Only once you understand how good you once had it will you understand how bad you have it now, and only then will you be capable of turning your life around and turning it in the right direction.
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There comes a point in just about everyone’s life when we accept we cannot make it through this life alone — that we need a partner in order to make it out alive.
Different people come to accept this at different points in their lives, but regardless of who you are, how or where you were raised, or what your current living situation is, you will realize — sooner or later — you can’t make it solo.
Moreover, you’ll come to accept that you don’t want to make it alone.
There’s a difference between knowing or being told you need someone in your life and feeling you need someone to share your life with.
We are told different “truths” throughout our lives and although we often believe what we are told, we rarely find the motivation to do what is recommended without first experiencing the need to act, to change.
One of the greatest motivators for settling down and partnering up is realizing you already let an ideal candidate get away.
Just about everyone is searching for the next best thing, but only once you realize that finding better is mostly impossible will you truly appreciate what you once had and what you were once too immature to hold on to.
Only once you understand how good you once had it will you understand how bad you have it now, and only then will you be capable of turning your life around and turning it in the right direction.
In a sense, you need the one that got away in order to find the one that stays by your side forever.
1. Realizing that loving and being in love aren’t the same thing.
When two people who are perfect for each other end up not working out, it’s usually because one of the two feels that he or she is no longer in love with the other.
Relationships can be incredibly intense in the beginning — even more so when you’re dating someone who could potentially be the one. As the novelty and excitement of it all die down, however, so do the corresponding emotional responses we experience.
Not feeling your heart flutter when you see your partner doesn’t mean you’re no longer in love. It just means you are no longer worried you may lose him or her. Sadly, this is a deceiving feeling as you can always lose anyone at any time.
2. Realizing that finding someone to love is a lot easier than finding someone to love you.
You can fall in and out of love weekly if your mind is open to it. Of course, it would be a very shallow sort of love and surely wouldn’t last, but nevertheless you would still feel many of those emotions most closely related to the phenomenon. The hard part is finding someone to love you in return.
A lot of factors come into play when considering whether or not a person is even capable of loving you — so many factors that, in the end, it all comes down to luck.
If he or she happens to be in the right place in life, in the right mindset, then he or she may fall for you. Such windows are small, however, and are missed more often than not.
3. Realizing that you’re capable of treating people horribly.
Love brings out the best and worst in people. When things within our relationships are going the way we wish them to, we’re the nicest individuals in the world.
But because we put so much on the line, open ourselves up and put great trust in another individual, when we feel threatened, we lash out with horrendous fervor.
There is no better person than a person in love and no more horrible a person than a person feeling he or she may lose that love. You need to accept how horrible you can be in order to realize how much it takes to avoid being that person.
4. Realizing that your emotions can play tricks on you.
What most people don’t realize until it’s too late is that our emotions aren’t good indicators of reality. First, we have the reality that exists outside of us, that isn’t subjective, but entirely objective — a reality that exists only in the physical sense.
We then add a second layer to this reality by perceiving and interpreting what we perceive. Only then do we experience emotional responses — but not in response to reality itself, but in response to our interpretation of it.
Feelings are the third, and furthest removed, layer that make up our personal reality. If we misperceive, misinterpret or misunderstand something then our emotions will reflect the errors we make, not what actually exists.
Most relationships fail because of just this — misinterpreting reality, drawing the wrong conclusions and then allowing our misleading emotions to get the better of us.
5. Realizing that although forever is scary, it can also be comforting.
Fear of commitment is a real thing. Every time we commit, we are simultaneously rejecting all other possible alternatives; there are always opportunity costs associated whenever we make a decision.
Most decisions don’t worry us too much as we feel that we can reverse them if necessary. When it comes to love, however, most of us believe that it is or, at the very least ought to be, forever.
Making a decision that you believe you need to stick to for the rest of your life is scary. What if you make the wrong decision? What if you’re going to miss out on something better? These will always be possibilities — you can’t wrestle with them because these questions will never go away.
Instead, focus on all the positive things that having a special someone in your life allows for. The truth is that you are never stuck when it comes to relationships… unfortunately most people don’t realize this until they let that special someone get away.
6. Realizing that missing someone can hurt indefinitely.
Most physical pains are temporary. Emotional pains, on the other hand, have the ability to last for decades. They may not be constant, but they have the ability to resurface again and again for years to come.
All that’s necessary is for one experience, one thought, one memory to trigger another painful memory. Because we’re only human, we learn from experience. The only way to understand how much it’s possible to miss someone is to miss that someone that you now know you could spend your life with.
You will never miss anyone the way you miss the one that got away. I can say this with certainty because if you do manage to find another special someone to spend your life with, you’ll sooner die than let him or her slip away.
by Paul Hudson
This post originally appeared at Elite Daily. Reprinted with permission.
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A young writer, philosopher, and entrepreneur, Paul Hudson (@MrPaulHudson) has been writing for Elite Daily nearly since the start. He primarily addresses the successes and downfalls of love and life.
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Photo: Ana_Cotta/Flickr
“we need a partner in order to make it out alive.” You have got to be kidding. There are all kinds of ways to have love and support and get needs met without having “a partner”. Yes, partners can be nice, but not necessary. We need self-love, and self-esteem, and healthy relationships with whoever is in our life. Drop the Disney…
Why?
You let them go only to realise they were the one true love,
the one who loved unconditionally, they truly loved, their heart ripped open, only to have it torn from their chest and devoured in front of them, leaving them lifeless and defeated.
FEAR!
This article is so right. I found out about 5 months ago that my partner cheated on me horribly (sex affairs with different women)…but I am still trying to give him a second chance because I never felt so comfortable with someone before in my life. We have been dating for 6 years when I found out and not one time in that 6 years I have wished to not wake up next to him…it always felt right. I am afraid to let him go because from experience I know how hard it is to find someone you want to… Read more »
It’s not comfort that’s keeping you with him. How in the world do you find comfort with a man who has cheated on you several times?? How do you continue to want to be with him every day let alone looking him the face…and I’m assuming you two still have sex even after all the other women he’s screwed….sorry. You are the rug and he’s walking all over you–because you’re letting him. You need to re-evaluate yourself and why you stay. He doesn’t respect you. He doesn’t love you. I don’t care what words he says—his actions say it all.
Hi Mona,
Unlike the jaded response previous, if a person cheats its a symptom of a problem… not a cause. I would suggest that you and he seek couples counselling if you both intend to stay together. His actions are not ok, nor should you consider them so. But, if he is serious about wanting to stay with you, and you are clear about your expectations of him, you can work together to find what you seek. Good luck.