Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Define Love and I’ll tell you if it exists.
Love is a single soul inhabiting two bodies and you wish you could turn back the clock to find sooner just to love even longer. Whenever you're alone with them, they make you feel like you are home again. You don't love someone for their looks, or their clothes, or for their fancy car, but because they sing a song only you can hear. You find the one whom your soul loves.
Barf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Define Love and I’ll tell you if it exists.
Love is a single soul inhabiting two bodies and you wish you could turn back the clock to find sooner just to love even longer. Whenever you're alone with them, they make you feel like you are home again. You don't love someone for their looks, or their clothes, or for their fancy car, but because they sing a song only you can hear. You find the one whom your soul loves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Define Love and I’ll tell you if it exists.
Love is a single soul inhabiting two bodies and you wish you could turn back the clock to find sooner just to love even longer. Whenever you're alone with them, they make you feel like you are home again. You don't love someone for their looks, or their clothes, or for their fancy car, but because they sing a song only you can hear. You find the one whom your soul loves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I believe it exists, but not for me. Not in this lifetime.
It makes me kinda sad if I spend too much time thinking about it, so I try to focus on being happy for the people I know who seem to have what I don't.
Lucky them!
How can you possibly know that?
Anonymous wrote:I believe it exists, but not for me. Not in this lifetime.
It makes me kinda sad if I spend too much time thinking about it, so I try to focus on being happy for the people I know who seem to have what I don't.
Lucky them!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am mid 40s and divorced. I think I was done looking for love when I was 28 before I met my ex-husband because I was destroyed by a break up. I think by the time most people hit 30 they’re done with the love thing because you can’t really grow together if you’re getting married in your late 20s or later. I think love and marriage only works if you’re getting married from 22-27 or so.
I would never remarry because I did not see any benefits of marriage whatsoever and I’m not naïve enough to think that I’m going to find love like I did in my early 20s.
I’m mid forties and still married. I met Dh in my mid twenties, got married at 29 and had 3 kids together in our thirties. We absolutely grew together. I feel we are drifting apart now in our mid forties. He hasn’t changed much but I have.
You just proved my point exactly because you met in your mid-20s and you married by 29. It is completely different if you meet at 29 or 30 and get married in your 30s—that’s my point. I did not meet my ex until 30; he was 34. That is way too late to grow together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am mid 40s and divorced. I think I was done looking for love when I was 28 before I met my ex-husband because I was destroyed by a break up. I think by the time most people hit 30 they’re done with the love thing because you can’t really grow together if you’re getting married in your late 20s or later. I think love and marriage only works if you’re getting married from 22-27 or so.
I would never remarry because I did not see any benefits of marriage whatsoever and I’m not naïve enough to think that I’m going to find love like I did in my early 20s.
I’m mid forties and still married. I met Dh in my mid twenties, got married at 29 and had 3 kids together in our thirties. We absolutely grew together. I feel we are drifting apart now in our mid forties. He hasn’t changed much but I have.
You just proved my point exactly because you met in your mid-20s and you married by 29. It is completely different if you meet at 29 or 30 and get married in your 30s—that’s my point. I did not meet my ex until 30; he was 34. That is way too late to grow together.
Anonymous wrote:It’s not being jaded, I think, but realistic. The heady early period fades and so you have to really like the person’s personality.
When you like the personality, you have to weigh whether the benefit of a standard marriage or long term monogamous relationship is there for you anymore.
I’m a late 40s woman. If DH were to die or leave me, I’d probably try to find a nice boyfriend, but I also probably wouldn’t want to live together or join finances. I love companionship, but I no longer enjoy daily cooking for people or cleaning or keeping house for them. I have enough money for myself forever. Plus I’d be looking for fun after decades of monogamy.
Anonymous wrote:Define Love and I’ll tell you if it exists.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am mid 40s and divorced. I think I was done looking for love when I was 28 before I met my ex-husband because I was destroyed by a break up. I think by the time most people hit 30 they’re done with the love thing because you can’t really grow together if you’re getting married in your late 20s or later. I think love and marriage only works if you’re getting married from 22-27 or so.
I would never remarry because I did not see any benefits of marriage whatsoever and I’m not naïve enough to think that I’m going to find love like I did in my early 20s.
I’m mid forties and still married. I met Dh in my mid twenties, got married at 29 and had 3 kids together in our thirties. We absolutely grew together. I feel we are drifting apart now in our mid forties. He hasn’t changed much but I have.
Anonymous wrote:I am mid 40s and divorced. I think I was done looking for love when I was 28 before I met my ex-husband because I was destroyed by a break up. I think by the time most people hit 30 they’re done with the love thing because you can’t really grow together if you’re getting married in your late 20s or later. I think love and marriage only works if you’re getting married from 22-27 or so.
I would never remarry because I did not see any benefits of marriage whatsoever and I’m not naïve enough to think that I’m going to find love like I did in my early 20s.