Like most other little girls, I often played house with my baby
dolls; pretending to have a family or taking care of a baby. By the time
I reached middle school, dating had become a popular topic for
discussion. Everyone was talking about who was dating who, which couples
had been together for a while, which ones had broken up and why, as
well as the things that may (or may not) have taken place in some of the
relationships. I often heard the girls gushing about their boy saying
things like "I love him" and "We are never going to break up." Know how
many of those middle school relationships I was always hearing about
still exist? None.
I wasn't against the idea of dating
in middle school or even high school. My thought was I didn't want to
be in and out of six, or more, relationships by the time I graduated
high school. I have always been a long-term, dedicated, serious
relationship kind of gal. Additionally, my education is important to me
and I didn't want to get into a relationship with a clingy boy who
would, potentially, take me away from my studies. Besides, all the boys I
knew where just that, immature guys who didn't understand what it meant
to love someone.
Okay... To be fair, I didn't really
understand what it meant to love someone either when I was a freshman. I
had an idea of what it was but, that was an idea based off of romance
movies like the ones on Hallmark. Even still, I'm almost positive that
was a better idea of what love was than anything the boys had. And, of
course, I had this "perfect boyfriend" image in my head too. This image
was made up of all the characteristics that I wanted my boyfriend to
have; the characteristics coming from the things I want my future
husband to have. Yes, I knew full well that the chances of finding
someone that fit every single desire was slim to none. But, it is good
to know what you want and not just settle for anything. I had long list
of things I wanted in my boyfriend (Mature, respectful, funny, thankful,
understanding, sympathetic, etc.) and was expecting him to have at
least 90-95% of the characteristics on the list. But, I found someone
who changed that....
There is something about being
emotionally hurt that changes the way people look at love. For me, my
emotional hurt came from the young boys who only wanted me in their
lives to fill a physical craving called sex. I never dated them because
sex is something that I have always seen as special and something to be
done with your spouse. For my boyfriend, his was the feeling of being
used since he was cheated on a few times. For both of us, the hallmark
definition of love is only part of it.
I've been with
my boyfriend for nearly five months now and I'm starting to realize that
love is the bond and connection of two hearts in a way that makes it
hard to be away from the other person. It is a desire to be with them
even if the two of you aren't agreeing with each other or are fighting
with each other. Love is wanting the other person with you all the time
because they make you a better person and you can't imagine your life
without them. Disagreements are going to happen, they do in every
relationship, but if taken care of properly, those disagreements bring
you closer to each other and make your relationship stronger.
Even
though he isn't everything I imagined he would be, my boyfriend is
everything I ever could have asked for realistically and so much more. I
love him with everything in me and I can't imagine living without him.
He is my "Forever Love" "Always and Forever"
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