FIVE SIGNS IT ISN'T LOVE THOUGH THEY SAY, "I LOVE YOU!"
Here are five warning signs that what your
partner feels for you isn’t love, even though he or she is saying, “I love
you.” They’re not the obvious ones we’re all familiar with: abuse (emotional or
physical), disrespect, manipulation and control, intense neediness, and hero
worship, among others. These signs are more subtle and can easily be
misinterpreted as real love, because they feed the part of our ego that craves
to be adored and accepted, the part that still searches for the
soul-nurturing love provided by an emotionally healthy parent (or not provided
by an emotionally disordered one). Unlike the red flags that feel wrong, these
signals feel right, because they feel good and enable us to indulge our love of
… love.
1.
Too soon.
“To know me is to love me …” said the narcissist to
anyone who can be forced to listen. But the truth is the reverse. To love
someone is to know the person, to have achieved a level of emotional intimacy
and to accept the person underneath the hair and skin. Love is both a feeling
and a commitment; both emotion and action, both noun and verb. It is not
something that develops instantly or even after spending a number of ecstatic
hours with someone over a few weeks time. Love
at first sight is a potent combination of curiosity and lust, and the
feeling we experience after meeting someone we both attracted to and click with
is infatuation. If your partner says I love you too soon, it’s a good bet
he doesn’t know himself or his feelings, or she wants to be in love more than
she wants you specifically. So watch out for early professions of undying
affection.
2.
Too much.
You would think you could never hear the words “I love
you” too many times from your lover. But a compulsive need to confirm love
feelings is not sweet; it’s indicative of potentially dangerous emotional
issues, and if you need to hear it every 20 minutes or 20 times a day, you’ve got
issues of your own. One reason partners keep saying
“I love you” is insecurity. They repeat the words to hear them
back from you and dispel any doubt. Another is a lack of emotional integrity.
Your partner may be faking it until he or she makes it, using the constant
repetition to convince himself or herself of feelings he or she doesn’t
actually feel but is hoping will
develop in time. The third and most problematic reason your partner
may bombard you with the love bomb is to guilt you into expressing reciprocal feelings you may not actually
have. This truth for those that are ready for it! There’s no greater
relationship killer than one person saying, “I love you,” and the other not
saying it back. Whatever the underlying explanation, when someone says “I love
you” too much, that person is putting his or her feelings above yours and is
likely to do that throughout the relationship.
3.
Too physical.
The sad fact is, our bodies change as we get older,
while the person we are inside may grow intellectually and emotionally but
remains essentially the same. If your partner only says I love you when giving
or receiving physical affection or only attaches love statements to your
physical features, you could be in for trouble down the road. Your partner may
love to be with you, and specifically to sleep with you, in your current
physical form, but that “love” may wane as age and time take their toll. Simply
asking the question, “Will you love me when I’m 60 or when I’m old and gray,”
won’t help much, because you’ll simply hear, “Of course.” Try counting the
number of times you hear “I love you” after you’ve said something intelligent,
done something your partner feels proud of, or—and this is tough test for
anyone to pass—when you’ve just stood up for yourself!
4.
Too compatible.
It’s amazing.
Your partner loves everything you love.
The same foods, the same books, the same movies, the
same interior design.
You never—not just rarely but never—disagree on any
choices.
The words, “No thanks, I’d rather,” are not part of
your vocabulary.
Some, even a lot, of shared interests and tastes is
natural; it’s one of the things that attracts you to each other. But unless
you’re dating a clone of yourself, each partner should have distinct interests
and tastes of his or her own. When everything matches to a tee, it’s called
mirroring, and you may be doing it as well as your partner. Psychopaths mirror
to draw victims into relationships by making them think they’ve found the
perfect mate. You may not be dealing with a psychopath, but you may also be
unaware of your partner’s real likes and dislikes, because he or she is not
sharing them for fear of rocking the boat or because it would puncture the
illusion of perfection. Suppressing disagreement also leads to resentment. The places you need to be compatible are
your values, your goals, and your parenting philosophy. Other than that, vive
la différence!
5.
Too tight.
I’m not talking about something not fitting properly
here. I’m talking about a partner being so consumed with the idea of an “us”
that he or she forgets there is a you. If you find your partner frequently
singing your virtues as a couple or always talking about how great you are
together, he or she may be indulging the fantasy of being in a
relationship without experiencing either the actual relationship or you as a
person. An us comprises two independent people who choose to be together, to
bring their individual selves into concert with one another. If your partner surrenders his
or her individuality without a fight or even a whimper, you may be with someone
whose psychological integrity is compromised and who will ultimately define his
or her identity around the relationship. This makes it harder for you to
leave if you choose to, because severing the bond destroys the identity your
partner has built around it. The “us” that you become with a partner develops
out of the ways the two of you connect and find common ground. Celebrating the
“us” before you’re really a couple is a sign of insecurity
and desperation.
Now that you know what to look for, you can enjoy a
sincerely spoken “I love you,” or the words lit on fire by the side of the
road, even more.
Your views are most welcome...
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