We think we know what love is, but most often we sabotage our relationships with these common misconceptions and myths about love.
We all think we know what love is, but when times get rocky and relationships get rough, the gaps in our knowledge can become crippling. Donโt fall for these five common mistakes.
Today I want to talk more about the โbut I love themโ justification that people use all the time as a reason why they should keep striving for a relationship with someone who will NEVER provide the kind of loving partnership that they want and deserve.
Unfortunately, love is vastly misunderstoodโ and we make all kinds of mistakes based on our mistaken ideas about it.
The truth is, thereโs a fundamental difference between loving someone and whether a relationship with them is the right thing for you. Theyโre not the same thing. Theyโre not even on the same planet.
And yet, mistaken ideas and myths about love and what it means for our relationships are so rampant, itโs unbelievable.
Here are the five often-ignored facts and myths about love:
1. Love does not conquer all.
If you love someone romantically, you can still be wrong as a romantic partner for them. You can deeply love someone and they can deeply love you, but a relationship between you both can still be a disaster. This doesnโt mean โit wasnโt true love,โ it just means that at this time, coupledom between the two of you is not meant to be.
2. Love is not an excuse for acting out.
Sometimes when we fall in love, we get comfortable and feel like weโve โconquered itโ or โwonโ because the other person loves us back. We tell ourselves that because thereโs love there, or we have feelings for someone, we can act out, we can cling, we can generally allow ourselves to act in ways that weโd be embarrassed to admit to our friends.
When we let this happen, we allow our shadow selves to come out and play. We let ourselves go emotionally, and stop protecting the other personโs feelings. When theyโre hurt, we justify our shabby behavior with how we truly love them and โthey arenโt going anywhere.โ Then the relationship goes off the rails and we tell ourselves it wasnโt meant to be or that it wasnโt true love. The truth is that behind closed doors we acted like that person would never leave us and weโre send reeling when they call our bluff.
The truth is because someone loves you, they donโt automatically have to put up with lousy treatment from you and vice versa.
3. Love doesnโt automatically imply pain.
One big problem is the belief that once you fall in love, you have to overcome obstacles to โmake it work.โ This is heavily shown in Hollywoodโs version of true love since, without conflict or romantic tension, there isnโt much of a movie to watch. As a result, people manifest all kinds of terrible situations to support the mistaken belief that they need to strive, work and overcome to have a good relationship.
Loving someone doesnโt require that you strive and contort yourself in an attempt to โmake it work.โ Love is an emotion. Relationships often do require work, but itโs usually more the staying present, communicating and working on oneโs issues variety. Not the โconvince someone you REALLY DO love themโ type so commonly shown in the movies.
4. You are not obligated by someone elseโs love for you.
The fact that you two love each other (or they love you) doesnโt automatically mean that this relationship is right for you or that you are obligated to stick around. If the relationship is wrong for one person, itโs wrong for both people.
The fact that youโre going to hurt someone if you leave them can notโ and should not- make your stay if the relationship is wrong for you. Guilt is a powerful emotion that will snuff out your happiness if you let it.
5. Love is scarce and rare.
Love is all around if you choose to look for it. So are people with whom you could have a great relationship. It takes digging, but itโs doable.
If you adopt the belief that you canโt go out and find love with someone else, youโll cling to bad relationships and make decisions based on lack. Fear-based decisions arenโt rooted in the greater good, they are contorted by your mistaken view of the world. And when it comes to romantic love, the results will keep you stuck and mired in what you hope a relationship could be, rather than what it is.
Our fears lie to us. Fear tells us we might never find anyone else and that if we let go, we might never be happy again. This is simply not true. Itโs our fear trying to protect us from taking a leap into the unknown.
If youโre like most women, this story will sound painfully familiar to you.
At first, things are going great with a guyโฆ there are the tantalizing calls and texts, flirty Facebook messages, and maybe things even get a little intimateโฆ
Then it happensโฆ
It seems like suddenly something snaps in him, and he starts to withdrawโฆ then out of nowhere he just completely loses interest in you.
Your texts and calls start to go unanswered and soon he just disappears out of your life.
To make things worse, itโs usually not an isolated incident. If it happens once, itโs most likely going to continue to happen.
That was the exact story my relationship consultant friend James heard at a lunch meeting with a client a while ago. It was during that same lunch that James discovered an answer to perhaps the biggest piece in the dating and relationship puzzleโฆ
Written by Elizabeth Stone
Originally appeared in AttractTheOne.com
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