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Previous comments... You are currently on page 3.
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First big one was intellect and spirituality, second was physical, third was just because she was different than everything I was.
I am now pondering - and haven't experienced - actual friendship, which in turn takes me back to the beginning of the cycle.
I'm out of time and energy and money, but the fertile brain marches on.
There are lots of books and studies of your topic.
As I've aged and seen relationships formed and broken around me (relatives, friends, etc.), my question is why people are and remain attracted to those who do not treat them well or even abuse them.
Particularly, people get unhappy, divorce, and find someone else on whom to dump their baggage, and another unhappy relationship ensues..
So the question to ask is not, "what's wrong with you," but, "what's wrong with me that I keep finding and establishing intimate relationships with people like you."
If you truly love your self, then you should find a mate with that same characteristic. Be choosy; expect the best.
Courage is important. The snoozer looses.
On the other hand, there's an old story of a wealthy young man who was considering marrying one of 3 women, but he was worried his wife might squander his hard earned wealth. So he gave each $1000 to see what they would do with the money.
The first bought herself a lot of jewelry and clothes and got nothing for him.
The second bought an equal amount of similar stuff for her and him.
The third invested the money and made a significant profit, then treated both to something nice with that profit..
Which one did he marry?
The one with the biggest boobs.
Holding the same fundamental values is a necessary condition, but is sufficient only for friends. For true love (as Peikoff explains), one should see the other person as representing the sum of his top values, see him as irreplaceable, and see the need for a sexual connection.
PS it was two morado (purple) two red and one hot pink.
First comes physical, then comes the rest, then back to physical or a trip to the pharmacy.
2. That makes sense, and also explains a lot about the relationships I've seen.
2) Long term requires a very similar hierarchy of values which requires both of you to place a higher value on reason than on emotions. Not easy but doable.
With any relationship involving two people you can't quantify the why's exactly from outside, only they can. And even their answers are subjectively theirs, their partner's are likely to be very different even though they share the relationship in common.