The classic idea is that love is spontaneous and nearly effortless with the right person. Furthermore, you have no control over who you love and who you don't love.
A newer idea, expounded most fervently in The Art of Loving and more recently in The Road Less Travelled is that love is nothing of the sort. Love is a conscious act of will to do that which is loving toward a particular person, even in the absence of strong feelings, which are thought to come and go. Oftentimes, this may be counterintuitive, as is the case with tough love. Oftentimes, it might require a good deal of self-sacrifice and patience which are not characteristic of the typical passion one thinks of when one thinks of love.
So which theory do you subscribe to? I think most people would probably believe the second, at least partially, on principle. They know that making a relationship work takes a lot of effort and compromise and patience. But in the same vein, they do not practice what they preach, growing tired of people when they are comfortable with them and becoming resentful when the passion is gone.
A newer idea, expounded most fervently in The Art of Loving and more recently in The Road Less Travelled is that love is nothing of the sort. Love is a conscious act of will to do that which is loving toward a particular person, even in the absence of strong feelings, which are thought to come and go. Oftentimes, this may be counterintuitive, as is the case with tough love. Oftentimes, it might require a good deal of self-sacrifice and patience which are not characteristic of the typical passion one thinks of when one thinks of love.
So which theory do you subscribe to? I think most people would probably believe the second, at least partially, on principle. They know that making a relationship work takes a lot of effort and compromise and patience. But in the same vein, they do not practice what they preach, growing tired of people when they are comfortable with them and becoming resentful when the passion is gone.
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