Love & Sex

What Is Love?

Love can be many things...even a sweet treat.


Some would say love itself is an ideal and there is some truth to this but like most truth's its one-sidedness it fails to recognize the very real experience of billions upon billions of people who are in a very real state called love. '
By Citizen Correspondent Darrell Goodliffe
Date Posted: 03/16/08
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We each have unique experiences of this thing we call love. As such, pinning down a precise definition of the word itself is challenging enough let alone categorising the sum total of human experience. My own experiences make me a fair way short of being a whore by commonly accepted standards although I am still relatively young at 26.

Starting at the beginning - not with a definitive definition of love but rather with my personal definition, as this is the only one I can reasonably give. Love is a connection. However, it is a different connection to any other. Whether we are conscious of it or not we all form connections with those around us, our friends, family, partners, and even sometimes fleeting ones with complete strangers. A separation of attachments is something that has evolved and is sometimes blurry. Friends and lovers has always been a classic blurry one; all are in an almost constant state of flux except for those precious few that endure for a life-time.

Love in its broadest sense can be applied to all these connections. People love their friends and they love their kin but normally in a platonic way. So, is love just another emotional connection plus sex? Yes and no. Lust is an important part of love. It is in no way shallow to say that you must lust after your partner in some-way, it is just a fact. Remove lust and all you are left with is a close friendship. However, with just lust you are left with, in effect, a one night stand. Speaking personally I often find personality traits sexually interesting. To my mind some of the un-sexist people are often society’s deified icons of sex. Model's, for example, often have disturbingly vacant eyes something which turns me decidedly off. Loving somebody involves spending time with them outside the bedroom so it has to involve more than lust.

It's supposed monogamous nature is one of the great love myth's. Why is it perfectly socially acceptable to love more than one person in a friendship sense but not in a partner sense?


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Re: What is love??

By daphne atieno, April 2, 2008 at 03:01

well to me love gives nothing but of itself and receives nothing but from itself in other words when you love you give of what is within the love you feel for that someone and the same way you receive from that someone what is within the love they have for you so love completes itself in love