fureverywhere
beloved friend who will always be with us in spiri
- Location
- Northern NJ, USA
Hubby might hang on another decade and I'm sure Levar is probably taken...ah but we can dream.
For the first time in my life, I feel it all. Fireworks, and a mental, emotional, spiritual connection that is off the charts. Having a man who can run around in my mind with me, as I do with him----best ever. Living apart, we have been forced to actually
communicate, to share on a deeper level. In person, one often speaks spontaneously, no real thought behind the words. When that is denied, even a hug impossible, communication becomes paramount. Things get real, and the walls come down. My son
swears by the depth of his online connections. Now I understand what he means, fireworks are great, but fleeting. Depth and commonality have saying power.
Phoenix, I think you may be right. Certainly being courted is a novel experience for this flower child. I love it. The poet and the Sifu, who ever would have guessed?
One of the things that I think we lost during the '60s and '70s was romance. In our eagerness to hop into bed, we never took the time to get to know each other. Mystery disappeared into writhing body sweat. I think that distance can be good for creating the space for romance and courtship. Maybe that's what's happening with you, Shalimar. Maybe, you are being introduced to the subtleties that allow love to blossom.
A lot of us never went that route, though. Either we did the traditional fall-in-love-marry thing or we had relationships that didn't involved leaping in and out of beds. That paled for me very early on, in the early '70s. When sex becomes the focal point of the relationship, the brass ring on the merry-go-round, it seems that real communication and closeness go out the window. (OK, mixed metaphor, but it's after midnight here.)
So now, at my age, it will have to be true love or nothing, and frankly, after this past year, I'd almost just as soon it be nothing.
One of the most overlooked factors for a successful relationship is compatibility. When two people enjoy doing things together, maybe just watching television or sitting on the porch, each comfortable and confident in each other's presence. Without compatibility you , you have nothing. Is it more important than love and honesty, no, but it can be the one factor that may make or break a relationship.
True love is a myth of fairy tales and romance novelists. In the beginning its all hormones anyway --- lucky if we end up liking each other after that wears off, which apparently it does after about a year, according to experts. When these old couples say they are still 'in love' I wonder how they define love. I imagine they love each other like platonic old friends, minus all the 'magic'.
I agree. Relative to that, does a person give the other person the benefit of the doubt or immediately assume that the comment one heard that sounded like a put down was not that at all?
To whom it may concern:
I'm just as handsome as Levar Burton.
"I give to you and you give to me, true love, true love. For on and on it will always be, true love, true love. For you and I have a guardian angel on high with nothing to do, but to give to me and to give to you, love forever true." Remember this song?
There are many theories about what love is, what romantic love is...etc. I've loved a number of guys in different ways. Some of them I was in love with...it had nothing to do with hormones. The day to day of a relationship can wear the romance thin, but if one can maintain respect, then "in love" does not have to end.
“You wake up one day, and you look at your spouse and realize you’re relatives.”