is part of your love language? Shouldn’t it be GIVING gifts?
It’s about what makes you feel loved.
Anonymous wrote:Cheese. And taking the kids outside so I can be alone with my cheese.
For me it's when DH plays guitar and we harmonize. I guess that would fall under Quality Time.
Anonymous wrote:Physical touch is a nice way of saying sex? I understand men have sex as their love language
Anonymous wrote:Doing your fair share around the house
Anonymous wrote:I would say looking good for your partner
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are the first five?
1. Words of affirmation
2. Quality time
3. Receiving gifts
4. Acts of service
5. Physical touch
Though I personally don't buy into this approach because I have encountered too many people who have personality issues (maybe disorders, I'm not a psychiatrist) but will claim "Oh, it's just that my love language is receiving gifts!" But actually they are just very selfish. Or they'll claim their love language is "acts of service" only their acts of service are always inappropriate and unwanted, and they just have boundary and control issues. Etc.
So cheese sounds like a decent 6th category.