T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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261.1 | ->Love is.....<- | SSVAX::LAVOIE | | Mon Mar 30 1987 16:51 | 12 |
| Knowing that no matter where you are someone special is thinking
of you. To me it is that feeling of lightness when your so glances
your way and you know that no matter what he/she/it does they will
always worry and care about you.
Love is something you feel in your heart an euphoric ecstasy which
can only be reached by finding someone who can make you smile, laugh,
tremble when they touch you and shake yourself to the very core
just by looking into your eyes.
A romanticist at heart.........
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261.4 | Just a giggle... | RDGE00::LIDSTER | still hangin' in there... | Mon Mar 30 1987 19:33 | 8 |
|
Being in love always makes me burst out in fits of spontaneous
laughter - a bit like being insane ! If that's insanity give
me more.
be lucky,
Steve
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261.5 | | ZEPPO::MAHLER | Come here often? What's your node? | Tue Mar 31 1987 02:30 | 5 |
|
When you care for someone else's growth more than your own.
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261.6 | From the originator. | OWL::LANGILL | | Tue Mar 31 1987 10:32 | 12 |
| What .5 is saying is more what I'm asking. We all know what it FEELS
like to be "in love", but in any relationship of duration that feeling
is going to fade.
My definition (since I started this one) is:
Being willing to put my own needs away for the time being when his
become more important. To conciously work with him, not pull against
him. To look out for his best interests all of the time. To celebrate
his growth as a person.
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261.7 | Some random, unconnected thoughts. | SQM::AITEL | Helllllllp Mr. Wizard! | Tue Mar 31 1987 11:01 | 12 |
| And, being as we're fallable humans, put "try our best to" in front
of most of the statements in the definition in .6. I know that
I don't always think before I act, even my actions affect someone
I love. I would also add that love is trying to see someone
without putting rosy glasses on, no matter how comfortable the
glasses may have gotten. You need to see clearly in order to
truely support someone and help them to grow. Also, if you love
someone you need to be good to yourself, so that when they need
you you will be strong and capable, and so that you will grow
as they grow.
--Louise
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261.8 | | NUTMEG::TEMP6 | | Tue Mar 31 1987 11:16 | 15 |
|
In my past experiences, I think I've loved one person, but the
feeling didn't last as long as the relationship (4 years).
I think love is something that grows with time (I don't believe
in "love at first sight") and could possibly last forever if both
parties love each other.
In most of my relationships, however, one person always loves more
than the other.
Nancy
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261.11 | The sub-set of LOVE | REGENT::WAGNER | | Tue Mar 31 1987 14:00 | 13 |
| .5 and .6 have the right approach from my perspective. "caring
for someone's growth more than your own" is the ultimate lesson
of romantic love and the lesson is pushed to it's limit through
the vehicle of marriage. "Being willing to put my own needs away
for the time being when 'His'(my quotes) becomes more important."
Why are these concepts only limited to special romantic situations?
in my mind romantic love etc. are just stepping stones (not different
from) the altruistic love that Jesus, as a Messiah, was trying to
teach Personkind. In my view, Romantic love,and even puppy love,what
ever the personal description of love is, is not different from each
other, just sub-sets of the larger scope of altruistic LOVE that
Jesus and other Masters attempted to teach.
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261.12 | Nothing Less | GNUVAX::TUCKER | Peace of mind... | Tue Mar 31 1987 17:39 | 2 |
| When everything else settles down, that pure bliss that sends chills
rippling over the skin.
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261.13 | | OWL::LANGILL | | Wed Apr 01 1987 12:07 | 15 |
| RE .10 Letting someone you love go is probably the hardest part
of all, but isn't that our responsibility if we truly love them?
We all have to face the fact that a parting will come, whether it
is through divorce or death. Don't we have to accept that as a
part of living? Since we raise our children with the knowledge that when
we have "grown" them they will leave us, don't we also have to take
the risk that is involved in allowing others around us to grow?
RE .11 I am in agreement with what you are saying. TRUE love is
not limited to any one situation. Can you imagine the world we
could live in if people could truly act this way toward one another?
Idealistic? Yes! Unrealistic? Maybe! Impossible? No!
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261.14 | Love is... | VINO::KSTEVENS | Tradition! | Wed Apr 01 1987 17:34 | 9 |
| I reply in batch so forgive me if someone has expressed this here....
Love, to me, is caring about another person's happiness, well-being,
and growth more than your own. Sometimes it even includes "letting
go."
Ken
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261.16 | My definitions | DSSDEV::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Wed Apr 01 1987 18:45 | 23 |
| To love is, according to what I've written all over this
conference, "to value, care for and consider another person as
much as you do yourself". This is an action, something you do,
and should not be confused with the passion of "being in love",
which is a feeling about some-one you love.
Being in love is when someone is so important and exciting to
you that their presence, physical or psychological distracts you
immensely. It is when you can get them of your mind--no matter
how hard you try them come back unbidden. It is when a small
smile from them can melt away a mountain of hurt.
Then, of course there is lust. Lust is pretty neat. It is,
basically, a completely physical version of being in love. It's
when sexual excitement and interest reaches the levels of being
in love. You can lust after a person that you have no interest
in as a person. Lust to the exclussion of being in love or love
itself is basically distructive as it leads to depersonal-
ization. Lust conjoined with being in love can strengthen the
being in love, and add spice to it. Both lust and being in love
can strengthen love, but neither are necessary to it.
JimB.
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261.17 | it may be a question of perspective | TWEED::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Wed Apr 01 1987 22:27 | 6 |
| re .15
Maybe to really be in love means that you can deal with the
needs of another person instead of calling them "chains" and
leaving.
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261.19 | who knows | COMET1::SCOTTT | | Fri Apr 03 1987 16:58 | 8 |
| LOVE it can only be when, that person is not around you will miss
so bad you cannot stand it. and when they are sick you don't want
to leave their side until they are well. when they are hurt for
whatever reason who hurt as bad as they do. no matter what happens
you only care about their happiness. you might say this is being
in love, but how can that be, you can be in love with your truck,
but would you follow that to the end of the world.
terry
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261.21 | | JUNIOR::TASSONE | Spring Fling | Wed Apr 08 1987 12:43 | 1 |
| re.19 It's called "Empathy", a very important part of a relationship.
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261.22 | >>??.. | TSG::MCGOVERN | | Tue Apr 14 1987 13:11 | 5 |
| Re .5 and .6: if dsomebody is always putting themselves or theri
needs aside for the other, thenthis is not love. Love is intertwined
independence, not one person constatnly prevailing p-hysically,
emotionally, preofessionally) over the other. It's a balance of
needs, desires, and lives. if
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261.23 | Ah, Romantic Love, how impractical... | YODA::BARANSKI | 1's & 0's, what could be simpler!? | Tue Apr 14 1987 14:06 | 4 |
| Is it love when you know someone special, can't forget about them, no one
can compare to them, and you pine the rest of your life away?
Jim.
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261.24 | | NACHO::CONLIFFE | Store in a horizontal position | Tue Apr 14 1987 14:13 | 9 |
| |Is it love when you know someone special, can't forget about them, no one
|can compare to them, and you pine the rest of your life away?
|Jim.
NO! That's infatuation, which is a different (but somewhat similar) phenomenum.
Nigel
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261.25 | ? | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | Back to Reality | Tue Apr 14 1987 19:26 | 3 |
| Is young love different than mature love?
Seems a lot harder to fall in love at 48 then it was at 16. *sigh*
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261.27 | risks | NOVA::GROFF | | Wed Apr 15 1987 02:48 | 5 |
|
I also suspect that as you get older you notice the risks of love
more...
dana
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261.29 | Nah, it's not hard at all | DSSDEV::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Wed Apr 15 1987 13:59 | 7 |
| I don't know about you, but love is just as exciting now as it
was when I met my wife a little less than half my life-time ago.
The marriage is a commitment and at times hard work, but the
loving is easier with every day, and more fun and more
rewarding, and it does conquer all.
JimB.
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261.30 | I still fall in love at 35 as easily as 16 | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.six | Thu Apr 16 1987 11:13 | 17 |
| I fall in love just as easily at 35 as I did at 16.
Perhaps it's infatuation, not love. Maybe it's only a crush.
I get crushes just as easily no as then.
One difference is, people don't *talk* about "who likes who" and "who
has a crush on whom". It's kind of sad. I miss those days, actually.
So I guess what's different is that so many crushes and falling in love
are secret and hidden now, rather than purposely leaked as they were
when I was 16.
Also, being married now, falling in love and having crushes isn't
as accepted anymore, perhaps another reason it's kept hidden.
*sigh*
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261.31 | how crushing | CREDIT::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Thu Apr 16 1987 11:20 | 10 |
| I have to second this! One doesn't tell one's husband about the crush
one has on the good-looking new man in one's husband's group,
particularly when one is approaching the age where said new man is a
more appropriate companion for one's daughter than for oneself....
I think the reason it's possible to keep these things secret, and
to not do anything about them, is that when you've gone through
it a certain number of times, you realize they aren't going to last.
--bonnie
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261.33 | not wrong, exactly... | CREDIT::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Thu Apr 16 1987 13:30 | 11 |
| Um. Thank you, Mr. Eagles. This is not an aspect I had really thought
about.
My initial reaction is that my reluctance to admit this kind of
feeling is based mostly on my own fear of looking silly -- mothers
of teenage daughters aren't generally thought of as sexually -- but
you may be onto something here.
I'm going to have to think about this.
--bonnie
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261.34 | let's share our crushes | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.six | Fri Apr 17 1987 16:31 | 36 |
| Re: telling SO about crush, and telling teenage daughter about crush
You're talking about different things (obviously).
Bonnie has to be concerned about how teenage daughter's male peer will
react to knowing he makes his friend's mom moist. And how daughter
will react too.
Eagle has to be concerned about how SO will react to his crush.
One is concern over a teenager's reaction, the other over an adult's
reaction, and one is a SO (or a spouse) and other is a child and child's
friend.
In my marriage, we occasionally mention our crushes on others.
But I am reluctant, because all too often my wife seems to regard
my admission of having a crush as suggesting she (the wife) is not
good enough.
The truth in my life is that many women look wonderful to me. They
probably always will. It's probably God's way of telling me to have
kids and multiply. (not that I'm too religious)
I feel fine about my wife admitting to crushes. I hope she can become
more comfortable with mine.
But I'm also thinking about at work.
It would be fun to be able to mention to someone at work that "oh, what
do you think of so-and-so, I think she's really cute, I have a crush on
her" and have it kind of leak back to so-and-so.
You know, just like back in junior high. It was kind of fun.
/Eric
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261.35 | Let it out.........?????? | OWL::LANGILL | | Fri Apr 17 1987 16:50 | 9 |
| Nothing wrong with it, usually, Eagle.........it turns some SOs on as a
matter of fact........it's only wrong when it's done with intent
to hurt the SO, as in preference of the other OVER the SO.
As far as mothers of teenagers being nonsexual beings - if we portray
that I think that it is to only to try and stife our teenagers own
sexuality. Who knows? Your husband might possibly enjoy a rebirth
of the silliness. Men have been "appreciating" women openly for
years.....why not us too?
|
261.36 | well, maybe, but . . . | CREDIT::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Fri Apr 17 1987 17:16 | 11 |
| Men: you wouldn't find it threatening to find out that your SO pants
and drools (mentally, anyway) whenever that good-looking *** MADE-UP
EXAMPLE *** new college hire in the testing group drops by with a new
bug to fix? You wouldn't feel like she thought you were getting old or
hadn't been satisfying her sexually or bored her or something?
--bonnie
p.s. My daughter sort of knows I'm a sexual being -- we drool over
David Lee Roth and the Bon Jovi band together -- but that's not
the same thing as a real person you both know.
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261.37 | So, do you like the Spandex? | HPSCAD::WALL | I see the middle kingdom... | Fri Apr 24 1987 12:58 | 16 |
|
Crushes are practically second nature to me. It seems perfectly
healthy to me, as long as you realize that it's not love. At least
not immediately. It might develop into that, but don't bet the
emotional farm on it.
Aw, go on, Bonnie, tell him. I mean, it's not like you'd be looking
to sink a few barbs by mentioning it. Saying that the sight of
someone, ah, revs your motors, probably won't be that big a blow.
Of course, there's always the danger that your husband might come
home some time dressed like David Lee Roth, but there's risk in
everything...
:-)
DFW
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261.38 | thanks... | WEBSTR::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Fri Apr 24 1987 13:55 | 7 |
| I got real brave and posted a picture of Dolph Lundgren dressed
up (loosely speaking) in his costume from the He-Man movie -- it
doesn't seem to have bothered him any. So I may work up to a real
person any time now. (I mean one we both know.)
--bonnie
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261.39 | grow up!! | YODA::BARANSKI | 1's & 0's, what could be simpler?! | Sat Apr 25 1987 17:38 | 6 |
| RE: .24
I though infatuations and crushes were supposed to be temporary things that
you got over...?
Jim.
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261.40 | It's not temporary in all cases | HOMBRE::CONLIFFE | Better living through software | Sat Apr 25 1987 21:44 | 7 |
| re: .39:
Remember Narcissus????? That was an infatuation that he never
got over.
Nigel
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261.41 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel without a clue | Sun Apr 26 1987 03:25 | 8 |
|
I've been to Narcissus and I got over it very quickly.. :-)
(note: Narcissus is an under-21 dance club in Kenmore Square
in Beantown)
mike
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