I’ve been thinking a lot about love lately. What is love? What is true, romantic, everlasting love and how is it different than, say, motherly love? {Or is it different?} In my search through the confusing web of information and misinformation in the online world, I found the below article. I’m still not convinced the intricacies of true love can be fully explained and explored in a short article, but this one does offer some helpful information about how experts view love. This knowledge could, in turn, make us quarter-lifers better able to identify true love when we see it {or live it}.
~Ashley Taylor
Everlasting Love: How do you know if it’s for real?
Your heart races every time he calls and your palms sweat whenever he’s near. You think he may be “the one.” But how do you know if this is the real thing?
Dennis Neder, author of Being a Man in a Woman’s World (Remington Publications, 2000), says love has three stages: the infatuation stage, the bonding stage and the familiar stage. Dr. Neder, an ordained minister and doctor of metaphysics, says it helps to consider all three stages when determining if you have the real thing.
The infatuation stage is when you can’t wait to be with the other person. This is the romantic stage of love, says Dr. Neder, who warns that this is the stage when people thinks it’s “the real thing.” But this stage lasts only a short time.
The second stage, says Dr. Neder, is the bonding stage. During this stage you get to know the other person and you start planning aspects of your life around them. If you continue through this stage you eventually enter the third stage, or what Dr. Neder calls “the familiar phase.”
In the familiar stage you’ve established a pattern that involves the other person. “Your lives become intertwined and merged,” Dr. Neder says. “You know foundationally how the other person feels about almost everything. And interestingly,” says Dr. Neder, “you also become refocused on your own life, direction and goals.” Dr. Neder says this is where most professionals believe “real love” starts.
The Definition of “True Love”
“Love means never having to say you’re sorry,” or so the famous line from the movie Love Story goes. But when asked to define what true love is, even the experts have to pause and think. Perhaps it’s because true love has different meanings for different people.
Dr. Neder defines true love as caring about the health, well-being and happiness of another person to a greater degree than your own health, well-being and happiness. “When you carefully consider your words, thoughts and actions, and specifically how they will benefit that other person,” says Dr. Neder, “you’re in love.”
Christiane Northrup, M.D., author of Women’s Bodies, Women’s Wisdom (Bantam, 1998) and The Wisdom of Menopause (Bantam, 2003), says “true love is when you care enough for another person to allow them the space and time they need to become all they can be.”
Conversely, if someone says to you: “If you love me, you would …,” that is not love, says Dr. Northrup. According to Dr. Northrup, this is the “second chakra” talking. And when “love” comes from this place, it’s about control. True love comes from the “fourth chakra” and is easily recognized as unconditional support.
Kathlyn Hendricks, Ph.D,. and Gay Hendricks, Ph.D., authors of the upcoming book Everlasting Love, say that true love occurs when you shift from unconscious commitment to conscious commitment. “When you hear people say: ‘Relationships are really hard work,’ this is an expression of unconscious commitment,” says Kathlyn Hendricks. Conscious commitment, say the Drs. Hendricks, means that you reveal your true self to your partner and support your partner through thick and thin.
Laurie Moore, Ph.D., says all love comes from an open heart. “When you’re together, it’s open and safe at the same time,” she says. Moore believes, however, that this doesn’t mean the person you love is necessarily your life partner.
Nine Ways to Tell if Your Love Is Real
So how do you know if you’re in a lasting relationship? Here’s what the experts say:
- You feel good. A good relationship makes you feel good about yourself.
- You look forward to spending time with your partner. You don’t need to be with other people or go to events to avoid being alone together. You enjoy spending quality time together even when it’s quiet.
- You respect your partner. You hear yourself bragging about your partner. You say things like: “My husband is a really talented singer-songwriter.” If you find that you’re always talking about yourself, you’re not focused on your partner or the relationship.
- You’re interested in what your partner thinks. You ask your partner’s opinion about issues that are important to you. It’s OK if he or she disagrees with you.
- You accept your partner’s quirks. Everyone has them. Even you! If your partner’s quirks are endearing or tolerable, you’re in good shape. If they really bother you, you should look more closely at the relationship.
- You’re able to work through your problems. It’s natural to have some bumps in the relationship road to true bliss. People in healthy relationships see disagreements as a chance to learn more about their partner. However, if you’re creating problems, or if you think every fight is the “big one” leading to a breakup, you should probably rethink your relationship.
- You feel safe. You’re not afraid of losing your partner.
- You can’t explain why you’re together. Many people coordinate their lives so that they have to be together. But ask yourself if you’re together because you truly want to be. If the answer is “yes,” then you’ll probably stay together. If it’s “no,” you’re bound to have problems — if you haven’t already.
- You don’t compare your partner to others. There will always be someone more beautiful, smarter or more athletic than your partner, but you don’t care because you only want to be with him or her.
If you still don’t know whether your love will last, try this last piece of advice from Dr. Moore: Make a list of what you require from someone to be happy. If the list is met, you may have found everlasting love.
Originally published on Discovery Fitness & Health. Everlasting Love: How do you know if it’s for real? by DiscoveryHealth.com writers.How do you know if it’s true love?



Dear Ashley, What a wonderful post. I appreciate your thoughts and could not agree more. Dr. Moore hit it right on the head, to make a list of what you require from someone to be happy. It a wonderful idea! I also have found another source to determine if you have found true love. It is an e-book that I found, that is in line with your thinking on finding and keeping your true love. This brief e-book by author, Hayden Dane, is entitled “I have one question”. It truly opened my eyes and was life-changing. I think you would enjoy it. You can find it at haydendane.com – Thanks again for your insight.. Kind Regards, Theresa Jones
I agree with all of the points mentioned in the post, but I think at a fundamental level the most important component of everlasting love is compatibility. So I would restate the question as: How do I know if I am truly compatible with someone such that I can enjoy everlasting love with him/her? The best source I’ve found to answer this question is, believe it or not, a brief e-book by a writer named Hayden Dane (www.haydendane.com). In “I Have One Question,” Dane describes a conversation to be had that will reveal true compatibility, and it works. The key, Dane says, is admiration. I’d never considered admiration to be an important element of compatibility, but after reading Dane’s book and having the suggested conversation with a lot of “possible” loves, I’m convinced he’s on to something. Definitely worth looking into.
Building off your mentioned concept of compatibility:”We’re all a little weird and life’s a little weird and when we find someone whose weirdness is compatible with ours, we join up with them and fall into mutual weirdness and call it love.”
Compatibility isn’t just about having things in common, or being similar in character. On the contrary, you can be quite different from your partner but still be in love. I have found from my own experience that admiration is central to a lasting love.
But how do you know when someone is compatible? When you find someone you both admire, and also don’t fully understand, that is when you have a lasting love. Some people you understand completely, but you also tire of them quickly. It’s nothing new. Other people you come across you don’t understand at all, and will simply give up. But when you’re compatible with someone, you will keep finding new things to admire about them, and never grow bored; the admiration will make you never give up.
I just got onto a fight with my boyfriend about a half hour ago. I was on Stumble Upon and came across you blog post about true love. Thank you for helping me decide whether or not I want to stay in this relationship. Before reading this I wasn’t sure, but now I know I love him.
I would disagree with the statement, “Make a list of what you require from someone to be happy. If the list is met, you may have found everlasting love.” I think it either needs to be re-worded, or the idea needs to be thought through. If you require as much as a LIST from another human being in order for you to be happy, then you need to think about why you are so dependent on other people to gain happiness.
I totally agree. They had me up until the last line: “Make a list of what you require from someone to be happy. If the list is met, you may have found everlasting love.”
How can you depend on someone else for your happiness? Happiness comes from loving yourself, not needing someone to complete you, to make you feel whole. Chances are, if you need someone else to make you feel happy in a relationship, you won’t be happy on your own, either.
I feel like we always think its “true love” at the beginning of a relationship. there are other things that matter besides who makes you flutter ect. more like who puts a smile on your face when you are down or who lets you be your self.
great post. So true for me.
Ashley,
I find your curiosity brave, but you failed to include a very important perspective of love here. See the Greeks had several names for love, 4 loves if you may. I can say I love my iphone and I can say I love my mom, but see how one is of much more value than the other, yet I use the same word and in a sense cheapen it. Back in ancient Greece there was eros, which is where we get our word for erotic. It’s the love that we may feel for a lover, someone we are attracted to, perhaps more of an infatuation, but you need eros in your marriage to keep it alive, so this word has to mean something stronger than infatuation as infatuation fades. Secondly there is philia, philia is a brotherly love, a love you would have for a friend, your best friend… but again, marriage, for it to last needs this as well. Then you have storge, a love often described for family, but also for tolerating in a way… I guess the closest you can get to loving your iphone, because a material thing perhaps should never be deserving of such a deep affection. And again, tolerance another is a thing you need in marriage, in the one. Finally and most importantly, you have agape. Agape literally means unconditional love. A love so great, it has often been thought that we humans are simply not capable of. We want to believe we are, but it often means laying your life down for the object of your love. A quality that most marriages/relationships would hope to have, but very few seldom do. Some say love is a choice not an emotion, because emotions are as unpredictable an inconsistent as the sea. So love is getting up every day and looking at that person and saying to them, I chose you, today. That is love, a continual commitment that lasts a lifetime. I hope this helps you in determining your “the one”. As for Agape, I only know of one being capable of it, and in the hopes of not being corny, that being is God himself
Blessings!
I am left stunned by your reply, Andrea! Eye-opening and inspirational. The concept of “agape” is new to me. I think I experienced that once in my life, with a partner I had the deepest spiritual connection with I have ever known in my life…but he was not destined to be my life partner. In my current relationship I know we have “philia” and sometimes “eros,” though he places far more importance on the former than the latter. The concept of “romance” is something he thinks as something society manufactured, the realm of Hallmark cards and commercial Valentine’s Day gifts, something that fades, in favour of something deeper. I can’t give up my romantic side though! Or my desire for eros!
I am blessed enough to have a relationship which I was able to answer yes to all of these. After five years, we have definitely reached the comfortable stage, and it’s really wonderful. We are very much best buddies and lovers. When you can tell your significant other about a very satisfying and relieving experience on the toilet, and have a good laugh, you are definitely in a safe place!
love? good question. everyone has their own way of loving someone and how do we know if he/she is the one? it isn’t about that. it is about making sure you are self loved in a healthy way and committing to another with respect.
OH GOSH! So weird! I just posted up a status relating to this on Facebook, here’s what I wrote:
“The words “I love you” have almost no value anymore because so many people throw it around like it’s nothing & corrupt it. It’s kinda like the “some ruin it for all” theory. You can’t just say “I love you” 2 weeks after getting to know someone. I can see if it’s love at 1st sight, but how often does that happen, REALLY?
When you know someone through & through, when you know their face value, when you know the consistency of their actions, when you know their morals, when you know what makes them tick, when you know most of the things they love, when you know most of the things they hate, when you know their beliefs, when you know all the nitty gritty details of the skeletons in their closet, when there are WAY more pros & cons, when you know their methods & what drives those methods, when you know their expectations, when you know their cause & effect, when you know how they are with you alone for long periods of time, when during those periods of time you can have nothing materialistic around yet you can still entertain each other/want each other/need each other, when you know how they are with their friends/family, when you know what their position would be in every worst & best case scenario, when you know that if wars raged around you & everything you have ever known has collapsed around you that you would undoubtedly remain together, when you know every layer of the core of their soul thoroughly as if it were the back of your hand, when you can answer everything I just listed about yourself also, when you’re sure they know all this of you, when you can only feel all of these deep unfathomable feelings for 1 person, & when you are the best of friends….
THAT’S when “I love you” actually means something.”
I came across this article through stumble upon. . . It reassured me that I knew what love was. Unfortunately the realization that my current relationship is all built on a “had to” instead of “want to” basis. Ive been trying for years to justify all the little “quarks” claiming to myself “it happens to everyone” but there’s always been tell tale signs around me saying “it shouldn’t be like this”. I want this desperately but know I can’t find it here. Now is there such a thing of “working on it” or is it all for not? I’m not sure if I’m more scared of being alone on my own or just giving up on something I may have wasted years on. . .
When I was still in high school we had a subject dealing with religion, spirituality and norms and values. In that course we were asked to make a list of what our ideal partner would be like. At the end of the class the teacher said: your true love isn’t what you just described, it is the person that makes you throw away the list. For me that’s true. My love has backhair, a beerbelly and he likes to smoke marihuana often. We are really happy, living together for allmost a year now with our ‘baby’dog.
I find your curiosity brave, but you failed to include a very important perspective of love here. See the Greeks had several names for love, 4 loves if you may. I can say I love my iphone and I can say I love my mom, but see how one is of much more value than the other, yet I use the same word and in a sense cheapen it. Back in ancient Greece there was eros, which is where we get our word for erotic. It’s the love that we may feel for a lover, someone we are attracted to, perhaps more of an infatuation, but you need eros in your marriage to keep it alive, so this word has to mean something stronger than infatuation as infatuation fades. Secondly there is philia, philia is a brotherly love, a love you would have for a friend, your best friend… but again, marriage, for it to last needs this as well. Then you have storge, a love often described for family, but also for tolerating in a way… I guess the closest you can get to loving your iphone, because a material thing perhaps should never be deserving of such a deep affection. And again, tolerance another is a thing you need in marriage, in the one. Finally and most importantly, you have agape. Agape literally means unconditional love. A love so great, it has often been thought that we humans are simply not capable of. We want to believe we are, but it often means laying your life down for the object of your love. A quality that most marriages/relationships would hope to have, but very few seldom do. Some say love is a choice not an emotion, because emotions are as unpredictable an inconsistent as the sea. So love is getting up every day and looking at that person and saying to them, I chose you, today. That is love, a continual commitment that lasts a lifetime. I hope this helps you in determining your “the one”. As for Agape, I only know of one being capable of it, and in the hopes of not being corny, that being is God himself Blessings!
+1
Just stumbled upon this post and couldn’t be happier
I had a crummy day at work and all I wanted was to be with my Dear [my LOVE]- he ended up coming home early and hasn’t left my side… I’m in love <3
Loved this post. Thanks for the share!