T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1074.1 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Thu Sep 20 1990 17:51 | 21 |
| I have (and have had in the past) male friends that I loved but wasn't
"in love" with. I think I can love and care about friends without
involving all the emotions and feelings that come into play with being
"in love." I think they're two completely different things. If I say
I love a person, maybe a man, but I'm not in love with him, I mean that
I love him and care about him in much the same way I do my daughter,
maybe my parents or my closest female friends. It doesn't mean that I
would want to be married to him, live with him, date him exclusively or
even necessarily have sex with him.
If I say I am in love with a man, it means that I think about him a
lot, maybe even constantly, that I definitely am sexually interested in
him, and would probably feel jealous about any other women he dated,
and that I might be interested in a long term relationship. Just two
very different things. If a wife says she loves her husband but isn't
in love anymore, I think it means the romance and thrill is gone. She
still cares about him, but that her need for romance and probably sex
is not being met.
Lorna
|
1074.2 | Some thoughts on the difference | AKO569::JOY | Get a life! | Thu Sep 20 1990 17:57 | 50 |
| This questions comes pretty close to home for me these days so here's
my cut at it.
- You can love many people at one time but only be "in love" with one at
a time (IMHO). You might love your friends or a special friend,
parents, children, etc. but not be "in love" with them.
- Also, I think the key part of the phrase is "in love WITH"....you may
love someone in the romantic sense but if they don't feel the same way,
how can you be in "anything" WITH them. Being "in love", to me, means
sharing that feeling WITH the other person, not having it be one sided.
(This would signal trouble in a marriage I would think).
- As for the emotions, loving someone means enjoying them as a person,
enjoying spending time with them, but when they aren't around you don't
feel as though half of you is missing. Being "in love" means finding
your soul mate, or "other half", feeling such joy in life that you
can't help but smile all the time. And there's this hard-to-describe
feeling, deep within you, that is always there, whether the other
person is there or not, that just makes even the worst days seem a
little brighter.
- Loving someone doesn't rule out the possibility that you may fall "in
love" with them at some time in the future. It doesn't always happen,
but isn't it an awfully good start?
- The biggest turn-on is making love with someone you're "in love"
with, no doubt about it. Making love with someone you love can be real
good, but its never as good as being in love.
- Being "in love" means thinking about long-term commitment as the
obvious next step (marriage, living together, etc.). It can help get
thru the rough times because you have a common bond to help you though
it. I don't believe the bond is there by just loving someone.
- Being "in love" only happens once or twice in a lifetime. Loving
someone can happen many times.
These are a few of the thoughts I've come up with over the past couple
months. They are, of course, my opinions only. As you can probably
guess from my definitions, I think your friend needs to work on her
marriage. But some people aren't emotionally able to be "in love",
because they feel too much loss of control, so for them, loving someone
might be the best they can do. For me, I wouldn't settle for less than
being in love with whoever I was married to (and I would expect that
feeling to remain over the years, even if it lessens in intensity), but
to each their own.
Debbie
|
1074.4 | | CADSE::GLIDEWELL | Wow! It's The Abyss! | Thu Sep 20 1990 20:56 | 7 |
| JMW,
Your friend's statement reminds me of a Joan River's line:
I'm married and I'm happy. I'm not H*A!P*P%Y* but I'm happy.
:) Meigs
|
1074.5 | Love... the bigest mistery of all! | MELIUM::MAHONEY | | Fri Sep 21 1990 10:41 | 56 |
| Bein "In-Love" might happen once or twice in a lifetime or NOT AT ALL
in that lifetime! we only strive to find that sublime feeling a person
gets when is "in love" with another person...
By the way, a person can love and be in love with another without
being corresponded... I mean, a person can love another thru a lifetime
and not necesarily be "loved back" by that person... I have seen it and
forever wondered why that devotion, feeling, dedication, went through
so many years totally unchanged or dimminished! I couldn't call that
anything but LOVE or "BEING IN LOVE" even if not loved back.
Believe me, I have seen true love and...it does EXIST! but only very
few of the many people I know really have "IT".....
You can make commitments, you can choose a partner by similarities,
hobbies, customs, whatever, but you cannot choose to fall "IN LOVE"
with him/her.
I was always told "wait for your turn, it'll come when
you least expect it, but be ready to grab it because it is a very
fleeting thing" so when I was little I did just that, I always waited
to see if I could define, or feel, or notice, anything out of ordinary
in any boy I met...(was I waiting to see stars in daytime?) I didn't
know. I was very joung and so naive...
When I met "the right one" I looked into his eyes and I saw something
so honest, so peaceful and so reasuring that right there, right then, I
KNEW that I could have something very meanningful...
and I was careful not to commit any mistakes! I was jelous and really
kept an eye on him! I watched every girl around...it took me 2 years of
dating, of sharing everything (except intimacy)... to get engaged. I
figured that if a person could remain with another without pressures
for sex or demands of "if you love me prove it" (anyway I don't believe
in all that jazz) that person would come for the real human being in
ME, not for sex! Maybe I was naive, maybe I was old fashioned, but
whatever I was at the time...it worked beautifully! I wanted to marry
"permanently", for ever, and on top of that, be happy...twenty six years
and 3 kids later still works... who could tell me I was wrong!
Life is not easy, it constantly test us with financial problems, moral
problems, sicknes... you name it, but when you have a person at your
side in which you can fully lean to, those problems get solved a lot
easier... and also those problems increase the faith, the sharing, of
the couple and the family (if there are kids). I know a extremely happy
couple, childless, who have been married 42 years and... they are so
close to each other, so devoted to each other that is not even funny!
Anybody could feel plenty of jelousy at their sight... and they are in
their late sixties... that must be LOVE, as looks just could not last
that long, they're great people but they're not ravishingly handsome,
so, I am convinced that in their case, it is a very deep and wonderful
feeling that have kept them so faithful, so happy, and so close,for so
long.
Is that feeling accessible to everybody? I don't know. Do everybody
feels that way? I don't know. All I can say is that I know tons of people
and only a tiny number are lucky enough to be in that state called
"they are in LOVE WITH each other" thru the years... and I mean YEARS,
not just a year or two, but decades and decades.
A person can love many, many people, but to be really in love, that is
much more difficult and rare!
|
1074.6 | Just my view | AKO569::JOY | Get a life! | Fri Sep 21 1990 10:50 | 14 |
| re: .3
Mike,
I say only once or twice in a lifetime because, to me, that total
overwhelming, all-encompassing feeling of being "in love" will only
happen with one or two people. To me it relates to a depth or feeling
and commitment that, if shared with many people, only becomes diluted.
Sometimes I think that people who fall "in love" many times in their
lives are more in love with being "in love" than they are with the
other person.
Just my way of looking at it.
Debbie
|
1074.7 | The Hidden Place\ | SALEM::GAUTHIER_A | As ye sew, so shall ye rip | Fri Sep 21 1990 13:40 | 12 |
| Within each one of us is a special place. It is the place we store the
perfect love. We lock it, and grow up and in our growing up we
compromise, we rationalize, find someone who closely resembles our
ideal, marry and continue the process of life. But all of us keep
looking, maybe not as intently as before. But look we do, and look we
will. And someday, sometimes, not often enough, we find that someone,
If we are wise enough, we turn away, secure in the knowledge that we
have in our lifetime, not compromised our perfect love, and that we
have not defiled that place within us. For only there is
soulmate/everlasting/ love allowed to grow.
a
|
1074.8 | "Three kinds of Love" | TALLIS::MACKENZIE | Gur trom leam mo cheum | Sun Sep 23 1990 19:43 | 20 |
| Re: .2
I disagree that someone who feels unilateral love for another is
"not in love". In my experience, there is love and two kinds of "in
Love". These are unrequited "in love" and mutual "in love". These are
in addition to "love". Unrequited love, the real heartbreaker, can
happen many times in one's life. You can't go on without the other
person, but they don't care. One of those "suffering" experiences that
Dr. Peck talks about. This topic is also mentioned in .5
Debbie pointed out (.6) that truly being "in love" occurs only once
or twice in a lifetime. Maybe, if your're referring to mutual "in
love". But "one way" or unrequited "in love" occurs frequently. I have
a friend now, who loves her husband but is "in love" with another man
who won't give her the time of day. This brings up the question, "Can
you be in love with two people at once?"
Getting deep
Spuds
|
1074.9 | but, of course | BLITZN::BERRY | More bad golfers play with PINGS. | Mon Sep 24 1990 08:33 | 6 |
| >>>> who won't give her the time of day. This brings up the question, "Can
you be in love with two people at once?"
Yes.
-dwight
|
1074.10 | ? | DUGGAN::MAHONEY | | Tue Sep 25 1990 10:42 | 10 |
| to .9
Unless there is two split personalities and each "half" loves a
different one...
real LOVE is whole, undivisible, total, if we are talking about LOVE.
(there are always time for companionship, relationship, and all those
...ships, but please, let us not confuse them with the REAL THING...)
IMO...
|
1074.11 | Total exhaustion | YUPPY::DAVIESA | Artemis'n'me... | Tue Sep 25 1990 12:45 | 7 |
|
re -1
Anyway, being "in love" is so darned all-consuming and exhausting that
I'd expire trying to do it/live it/be it with two people at once ;-)
'gail
|
1074.12 | One at a time | AKO569::JOY | Get a life! | Tue Sep 25 1990 13:05 | 7 |
| I agree with .10 & .11, I believe someone can only be "in love" with
one person at a time, because part of being "in love" is loyalty and
having that person be the ONLY one you share parts of your life with.
Otherwise the feelings just get diluted.
Debbie
|
1074.14 | not enough evidence | BLITZN::BERRY | More bad golfers play with PINGS. | Wed Sep 26 1990 07:36 | 10 |
| re: 1074.12
>>>I agree with .10 & .11, I believe someone can only be "in love" with one
person at a time, because part of being "in love" is loyalty and having that
person be the ONLY one you share parts of your life with.
True... it's ONE part. But that alone doesn't support your "loyalty" to
.10 and .11!
-dwight
|
1074.15 | what position are you running for? | BLITZN::BERRY | More bad golfers play with PINGS. | Wed Sep 26 1990 07:39 | 13 |
| RE: 1074.10 DUGGAN::MAHONEY
>>>real LOVE is whole, undivisible, total, if we are talking about LOVE.
(there are always time for companionship, relationship, and all those
...ships, but please, let us not confuse them with the REAL THING...)
You make LOVE sound like something on a blue print, upon first glance. But
as one reads on... one realizes there is nothing tangible to your
reply. It's like a campaign speech to attract the masses without
offending or debating the issues at hand. Tactful, but not
educational.
-dwight
|
1074.16 | Life? Love? Hell? Twilight Zone? Which is it? | BLITZN::BERRY | More bad golfers play with PINGS. | Wed Sep 26 1990 07:47 | 86 |
| Thinking out loud....
The real problem is, what is the "REAL THING" that .10 mentioned? In reality,
it doesn't exist. And if it did, one could never recognize it, because *love*
is an emotion. If it's warm and fuzzy, we call it love, (OK Z_MAN, I set that
one up for you!). ;^)
Think about this.... Perhaps it would make more sense to say that when we find
someone that we think we *like* much more than the average person, then we may
call that *love.* We enjoy being with them, we confide in them, we trust them,
they make us laugh, the sex is great, we help each other out, so we say, "Damn.
I'm on a roll here. I'm in love!" We say that.... until they do something
that alters one or more of those items listed above.
Then we decide, since I have the *REAL THING,* I will marry this person. We
are both SO IN LOVE! We both swear before friends, a priest, and God, that
we'll LOVE and cherish each other until death parts us, no matter what.
Then sometime down the road, things happen, things change. We get smart. We
start watching Oprah, Married With Children, The World Turns, The Cosbys, ...
we read self-help books, make weekly contributions to our psychiatrist, get
religion, sell Amway, kids come, many unwanted, you realize your boss is a
jerk, the wood panel on your chevy wagon is coming off, the neighbors mongrel
jumps the fence in your back yard and knocks up your prize winning bitch, (I'm
talking about the dog, here). You're taping The Simpsons and the cable engineer
decides to work on your lines, your son's report card has a bunch of vicious
lies on it about your son's behavior, but you know he's a gifted child and just
bored with their inability to educate him. Your mother-in-law hates you...
always has, always will. Your mate snores. The sex has become routine, when
you get it. Your mate never has time for you anymore. You need a drink, but
the liquor cabinet is empty, the paper boy continues to throw your evening
paper in the sprinkler system, and your Sears Kenmore washer is leaking...
again.
All of a sudden, you decide that you made the biggest mistake of your life.
You think, "Hmmmm. I thought I loved _____. S/he really did a snow job on me!
I thought _____ really loved me too.... I married a real jerk! What a fool
I've been! Mother was right! -- Well, it often happens this way. Look
around you!
Next week you see their story on DIVORCE COURT, their picture on the National
Enquirer... headlines, "Wife takes HALF! Husband take on three jobs."
But, alas, a perfect stranger you recently met, has displayed kindness and
affection for you. There's smoke... then a spark... and a new flame starts!
Now you *know* you have finally found.....(all together now), ...
THE REAL THING !!!
Adult love is no different than puppy love, really. It can be here today and
gone tomorrow, because its emotions, feelings, wants, desires, expectations,
hopes, and cable TV, all stored up in our hearts, or to be more accurate, in
our minds. After all, the heart is just a muscle that pumps blood!
Love is like God. We *make* it what we want to be. Love is emotion. People
say God is love. So God = "emotions" too, I guess.
I challenge anyone to define the *real thing.* I know, somebody will say they
have it and have had it for 131 years, but that doesn't prove anything except
that you've found someone that meets the items I mentioned above and you've
been able to be friends throughout the years, etc, etc, .... and you may wind
up on DIVORCE COURT yet! :^) I hope not.
Fact: 50% of all marriages in end divorce.
Fact: Many 'current' marriages have one or both partners having affairs, or
have had affairs in the past, or are good candidates for affairs.
Fact: Most of the people described above had the *REAL THING* too!
I'm not against *love.* I'm not putting it down. I have someone special that
I love very much. I have a son that I love very much. These people bring out
special feelings in me. But I've also been married before. I thought I had
the *real thing* too. So did she. Today I wouldn't give her air in a jug if
she was suffocating! :^) I've been in love with others besides her too,
before, and after, and probably during... Because I can't define love, who can
say???
Lot's of people lose or divorce their partner, and still find someone to love.
OK, if that can happen, then one could feasibly find two, (or more), people
that could meet his/her needs and therefore be in love with more than one
person at the same time. It probably won't be the best position to be in, but
I'm not so arrogant as to say it can't happen. I'll leave that up to the
psychology majors who are happy to define love for us all. :^)
So go ahead, love experts... explain it to me. :^)
-dwight
|
1074.17 | you took the words right out of my mouth! | BLITZN::BERRY | More bad golfers play with PINGS. | Wed Sep 26 1990 07:52 | 7 |
|
I agree with .16!!!
Couldn't have said it better!
|
1074.18 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Sep 26 1990 09:16 | 6 |
| Re: .17
Well, Dwight, it isn't necessary to tell us that you agree with
yourself. But take heart, I agree with what you said in .16 as well.
Steve
|
1074.20 | Hmmm... | BLITZN::BERRY | More bad golfers play with PINGS. | Wed Sep 26 1990 10:11 | 6 |
|
Ya know. The only REAL THING I know I've had goes great with a
hamburger and fries.....
Know waht I meen, Vern?
|
1074.21 | Life is hard... | DUGGAN::MAHONEY | | Wed Sep 26 1990 11:03 | 24 |
| Dwight...
You put it very nicely, but your explanation of everyday life looks
like...too many events that go wrong and the person gets overwelmed and
suffocated by them... I don't see that these events were really linked
to love... it seems to me that the events of everyday life KILLED
whatever tender feelings were there before. That can happen any time
to anybody, and people "in love" go thrugh them as often as you or I,
but they just don't throw the towel at a sign of trouble, but unite to
battle those troubles TOGHETER. That is what I have seen, and those
difficult times have made the couple to grow closer together, not
apart. By quitting a marriage we don't eliminate anything, we just get
free and ready to start all over again... doing the same things that
were done before... that EMOTION starts all over with the new person,
gets suffocated and strangled by everyday pressures and slowly, or
quickly, dies away... and the pattern starts all over again!
It seem to me that we are so busy coping up with life and every day
problems that we dedicate precious little time to our loved ones, we
all stress the need for career, status, survival, whatever, we do put a
lot of effort into that, but... I'afraid that we neglet a bit the
person closest to us... in the process. (with results that statistic
show, marriage-divorce rates...)
|
1074.22 | everytime we fall in love, it's the real thing | BLITZN::BERRY | More bad golfers play with PINGS. | Wed Sep 26 1990 12:29 | 38 |
| re: .21
Don't miss my point by focusing on the events themselves and not seeing my
remarks on *love,* or how love played it's role in the cycle.
I described a common cycle of many people in America, IMO. I think all these
emotions *are parts* of love. It is sometimes said, love is patience,
understanding, etc, etc.
People fall in love all the time, and some think that they can define *true
love* or the *real thing* and that once they think they've found it, they have
some kind of special magic. I described the events, surrounded by the "falling
in love" cycle. Don't get side-tracked by the events themselves, but key in on
my remarks pertaining to love.
>>>That can happen any time to anybody, and people "in love" go thrugh them as
often as you or I, but they just don't throw the towel at a sign of trouble,
but unite to battle those troubles TOGHETER.
They often do throw in the towel, AND they had *THE REAL THING* just like you
may think you have. But what I'm saying is that we love, and then we love
again. People that claim they have *THE REAL THING* and believe they've got
the ONE and ONLY and can love no other are living on a cloud cuz there are
others they can love as well, just as much, if not more. And love can be
ripped by many events in our lives, no matter how real or special we think it
is. That's why to LOVE is to RISK!
>>>were done before... that EMOTION starts all over with the new person, gets
suffocated and strangled by everyday pressures and slowly, or quickly, dies
away... and the pattern starts all over again!
Not always. The pattern may or may not repeat. Many folks stay happily in
love the second go-round. We're not doomed to repeat history, not really.
As the saying goes, there are more FISH in the sea, (watch it Z).
-dwight
|
1074.23 | ? | DUGGAN::MAHONEY | | Wed Sep 26 1990 16:33 | 10 |
| Dwuait...
Lucky you that can divide your heart many times...among many loves...
I did only ONCE, when I was barely 18, had huge hcnages in my life,
lived in many foreign places without knowledge of their languages,
without friends or family... and survived everything with flying
colors, I guess that 27 years of happy marriage can vouch for it?
At least, IMHO....
|
1074.24 | Just a question: Do cats really have nine lives ? | BTOVT::BOATENG_K | Gabh mo leithsceal!=em=muinteoir? | Wed Sep 26 1990 17:55 | 2 |
|
Can anyone help to explain why Liz Taylor has been married eight times?
|
1074.25 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Wed Sep 26 1990 17:57 | 4 |
| re .24, she's rich, good looking and easily bored?
Lorna
|
1074.26 | I'm NOT an E.T. fan... | QUIVER::STEFANI | Turn it on again | Wed Sep 26 1990 18:33 | 3 |
| re: .25,
Well, she's rich and easily bored, anyway...
|
1074.28 | 'love' and '?' | SA1794::CHARBONND | scorn to trade my place | Thu Sep 27 1990 08:07 | 2 |
| What we need is a new word for 'romantic love' as opposed to
the 'love' we feel for parents, friends, etc.
|
1074.29 | | REGENT::WOODWARD | | Thu Sep 27 1990 09:22 | 9 |
|
> What we need is a new word for 'romantic love' as opposed to
> the 'love' we feel for parents, friends, etc.
How about "lust"?
8)
|
1074.30 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Sep 27 1990 10:05 | 4 |
| There are already distinct words, from the Greek I think. Eros
and Agape are two - there are two more which I forget.
Steve
|
1074.32 | Ack! :-] | SELECT::GALLUP | Walk right thru the door! | Thu Sep 27 1990 11:35 | 9 |
|
MikeZ> Larry, I see we think alike.
That is a REALLY scary concept.
k
|
1074.33 | | QUIVER::STEFANI | Turn it on again | Thu Sep 27 1990 18:47 | 8 |
| re: .31
Mike, thanks for the compliment. :-) I'm just sick of all of the
Elizabeth Taylor hype. The Enquirer must have half of their staff
dedicated to writing pointless articles about her.
Later,
Larry
|
1074.34 | Fuel for the fire (pun or no pun) | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Mon Oct 01 1990 20:49 | 7 |
| In-Love? These days people aren't in love any more. They are in
"relationships". Just watched the movie _Romeo and Juliet_ the other day.
So, maybe I should make an exception for the teenagers. Alright then,
teenagers in love and adults in "relationships".
So to speak.
Eugene
|
1074.35 | | DUGGAN::MAHONEY | | Tue Oct 02 1990 10:50 | 5 |
| Eugene, you are sooo right!
People are not in-love anymore...
the head have taken over and does what the "heart" used to do
end result "RELATIONSHIPS"
|
1074.37 | here's one | ORMAZD::REINBOLD | | Tue Oct 02 1990 13:20 | 8 |
| My heart is passionate when my head says it's okay 8-)
I think in one's teen years, there's a disconnect between
the head and the heart. The connections seems to kick in
during the mid-20's. Then you start to think before you let
your heart leap. Those falls when we're teenagers teach us
to be more careful in the future; if we're lucky, some of
the passion remains.
|
1074.38 | Still leaping before thinking | BSS::VANFLEET | Treat yourself to happiness | Tue Oct 02 1990 14:39 | 3 |
| And then some of us never grow up. :-)
Nanci
|
1074.39 | hearts and heads | BLITZN::BERRY | More bad golfers play with PINGS. | Tue Oct 02 1990 15:54 | 6 |
| People...
The head can not take over what the heart does. The heart is just a
blood pumping muscle, a tool to recycle blood throughout the body.
-dwight
|
1074.40 | | WR1FOR::HOGGE_SK | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Wed Oct 03 1990 17:55 | 35 |
| re-1... obviously a man in a relationship .... ;-)
(Sorry couldn't resist)
Truth though... the reason the heart was believed to control the
emotions was because of it's reactions to emotional situations (the
speeding and slowing of the beat) and the feeling when subjected
to a deep emotional shock such as the lost of a loved one, is for
the most part centered in the chest.
Who hasn't experienced the feeling of an opened and sensitive void
in the center of the chest which feels as if the nerve endings have
all accumulated around edges of some hole and is sucking in all
the air around you? Especially at the initail impact of learning
of the lose of someone loved. (Maybe I'm the only person who has
ever felt it? If so, it is truly amazing to me that it seems to
center around the area of the heart).
So... if you wish to be clinical... yes, it's the head that controls
all emotion... but, if you choose to be romantic and go with what
your body feels.... then you sir are very wrong and it is indeed
the heart which controls emotions.
If you choose to be clinical it is a multi chambered muscle designed
to pump blood (not recycle) through the body as the blood is cleaned
via the Kidneys and replenished with oxygen (supplied by the lungs).
To allow the replenishment of oxygen in the various tissues of the
human body. It is a ugly looking mass of muscle tissue.
If you are romantic however... the heart is the house of nearly
all emotions and (at least in spirit) is shaped like a v with a
miss formed m over the top of it. It not only houses emotion but
is the source of courage and bravery as well.
Skip
|
1074.41 | | DUGGAN::MAHONEY | | Fri Oct 05 1990 14:05 | 5 |
| Thank you Skip, for putting a bit of romanticism in your very true
explanation of the heart... life without those emotions would hardly
be worth living... and yes, the heart feels, when the person is
sensitive... I am sure that there are many souls with just pumping
blood machines.
|
1074.42 | it never fails | DEC25::BERRY | More bad golfers play with PINGS. | Mon Oct 08 1990 05:24 | 5 |
| Ya put in a simple line, being sarcastic.... and someone comes along
and enters several screens, letting their emotions run at the finger
tips. How sweet....
-dwight
|
1074.43 | | WR1FOR::HOGGE_SK | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Tue Oct 09 1990 18:28 | 9 |
| Re-1...
Yes... and I write poetry too...
If you didn't expect a reply to your sarcasim you should have kept
it to yourself.
Cheers
Skip
|
1074.44 | -1, a typical PN | DEC25::BERRY | John Lennon Month | Wed Oct 10 1990 03:58 | 1 |
|
|
1074.45 | | WR1FOR::HOGGE_SK | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Thu Oct 11 1990 19:19 | 4 |
| I beg your pardon? I've yet to see anyone with anything slightly
resembling my PN.
Skip
|
1074.46 | So what's it to do with them anyway? | YUPPY::DAVIESA | Full-time Amazon | Fri Oct 12 1990 09:15 | 7 |
|
Re last few
I've always liked your -pn-, Skip :-)
I don't think it's typical of anything....
'gail
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1074.47 | | CSCMA::PEREIRA | Pam-a-lam-a-ding-dong | Fri Oct 12 1990 11:12 | 3 |
| Mee too! I always thought it was pretty original....like you!
Pam
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1074.48 | you slay me. :-} | DRAGON::MITCHELL | | Fri Oct 12 1990 13:37 | 10 |
| > <<< Note 1074.45 by WR1FOR::HOGGE_SK "Dragon Slaying...No Waiting!" >>>
> I beg your pardon? I've yet to see anyone with anything slightly
> resembling my PN.
How about a node peanut butter ?!? :-)
kits
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1074.49 | | WR1FOR::HOGGE_SK | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Mon Oct 15 1990 16:06 | 37 |
| Okay Kits... but I never knew about the node when I picked my PN...
Hmmm some of your IS personnel would probably like my PN...
Thanks for the support 'gale (its still Abby to me though), Pam,
and Kits...
I agree 'gale, I don't understand what my PN has to do with what
I'd written anyhow... also, after re-reading the note I answered
his with, I have a question about he "dripping emotion from my finger
tips... in a lengthy reply to his sarcastic remark... how sweet!
(I paraphrased a bit but I think I've captured the essence of what
was said).
I don't believe my reply was as emotional has thought. I pointed
out his error in stating that the heart re-cycled the blood (it
doesn't) agreed with his "scientific/logical" answer, explained
how the "myth" about the heart controling emotions came about and
sited some personal examples. I didn't insult his answer but explained
why I felt (although I KNOW otherwise, as everyone else does) the
heart was the center of emotion.
I would like to point out also that at the time the "myth" originated
if he had made the statement that the emotions where nothing more
then chemical responses created by various hormones and glandular
activity in the body/brain... he would have been ridiculed and thought
a fool. The funny thing about the scientific/romantic beliefs of
our race is that the romantic beliefs are all based on what at one
time or another was felt to be a scientific belief. Or what had
passed as science at the time of origin of the belief.
Finally as long as we are discussing the relativity of PN's to the
subject at hand, I DO believe John Lennon was a very Romantic
individual which, strongly motivated his outlooks about world peace
and his song writing abilities.... so, how can one admire a person
such as JL was and by so cynical at the same time?
Skip
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1074.50 | Get a clue, guy! | DEC25::BERRY | The SIMPSONS are back! | Thu Oct 18 1990 06:38 | 1 |
|
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1074.51 | | WR1FOR::HOGGE_SK | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Fri Oct 19 1990 13:24 | 5 |
| Touchy/testy aren't we?
Too much caffine?
Skip
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1074.52 | You Can't Touch This | DEC25::BERRY | The SIMPSONS are back! | Mon Oct 22 1990 05:57 | 1 |
|
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1074.53 | | WR1FOR::HOGGE_SK | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Tue Oct 23 1990 15:47 | 52 |
| Hmmm... a man of few words.... ah well, so ends another conversation.
It leaves to me to conclude that either...
1) A cat got your tongue.
2) You've seen the error's in "goading" me on the subject.
3) You're to embarrased to continue the discussion in a resonable
fashion and prefer to take hit and run "title only" messages.
4) Your SO has seen your comments about the heart.
5) You enjoy making cynical remarks and comments but don't like carry
through on it.
Finally, I want to apologize for my share of goading in this file...
I've gotten tired of the "cynical" view about romance and emotions....
Science is wonderful and I'm as much into it as the next person. But
some things just don't belong with it. The "mystic" qualities of love
have baffled scientists as well as theologists. Why Cleopatra fell for
Mark Anthony, Romeo for Juliett, Bonnie for Clyde, no one will be able
to accuratly explain... the term "chemistry" has been used to discribe
it. There was a time when that word wasn't associated with love or
being in love... but the study of the chemical reactions of the brain
when two people are mutually attracted as added it to the vocabulary of
passion/emotional love.
Doesn't matter really other then there are some things that science
will study to the point of creating drugs to change and people will
always choose to allow some mystical qualty to be associated with it...
To be honest, I don't think it can be helped. After all no one can
explain some of the matches that have accured through history. Or from
personal experience for that matter. People who have nothing at all in
common. Yet still make meaningful and long lasting (till' death they
do part) relationships.
I get tired of reading about all the scientific bro-ha-ha envolved in
romance/love... and sometimes I wonder if it has anything to do with
the increased divorce rate... seems that the more scientific study/
explaination we develope for our feelings, the more we "understand"
emotional responses from a "scientific viewpoint" the shorter
relationships last. Divorce is more and more common. At one point
when I was a kid it was published that if a marriage succeded the 2
year mark the odds were in it's favor to last until one of the two
died. As I got older, and more science meddled into romance....
that number has climbed... now some say 7 years is the average length
of a "modern" marriage and if a couple lasts longer then that odds are
pretty good they will remain together through a lifetime. I dunno
somehow putting science into something like that just makes it cold and
seem unimportant to us somehow... Oh and something else for you to
consider... the number one complaint in a failed relationship is that
the romance has stopped... which includes the mythical/traditional
beliefs.
Skip
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1074.54 | | TERZA::ZANE | all in good time | Tue Oct 23 1990 16:21 | 60 |
|
I haven't been in this conference for a very long time and I just started
reading it again a few days ago, so I haven't read the base note or its
replies. I do want to answer Note 1074.53 by WR1FOR::HOGGE_SK, however.
I'm not sure why anything "mystical" should baffle anybody. They just
are. I know the physical principles behind a waterfall. I know the
basic principles of flight. I've seen many waterfalls, and they've all
struck me as breathtaking. Sure, one part of me knows what is happening
with the waterfall, and I can certainly discuss it in those terms, but
another part of me is awed just the same. It's the same with flight.
I've flown many planes; I know the explanations that physics offers for
the reality of flight, I even know a little about the planes themselves.
But I am always awed at takeoff and landing. Those four little engines
and those wings that don't really look that big are going to carry me and
all these people, their luggage and everything else high up in the air?
Incredible, just incredible!
Certainly, one can over-analyze a relationship and reduce it to a mere
set of interactions that are constantly repeated. It is also certainly
true that exploring the interactions, feeling their power and their
subtleties, the pain and the pleasure of being with someone else, is
nothing short of magical. Sometimes discussion brings out more,
sometimes an action, sometimes nothing at all is required.
Yes, most of the time I *know* why my partner does a certain thing a
certain way. Most often, it is *not* the way I would choose to do it,
nor for the same reasons. But, many times I find myself grinning just
because he is doing it his way. Sometimes he shakes his head at the way
I handle things. But it's my way.
Sometimes I know that I'm bringing my stuff into our relationship and it
interacts with his stuff. I can analyze it and know that I can be better
and he can be better and that our future interactions will be changed as
a result.
Am I in love? Yes, very much. Do I love him? Yes. Are they different
things? Yes. I feel free to examine my love, my being in love, his
love, his being in love, our relationship, the choices we make -- on any
level with him. Analyze it, play with it, get rid of it, let it be.
Is there is a physical, concrete system that will explain all of this?
Maybe there will be, but such explanations can never detract from my
appreciation of what is. It is that appreciation that separates me from
the mere physical/scientific model.
But I won't give up "science" either. I love knowing how things work.
It isn't necessarily science that has destroyed romance, although as I
mentioned, a person can get so caught up in the analysis that the beauty
or the ugliness is completely missed. If a person is only interested in
the cold, hard, provable facts, then it's no wonder they're cynical.
They've lost the wonder, the romance of just being, just appreciating
things as they are. They're missing the risk of *not knowing* and some
of the most beautiful things in life are not knowable, and cannot be
reduced to provable facts, they can only be experienced.
Terza
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1074.55 | there are no more dragons to slay, dude | BLITZN::BERRY | The SIMPSONS are back! | Wed Oct 24 1990 07:45 | 20 |
| [1074.53]
> 1) A cat got your tongue.
> 2) You've seen the error's in "goading" me on the subject.
> 3) You're to embarrased to continue the discussion in a resonable
^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^
(embarrassed) (reasonable)
> fashion and prefer to take hit and run "title only" messages.
> 4) Your SO has seen your comments about the heart.
^^
Only a true PN would use this term.
> 5) You enjoy making cynical remarks and comments but don't like carry
through on it. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
I think I know what you're saying.
Nice try Skippy. Give it up, son. You'll only wear yourself out.
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1074.56 | | WR1FOR::HOGGE_SK | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Wed Oct 24 1990 12:22 | 10 |
| Or someone who has made the mistake of calling someone the wrong gender
enough times to think that it's safer to use SO then say
boyfriend/girlfriend.
Well, enough on this... it's obvious you don't care to discuss your
side of the coin so....
Onward to other things.
Skip
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