Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Deep love is cultivated.
http://www.businessinsider.com/lasting-relationships-rely-on-2-traits-2014-11
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2014/06/happily-ever-after/372573/
When you meditate on what you love about someone, you start to love them more. Not quite "fake it to make it" but more like building a case in their favor and it being true. When my spouse sleeps, sometimes I work on studying spouse's face and attributes. "I love ____'s eyes....smell, the way they hold me." And I practice what I would like more, I hug more, and holds are lingering.
You really have to be intentional and fight for the love you want. The more you feed into your distaste, it grows like a baby. You nature negative feelings and this negative baby will grow. The same is true if you nurture what you love and plant seeds of what you want to love to grow.
Sure but you need to fundamentally LIKe the person you’re with in order for this to work. If you don’t this means nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Deep love is cultivated.
http://www.businessinsider.com/lasting-relationships-rely-on-2-traits-2014-11
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2014/06/happily-ever-after/372573/
When you meditate on what you love about someone, you start to love them more. Not quite "fake it to make it" but more like building a case in their favor and it being true. When my spouse sleeps, sometimes I work on studying spouse's face and attributes. "I love ____'s eyes....smell, the way they hold me." And I practice what I would like more, I hug more, and holds are lingering.
You really have to be intentional and fight for the love you want. The more you feed into your distaste, it grows like a baby. You nature negative feelings and this negative baby will grow. The same is true if you nurture what you love and plant seeds of what you want to love to grow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Deep love is cultivated.
http://www.businessinsider.com/lasting-relationships-rely-on-2-traits-2014-11
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2014/06/happily-ever-after/372573/
When you meditate on what you love about someone, you start to love them more. Not quite "fake it to make it" but more like building a case in their favor and it being true. When my spouse sleeps, sometimes I work on studying spouse's face and attributes. "I love ____'s eyes....smell, the way they hold me." And I practice what I would like more, I hug more, and holds are lingering.
You really have to be intentional and fight for the love you want. The more you feed into your distaste, it grows like a baby. You nature negative feelings and this negative baby will grow. The same is true if you nurture what you love and plant seeds of what you want to love to grow.
x100000000
Anonymous wrote:Deep love is cultivated.
http://www.businessinsider.com/lasting-relationships-rely-on-2-traits-2014-11
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2014/06/happily-ever-after/372573/
When you meditate on what you love about someone, you start to love them more. Not quite "fake it to make it" but more like building a case in their favor and it being true. When my spouse sleeps, sometimes I work on studying spouse's face and attributes. "I love ____'s eyes....smell, the way they hold me." And I practice what I would like more, I hug more, and holds are lingering.
You really have to be intentional and fight for the love you want. The more you feed into your distaste, it grows like a baby. You nature negative feelings and this negative baby will grow. The same is true if you nurture what you love and plant seeds of what you want to love to grow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are your options?
I’m in a fine marriage. I love my husband and adore him. But he’s also so childish, immature and annoying. I do not feel deep respect or admire him. He never gets me or understands me on a fundamental level. But we have a good partnership and a life better than most.
I get sick in my stomach when I see couples who are deeply in love and have that connection.
You can feel it in their presence!
Is it worth it to throw your life away hoping to chase it? Or give in and find other sources of contentment?
Honestly? I know it's hard but I lean towards saying yes. I know it's a cliche to say this, but you only get one life, that we know of. ONE. It's easy to forget that because human nature makes you put it out of mind and we take it for granted that we're all going to live til 80 or 90 but the sad fact is, millions of people die young every day. Do you want to waste the best years of your life on someone who doesn't make you happy? I truly respect, admire, trust, and love my husband. We've been married for 20 years now and when we first started dating, I remember literally jumping into the air for joy on my way out of his apartment the first time I stayed over. I was that giddy and in love. Those kind of butterflies have mostly gone away but I treasure those memories. And what is left is bone deep trust, commitment, comfort, and security. And believe me, I'm nothing special. I just found the "lid" to my "pot" so to speak. That guy (or that woman) is out there for you. You just have to look. I really believe everyone has someone out there that they click with and fit together like puzzle pieces.
That is a crock of shit. I am very happy for you that you found your "lid" (or for those of us who were Friends fans, your lobster) but it's ridiculous to say everyone has that missing puzzle piece out there. It just doesn't happen for a lot of people through no fault of their own. So many different types of people, different personalities, different histories, different issues. Lots of wonderful people who won't find the mythical "deep love". If you've got it, treasure it, but most won't find that and to throw away a good marriage for this fairy tale that movies and books sell us is reckless. If your marriage is bad, that is one thing, but otherwise, you are acting like a fool.
I am happy to have a husband I trust (oh so important), respect and love, but he ain't perfect and neither am I. We choose to work at having a good marriage and creating a happy place for our kids each day. It's not always easy and we don't always "get" each other, but we keep trying.
NP. That’s the thing though. You think it’s a myth used to sell movies and books because you’ve never been in love but a lot of people would tell you it’s real and that they know that because they *have* experienced it. It’s real, it exists. A lot of people have it. All the cliches about what it’s like to fall in love are true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are your options?
I’m in a fine marriage. I love my husband and adore him. But he’s also so childish, immature and annoying. I do not feel deep respect or admire him. He never gets me or understands me on a fundamental level. But we have a good partnership and a life better than most.
I get sick in my stomach when I see couples who are deeply in love and have that connection.
You can feel it in their presence!
Is it worth it to throw your life away hoping to chase it? Or give in and find other sources of contentment?
Honestly? I know it's hard but I lean towards saying yes. I know it's a cliche to say this, but you only get one life, that we know of. ONE. It's easy to forget that because human nature makes you put it out of mind and we take it for granted that we're all going to live til 80 or 90 but the sad fact is, millions of people die young every day. Do you want to waste the best years of your life on someone who doesn't make you happy? I truly respect, admire, trust, and love my husband. We've been married for 20 years now and when we first started dating, I remember literally jumping into the air for joy on my way out of his apartment the first time I stayed over. I was that giddy and in love. Those kind of butterflies have mostly gone away but I treasure those memories. And what is left is bone deep trust, commitment, comfort, and security. And believe me, I'm nothing special. I just found the "lid" to my "pot" so to speak. That guy (or that woman) is out there for you. You just have to look. I really believe everyone has someone out there that they click with and fit together like puzzle pieces.
That is a crock of shit. I am very happy for you that you found your "lid" (or for those of us who were Friends fans, your lobster) but it's ridiculous to say everyone has that missing puzzle piece out there. It just doesn't happen for a lot of people through no fault of their own. So many different types of people, different personalities, different histories, different issues. Lots of wonderful people who won't find the mythical "deep love". If you've got it, treasure it, but most won't find that and to throw away a good marriage for this fairy tale that movies and books sell us is reckless. If your marriage is bad, that is one thing, but otherwise, you are acting like a fool.
I am happy to have a husband I trust (oh so important), respect and love, but he ain't perfect and neither am I. We choose to work at having a good marriage and creating a happy place for our kids each day. It's not always easy and we don't always "get" each other, but we keep trying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are your options?
I’m in a fine marriage. I love my husband and adore him. But he’s also so childish, immature and annoying. I do not feel deep respect or admire him. He never gets me or understands me on a fundamental level. But we have a good partnership and a life better than most.
I get sick in my stomach when I see couples who are deeply in love and have that connection.
You can feel it in their presence!
Is it worth it to throw your life away hoping to chase it? Or give in and find other sources of contentment?
Honestly? I know it's hard but I lean towards saying yes. I know it's a cliche to say this, but you only get one life, that we know of. ONE. It's easy to forget that because human nature makes you put it out of mind and we take it for granted that we're all going to live til 80 or 90 but the sad fact is, millions of people die young every day. Do you want to waste the best years of your life on someone who doesn't make you happy? I truly respect, admire, trust, and love my husband. We've been married for 20 years now and when we first started dating, I remember literally jumping into the air for joy on my way out of his apartment the first time I stayed over. I was that giddy and in love. Those kind of butterflies have mostly gone away but I treasure those memories. And what is left is bone deep trust, commitment, comfort, and security. And believe me, I'm nothing special. I just found the "lid" to my "pot" so to speak. That guy (or that woman) is out there for you. You just have to look. I really believe everyone has someone out there that they click with and fit together like puzzle pieces.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are your options?
I’m in a fine marriage. I love my husband and adore him. But he’s also so childish, immature and annoying. I do not feel deep respect or admire him. He never gets me or understands me on a fundamental level. But we have a good partnership and a life better than most.
I get sick in my stomach when I see couples who are deeply in love and have that connection.
You can feel it in their presence!
Is it worth it to throw your life away hoping to chase it? Or give in and find other sources of contentment?
Honestly? I know it's hard but I lean towards saying yes. I know it's a cliche to say this, but you only get one life, that we know of. ONE. It's easy to forget that because human nature makes you put it out of mind and we take it for granted that we're all going to live til 80 or 90 but the sad fact is, millions of people die young every day. Do you want to waste the best years of your life on someone who doesn't make you happy? I truly respect, admire, trust, and love my husband. We've been married for 20 years now and when we first started dating, I remember literally jumping into the air for joy on my way out of his apartment the first time I stayed over. I was that giddy and in love. Those kind of butterflies have mostly gone away but I treasure those memories. And what is left is bone deep trust, commitment, comfort, and security. And believe me, I'm nothing special. I just found the "lid" to my "pot" so to speak. That guy (or that woman) is out there for you. You just have to look. I really believe everyone has someone out there that they click with and fit together like puzzle pieces.
and I am content with my life and love him and our kid truly, madly, deeply but without the “I am ga ga over you”. Lol!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know but that thread is making me depressedI want that and hoped to have it and I just don't. We are not in love like that and I don't think we ever will be.
Op here. Me too. I’d always always hoped and prayed I’d experience deep love. I’ve been dreaming of it since I was 14!
I’m a romantic dreamy person and I feel like I’m being forced to swallow a bitter reality.
Maybe this is your problem? I am in that thread and my husband is not like...swooning all over me all the time. There aren't big romantic gestures and we have pretty low expectations of each other. I think people who have a preconceived notion of what deep romantic love is struggle to find it and perhaps struggle to identify it when they see it.
For us, it is simply a deep and profound appreciation for the other person, it isn't candles and roses and making out on the stairwells. Not saying this is what you believe but perhaps it could contribute.
I think I found this relationship by practicing gratitude in my daily life and kind of teaching my husband how to do that by example. That daily practice allows me to really appreciate and love him for who he is, flaws and all. We don't live a fairytale, we just live our lives and are very grateful for the opportunity to do so with each other.