I had said 1 year ago but I used to love him earlier, he said how did he tell you because he thought that I would never be able to say. We met on https://www.ted.com/profiles/8790892
I had said 1 year ago but I used to love him earlier, he said how did he tell you because he thought that I would never be able to say. We met on https://www.ted.com/profiles/8790892
after the first BJ.
aural roberts wrote:
after the first BJ.
tramp!
after * HE * breaks 15 flat 5K (or she 16:30) i'd say things are "serious"
Q: How long before you said "I love you"?
A: To Cinnamon Toast Crunch, instantly.
A: To your mother? Never.
A: To my wife? None of your business.
She said it first, immediately after I brought up getting a house. Several years later, she's got me for 18 years of child support. Oh yeah, she took the house in our divorce.
If you've been dating for a couple weeks and she still won't give it up, use the L word to drop those panties.
in touche with my emotions wrote:
She said it first, immediately after I brought up getting a house. Several years later, she's got me for 18 years of child support. Oh yeah, she took the house in our divorce.
pics?
The Secret To Love wrote:
If you've been dating for a couple weeks and she still won't give it up, use the L word to drop those panties.
lingam? labia? lapidary? lave?
800 dude wrote:
What is it we're actually saying when we say those magic words?
The attraction that we call being in love can start immediately, and sometimes it lasts forever, although it certainly evolves over time. If this is all we're talking about, then we should say it right away. In a sense, we do say it right away, though always in different words.
The act of loving, of trying to make someone happy regardless of any benefit to yourself, can happen at any moment. Some people love in this way more readily than others. This kind doesn't really need to be communicated, because you demonstrate it.
The soul-mate/spouse thing is different and unique because it involves a promise to continue loving, no matter what. This is the only kind of love that really requires some sort of dramatic communication, because after you make that promise, everything really is different. When we say, "I love you," I think we're really just taking a practice swing for the real promise, which for most people is marriage, though it needn't necessarily be. I think the real message is, "I think that at some point I may be ready to promise to love you and only you."
True but it should be effortless or automatic. In other words, if it truly was a soul mate connection then it should come naturally without hesitation...
I was about 3 the first time I said "I Love You". I said it to a stuffed animal.
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