grahamg
Old codger
- Location
- South of Manchester, UK
Anyone following divorce can probably agree there are/were aspects of the relationship they regret, if not the whole thing, (hard to regret the whole thing, if there were children involved, as you'd have to regret them too).
As long as you believed at the time you married, or formed a relationship with someone, that you loved them, then whatever failings there might have been on your own part, your conscience, or feelings of guilt, are eased by that aren't they, (define "love" as you like, although I define it as a feeling of being happy with someone or you felt this towards the other person, AND you're not completely in charge of this feeling, so coming from your subconscious, and it can't just be turned off by force of your own will).
It is certainly possible we delude ourselves when we say we love someone, this has been said by an "expert" I've read about recently though I thought it before myself (sorry can't remember their name, but I may have mentioned them on another thread).
Is it the same to admit we delude ourselves when saying we love someone, or might be deluding ourselves saying and thinking we love someone, compared to the situation where a man or woman professing love for another does so knowing this isn't the way they feel?
Is it that much different to deliberately mislead someone, than mislead yourself to an extent, (if you can follow my reasoning here?)? I think it is different, and I remember during my marriage ceremony forty years ago, the vicar pointng out marriage should not be entered into "wantonly" too, though I didn't fully understand the word at that time.
As long as you believed at the time you married, or formed a relationship with someone, that you loved them, then whatever failings there might have been on your own part, your conscience, or feelings of guilt, are eased by that aren't they, (define "love" as you like, although I define it as a feeling of being happy with someone or you felt this towards the other person, AND you're not completely in charge of this feeling, so coming from your subconscious, and it can't just be turned off by force of your own will).
It is certainly possible we delude ourselves when we say we love someone, this has been said by an "expert" I've read about recently though I thought it before myself (sorry can't remember their name, but I may have mentioned them on another thread).
Is it the same to admit we delude ourselves when saying we love someone, or might be deluding ourselves saying and thinking we love someone, compared to the situation where a man or woman professing love for another does so knowing this isn't the way they feel?
Is it that much different to deliberately mislead someone, than mislead yourself to an extent, (if you can follow my reasoning here?)? I think it is different, and I remember during my marriage ceremony forty years ago, the vicar pointng out marriage should not be entered into "wantonly" too, though I didn't fully understand the word at that time.