MstrssScarlet -> RE: how valuable is "romantic love" to you? (2/5/2010 11:03:10 PM)
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ORIGINAL: lucylucy I've been thinking about the concept of love lately. I used to think that love was the most important aspect of any significant other-type of relationship. I was with someone I was deeply in love with for 20 years. Our relationship faltered early and often for reasons other than love--mostly my distrust and his insecurity--but because we were in love we stuck it out for 20 years. I finally got to a point where quite literally love was not enough and I ended things. (The relationship was completely vanilla.) I am now in a relationship with my owner and while we do love each other, I don't feel that our love for each other is the most important part of our relationship. We do tell each other "I love you" every day, but I feel like the more important statement I make every day is "I'm yours," in reference to his authority over me, my complete trust of him, and my utter devotion to him. I feel that if our love died for some reason, I would still want to be in the relationship because of his authority over me and my trust and devotion. Our society prizes romantic love. Maybe I'm a cynic, but all the Valentine's Day stuff and other valorizations of romantic love just put me in a foul mood. I've had the relationship based on romantic love and more often than not, it sucked. The love I feel for my owner is quite different from the romantic love Hallmark cards address. Hallmark cards are all about love that makes people giddy. With my owner, love feels stable and comforting, and it's his power over me and my sexuality that gives me the giddy, butterflies-in-my-stomach feeling. I'm curious about - whether you believe in romantic love and why or why not
- how important romantic love is to you in a long term D/s relationship compared with other emotions and feelings
- what you value in a "successful" D/s relationship and where love figures into that
P.S. If you think this is a stupid or boring topic, I invite you to protest by not posting to the thread rather than by calling me a stupid vapid bitch or telling me that this topic has been addressed before and I should use the "search" function. I confess I had to stop at the end of the second page. I've spent too much time on the computer this evening and it's giving me my usual migraine for doing so. First of all, I'd like to applaud you for putting something out there that may or may not have been found with the search option. I absolutely hate it when someone squashes a good subject with the line "look it up". People come and go on this site and the opinions you get today may not be the ones you get a year or even a month from now. I once saw something posted that was exactly the same thing I had posted some months before. While it didn't get many responses either time, I found it interesting that the results the second time around were completely opposite from the first. How important is love to me? Important enough that after 20 years in a loveless but otherwise very successful marriage I decided to leave. It only lasted that long because of my stubborness and not wanting to start all over again. Like Mercnbeth, my marriage was doomed from the beginning because he felt he should be on his best behaviour while we were dating. Only after we were married and on the honeymoon did his "true" self appear and it wasn't at all what I was looking for. It only got worse from there, although everyone thought we were the perfect couple. I decided that the second time around I would have it all or nothing. I got it all. I have a partner that I'm deeply in love with who shares the same interest in the lifestyle that I do. He is the only person in the world that can make me laugh when it feels like the world is crashing down around me. When I get mad at something stupid, he helps me put it into perspective and get over it. When I don't feel good and he comes home to a silent house with no dinner prepared, his only concern is how I feel. When I play with my subs, he gives me complete, unsupervised leigh way to do what I enjoy so much and never questions what happens in those moments. That's trust. I swear that sometimes he can read my mind and knows exactly what to say or do. He IS my knight in shining armor. So many of you have described the same thing even better than I can and then put the disclaimer on it that it's not really romantic love. From my side of the screen, it is. Why be embarrassed or ashamed of it? It's a wonderful thing! Where does love figure into our D/d relationship? When we first got married, I was his submissive and rather new to the lifestyle. It wasn't long before he recongnized the domme inside me. He could have selfishly kept me in the dark and I could still be in the submissive role, probably not NEARLY as happy as I am now. He loved me enough to let me experiment and find my true niche in this lifestyle as a domme. The experiences he has given me by doing so makes me love him all the more. I hope that answers your questions. Off to bed now with some good pain meds. Scarlet
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