Joe Doe writes about the three loves that every man will feel.
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TASK #22: Young Love
“It is better to have loved and lost than never to have lost at all.” Samuel Butler
We men are dogs, sure. But we LOVE love. We love with a deep, powerful passion that engulfs us. And when we fall in love, we leap into the abyss without wondering where or when we will land.
I figure that a grown adult male–over 40–will have fallen in love three times. What do I mean by falling in love? You know what I mean. And if you don’t, you’ve never fallen in love.
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Now, we may fall in love more than once in our life. I figure that a grown adult male–over 40–will have fallen in love three times. What do I mean by falling in love? You know what I mean. And if you don’t, you’ve never fallen in love.
Of those three loves, one was probably a psycho who was sexually thrilling but so nutty that the memory of her causes involuntary shuddering; one is probably lying next to you now, the mother of your children and a woman who may or may not want to have sex with you.
That leaves one OTHER love–the one you never talk about. Especially with your wife. This other love may be someone you sat behind in 5the grade or someone who dated your best friend, but it was probably someone you dated and you fell in love with, but it ended. Maybe she dumped you for someone else, or maybe she didn’t love you the way you loved her, or maybe you dumped her and have regretted it ever since.
Whatever the reason, you carry an Olympic-sized torch for her. And every once in while when you least expect it, you think about her. Then you google her or try to find her on Facebook, then you get frustrated and try to put her out of your mind.
But you can’t.
And in a way that’s wonderful. Why? Because it was real, and even if it’s over, it happened.
TASK:
Go to a supermarket. Buy this woman a card. One of those cards that has a romantic picture on the outside but nothing inside (these are usually more expensive than the cards that have some hokey sentiment written inside which makes no sense). Bring the card home and open it up and write down everything that you loved about that woman. Try to articulate the feeling you have when you think about her.
And write down why you think you’re not together.
Then close the card, put it in its envelope, seal it and put it in your notebook.