Search

Does True Love Really Exist?

Written by Evan Bailyn on 06/21 at 11:12 AM

The question of whether true love really exists cannot be answered without first clarifying what true love really is. However, the concept of “true love” has already absorbed so many qualities from literature, television, and magazines that it can no longer be approached with any objectivity. Trying to consider true love freshly at this point would be like trying to taste a wine while you are eating a hot dog.

The image that comes to mind when someone mentions true love is of two inspired individuals, fatefully drawn to each other and ready to risk their lives for the other person’s sake - in essence, Romeo and Juliet. Despite the prevalence of this perception, I have never actually witnessed such a perfect relationship in real life. The closest thing I can think of is something I term “pure love”: love that contains the boundless excitement that only a child can experience.

Pure love happens to some people many times, to others only once, and to still others not at all. The ability to experience pure love depends upon the strength of your idealism. You are more likely to feel it if you are a fourteen year-old girl who believes in fairies, and less likely if you are a forty year-old investment banker who rejoices when the Federal Reserve lowers interest rates. However, no matter how old you are, you can experience pure love if you suspend your adult feelings for a while and allow yourself to be completely vulnerable.

I experienced pure love during the summer after I turned fifteen years old, before I had ever kissed a girl. I met Melissa on a family vacation, on a cruise boat called The Inspiration. I first saw her inside the disco while I was with my family. She was sitting off to the side with a group of people I didn’t know. I eventually got the courage to go over and ask her to dance, and even though she hesitated, we were soon on the dance floor together. As it turned out, we both hated dancing, so we went outside and hung out on the steps for the rest of the night. We talked for hours, until it was time for her curfew. I remember standing up and giving her a hug goodnight, and my whole body tingling with joy once she had disappeared into the elevator.

There wasn’t a single moment I didn’t think about her for the next twenty four hours. The following night we met back at the disco. It was formal night, and she was in a velvety black dress. We skipped the dancing part this time and went to walk around on the upper level of the ship. Earlier that day, I had asked my dad for advice on how to kiss a girl and he told me to use “gentle persuasion”: to lightly lift the bottom of her chin and guide her lips toward mine. That evening, though I was looking good in my best suit, I was more nervous than I had ever been in my life. So, when she stopped walking and asked me if I wanted to go over to the balcony and watch the waves, I could feel a deep pounding inside my chest. The wind was whipping through her hair, causing it to fly about wildly, and this intensity was the only comfort I could find at that moment, for it mimicked the frenzy inside of me. After a few minutes, she asked if we could go back to her room so she could change out of her formal dress.

I was sure our moment had been ruined. But when she emerged from her stateroom a few minutes later, newly clad in jeans and smelling of some tantalizing body spray, my hope was renewed. On her suggestion, we went back up to the observation deck and returned to the exact same spot. We talked about a few ordinary things for a while, and then all at once my fear sank to the bottom of my chest like a single, dense weight, and I heard myself say “Melissa, I really like you.”

“I really like you too, Evan.”

And with that, I raised my bloodless arm, placing my hand underneath her chin, and kissed her. I tried to remember to open and close my mouth slowly, but my vision was black, and I had no feeling in my entire body. Perhaps a minute later, I regained some composure and started concentrating on what I was doing. I felt the moistness of her lips and tasted her saliva with life-affirming euphoria.

When we finally separated for a moment, she said “Wow - you’re a really good kisser.”

We spent the last four days of the cruise together. I remember the simple and expressive way she told me that she liked me, the intensity of her eyes after we kissed, and the specialness I felt when we walked around together at night, holding hands.

After the vacation, we wrote each other letters with gifts enclosed every week. We traded pictures from the vacation in one of them, she sent me a bottle of her shampoo (I worshiped the smell) in another, and I wrote her poetry in others. We called each other as much as our moms would let us. She lived ten hours north of me, but I didn’t care. I would have seen her every weekend if I had a car or the money to fly.

Meeting Melissa ushered in the worst period I had ever had in my relationship with my mom. She thought the idea of having a long distance girlfriend was impractical, and that it would only lead to disappointment for me. We fought constantly about whether I was allowed to fly out there, and although I ultimately lost the battle, I did everything short of running away from home to try to see her again. In one heated fight, I screamed at my mom: “You’ll regret this when Melissa and I get married one day and I don’t invite you to our wedding!”

About a month after the cruise, on a Tuesday night, I was sitting on the floor of my room using the twenty-minutes-every-other-day long distance time my mom had allotted me. Melissa and I were talking about how much we missed each other. Then she told me about something she had been feeling.

“I don’t know if it’s love, but I feel something...it’s like fireworks inside of me” she said.

“Really?...I do too.”

“Do you think it’s all right to say it?”

I paused. “Yeah. Let’s say it.”

“Okay, you first.”

“I...love you.”

“I love you too.”

That moment changed something chemical inside of me. I became obsessed; I started to save allowance money so I could buy calling cards and sneak extra calls to her from the pay phones at school. We planned secret times to call each other when our moms weren’t around. This went on for a few weeks.

But our parents had no intention of tolerating our unrealistic romance any longer. About three months later, after a final, climactic fight with our moms (and even a conversation between them), we agreed it was best not to talk.

The rest is history. She eventually got a boyfriend, and I started dating someone else too. Although we kept in touch for years, we never got a chance to be together. But the feelings I had during those four days on The Inspiration and afterwards for three months were as vivid and real as any feelings I have ever had. That was pure love.

My experience with Melissa is the closest thing to “true love” that I know. There are many possible interpretations, though. Some would call the impassioned excitement of a new relationship “true love,” and others would say that true love is the comfort of being with someone who understands you intimately well. To me, these states represent meaningful emotions; and indeed, there are as many types of love as there are couples. But the pure type of love that I felt when I was fifteen is different. It was life-changing and infinitely painful - the type of thing that you can only feel when your heart is as open as a child’s - and it is all that I can think of when I hear the words “true love.”

48 Comments

Posted by Mae on 12/07 at 09:34 PM

So I have been talking to this guy and have started to care about him more than a friend, and I just found out that he no longer believes in Love!  I have always wanted to fall in love and i care about this person alot and feel that we would be good together but how do i get over the fact that he doesnt believe in love?

Posted by Mary on 12/23 at 10:49 PM

Hey… i can totally relate to how you feel. You see shut eye i too am in a long distant relationship… My bf lives in Bulgaria and I live in New York… It upsets me to realize that he is my true love, but is so far from me! i’m glad that i’m not alone, but thats not enough… You see, we are in deep trouble. Our story is like Romeo and Juliet… We are secretely in love, our families kno one another, but will not want us to be with each other for different and upsetting reasons. Sometimes i think i should stop the relationship, and other times, i say that i should stop thinking like that and love him forever. Oh i’m so confuzed and upset. And there is another thing… we’ve been together for almost 1 year and a few months… I think the mushy stage of “Love” is over. He never says he loves me anymore and he says things like, “Oh, i don’t care about talking to you until the summer*... What does that mean? Do u think he’s going through a stage or is that because he’s a year younger than me :(? i don’t kno but i hope that the true love that i experienced with him will flow in us forever… he was my first love… or maybe i should brake up with him… he does such childish things, i just wanna catch a plane and strangle him! grrr lol… you can notice that i just had a fight with him, but i still want him to kno that i love him… and he know’s, because i say it…

Posted by Mary on 12/23 at 10:53 PM

Hey… i can totally relate to how you feel. You see shut eye i too am in a long distant relationship… My bf lives in Bulgaria and I live in New York… It upsets me to realize that he is my true love, but is so far from me! i’m glad that i’m not alone, but thats not enough… You see, we are in deep trouble. Our story is like Romeo and Juliet… We are secretely in love, our families kno one another, but will not want us to be with each other for different and upsetting reasons. Sometimes i think i should stop the relationship, and other times, i say that i should stop thinking like that and love him forever. Oh i’m so confuzed and upset. And there is another thing… we’ve been together for almost 1 year and a few months… I think the mushy stage of “Love” is over. He never says he loves me anymore and he says things like, “Oh, i don’t care about talking to you until the summer*... What does that mean? Do u think he’s going through a stage or is that because he’s a year younger than me :(? i don’t kno but i hope that the true love that i experienced with him will flow in us forever… he was my first love… or maybe i should brake up with him… he does such childish things, i just wanna catch a plane and strangle him! grrr lol… you can notice that i just had a fight with him, but i still want him to kno that i love him… and he know’s, because i say it… maybe i love him too much ...

Posted by Juli on 12/26 at 09:42 AM

HUH???? 
When I was younger I thought I was in love with someone from another country we wrote, he gave me a ring, we talked of marriage.  It all seemed so perfect.  But I wanted more!!

True love does not want more.  True love is happy with what is there.  Give it time and think about this. 

I have no doubt that you care deeply for the people you speak of but will you accept what is given to you for the rest of your life.  When the right person comes along there will be no wants only give & give.  Both persons will give because they “want” it to work, and that is the perfect relationship.

Posted by snowflake on 01/10 at 12:49 PM

I had true love, at least I thought so… we were together for 3 years and i can say that our love was really intense at least in the beginning.
We were living together and i thought we were happy, we had everything for each other: friendship, attraction and caring… until the day he told me I was only his best friend…
Since then my heart has been broken and I dont know what to do. I still love him too much and I really don~t understand how he stopped loving me… Now, I feel lost and unable to love again…

Posted by Martina on 01/19 at 07:36 PM

I am not sure whether true love really exists in this world… but if it does then it should be unconditional and yes, eternal.. Thanks for sharing this beautiful memory LOL

Posted by jaxe on 02/02 at 01:45 AM

u know...im a 14 year old gurl hu blieves in fairies...n ur ryt...it is fire works n all with my boyfrnd...n i really hope we last… ur story was real nice...i loved it..n no matter how much evry1 denies it n all every1 has a little bit of peter pan inside themselvs..the lil fantasy world u go to wen ur sad n lonely...ryt? smile

Posted by Valentine on 03/05 at 07:53 AM

Thanks.You helped me find out if I really loved somebody.And yes.I did.

Posted by Tania on 03/08 at 05:53 AM

hi, im kinda new. um i just wondered if it was wrong to be so in love with this guy with out telling your parents you are even together. the thing is i believe that we to truley love eachother but i have something at the back of my head telling me its wrong. im hurting all the tym. my stomach does summasult everythime i think of him. but is that a sign of good or bad. i love him, truly i do, but do i tell my parents when it is such a difficult situation. please help me to understand.!!

Posted by Richard on 04/02 at 11:14 PM

Sorry but I don’t think it was pure love (or true love). It was pure chemistry. It was a drug induced state of euphoria (induced by chemicals designed to help assist the reproduction of the human species).

Your feeling of pure love was nothing more than an illusion created by all the hormones and chemicals floating around your brains. Your love was no more than the love of a heroin addict for his next fix.

True love exists but this was’t it. It wasn’t true love because when the chemicals wore off and the going got rough i.e. your mum’s pressure, then you both “agreed it was best not to talk” LMFAO. True love indeed.

No it wasn’t true love, true love keeps going when the going gets tough. True love even keeps going when the chemicals wear off. True love outlasts infatuation.

Infatuation can and sometimes does lead to true love (that is its purpose) but it itself is not true love.

If you guys really had true love your romance would have lasted and you would have gotten married. You proved it wasn’t true love but mere puppy love by the fact you didn’t get married. It may have become pure love though had your parents not interferred.

That is not to downplay what a fantastic feeling infatuation is though.

But at the end of the day love is an act not a feeling, its a verb not a noun.

Posted by vidushi tiwari on 04/14 at 03:42 PM

i think,TRUE LOVE IS FOREVER.and when u r wth the RIGHT person....u will never think about ur past rather u will think of the future ahead wth him......

Posted by Cece on 05/07 at 05:43 PM

Thank you.

Posted by Sue on 07/08 at 09:36 PM

Thad,

You didn’t mentiton how long you’re married.
Have you considered seeing a therapist individually to help you navigate this course?  It seems that you don’t have any control in the situation.  A therapist might help you (1) examine uncomfortable feelings, (2) support you emotionally, (3) help you decide what the next step in your life may be and what your options are, (4) and how to communicate with your wife (perhaps couples counseling).  A therapist would be an objective party.  No one wants divorce.  It seems like an emotional separation is occurring naturally.  A therapist may be able to help you determine whether to seek legal advice to prepare for a legal separation in the future.

Posted by Susan on 08/08 at 07:38 PM

True love certainly exists, but it is different for everyone and can be different in each person’s life. True love isn’t the same as ‘forever love’. As someone noted, ‘today I will love you forever, tomorrow....’ Anyway, I think for anyone younger than 50 or 40 (the first half of your adult life), true love is more like a special feeling, all tingly, with much longing and sexual attraction. However, since I just turned 52 and am twice divorced, I know what I need for true love to exist and for the first time in my life I recently fell IN LOVE. I have had a soul mate, many many crushes, some great long-lasting relationships, secure relationships, etc. but never ‘true love’. To me true love is a feeling that transcends sexual attraction and mere chemistry between 2 people. It is a deep almost aching feeling in your heart, right in the deepest part of your soul; it’s hard to describe but once you feel it, you’ll know. And yes, it is the kind of love that even trancends time so in that regard, it is ‘everlasting’ as well. Good luck to all, you may be as lucky as me!!  wink

Posted by Christy on 08/31 at 03:44 PM

Can a person fall really in love more than once?
Well first of all, I’m really in love with my husband. We got married a month ago. But, there’s this feeling that I have that doesn’t go away. I see that he may not be really in love with me...he fell in love with someone he grew up with at the church..simply adored her...that was his first love....and he thinks she is the love of his life....
Do you all think that one day he’ll fall in love with me and think that what he felt for her doesn’t compare to the love he feels for me? or am I just lost...and won’t ever feel like he really loves me?
I just really love him, I may sound selfish but I always dreamed of finding someone and marrying someone who would love me alot in return too not just me. Do I have hope or not?

Posted by Cheryl on 09/04 at 01:22 AM

Cheryl loves Evan truely, so I’m gonna have to say yes, true love does exist!!!!!!!!!!!

Posted by Byron on 10/06 at 02:23 AM

I’m sorry but i can’t let this be. evan email me.

Posted by DarkPrincess on 11/25 at 09:06 PM

This is a really cool story...thanks for sharing. I believe I know what ur talking about. I have felt true love with someone who calls himself the Eternal Peter Pan, and I still love him though we can’t be together.

Posted by vishal on 02/03 at 11:37 AM

love happens and love is only true or else its not love. A friend of mine says what happens can dissapear as well so if love can happen it can dissaper also. Makes sense but i refuse to accept that.I have been madly in love with a girl for the last 8 years and she had given me more love than i could have ever given to her in my entire life. One day she dissapeared. She stopped calling me .. broke all links with me .. perhaps under pressure from her parents or other reasons or could be the fact that she realised she had better options available. but isnt love supposed to be unconditional ? I dont know wether i am making any sense ... all i want to say that love exists .. i have experienced it like so many others have .. the experience lasts for the lifetime but brings a lot of pain as well.

Posted by Lisa on 03/29 at 11:51 PM

That was incredibly beautiful. Words cannot descibe it. Consider yourself very lucky.

Posted by emma on 04/02 at 09:40 AM

To be quite honest I’ve sorta given up on love. I mean I’m 20 yrs old and I’ve been with quite a few guys in the past and things just didn’t work out - perhaps just my luck? Who knows. I have come to realise, however, that people these days either want each other just for sex, money or marriage (just for the sake of getting married and starting their own generation, or perhaps purely by force...accidental pregnancies & what not). I mean I know I’m being really negative about the concept but people these days have just become so self centred and won’t care for anyone unless they get something out of it somehow. It’s just this idea of individualism and self-worth. What do you guys think about this? It doesn’t have to be black and white, a yes or no answer. Maybe this idea does somehow dfestroy this notion of a “pure” love.
I just finished watching The Notebook and am feeling quite a bit emotional (I’m also due for my periods!) Maybe I am the one to blame for my loneliness, not other people.

Posted by luke on 04/23 at 02:30 PM

I think that true love is where you both not only like each other’s company, but also you love each other just the way you are. in other words, don’t try to change the other person-accept his or her faults, for no one is perfect.  cool smile

Posted by Bera on 05/06 at 06:20 PM

I once knew pure love and it was one of the greatest and worst periods of my life. I had fallen in love with a man who was eight years my senior (I was fourteen at the time) and whom I would never enter a relationship with. I don’t think he knew how I felt and if he loved me it was purely platonic and friendship based. I felt like I could fly when I was with him. He opened up a part of me I wasn’t aware of. I know exactly what you mean though, and until this day my feelings for him have defined how I perceive love. I’m now 19 and while I haven’t seen him in many years at this point I still think about him a lot. You never forget your first love and you’ll never stop loving them. Still, I am sure that I will find love again, and probably just as potent as it was with him. The world is an open place and if you just let love come to you it will happen.

Page 2 of 2

Post a Comment


Smileys
Options: