Welcome:  guest       New emails:        IMessages:     
 
    
News
04-30-2009
Internet Personals are a great way to connect with quality women.
 
02-24-2009

There’s something about falling in love that makes it feel like first love. It has the sweetness of flowers and clouds and deep soul connection. It’s fresh, because it’s new and filled with wonders and wondrous feelings to explore.

Even if you’re falling in love for the second, third or even fourth time, it can feel like first love. We all know that’s true. That’s why flowers as a love token are so universally given.

But what is it about falling in love that makes it so brand new?

Well, there’s the “falling” feeling in falling in love. Why? Because that’s what it feels like. Like a first love, it feels like we have no choice. Something strikes us and over or down we go.

To follow the “flowers’ metaphor, sometimes it’s brazen like deep red flowers. At other times it’s gentle and strong like tulips. At other times it’s unspoiled like spring flowers. And yes, there are times when falling in love — even when you’re sure it feels like first love — can get you hanging over like flowers not watered.

And then there’s the sheer wonder of the other person. Not about this or that. But simply, they exist, and that’s breathtaking. It’s like seeing someone for the first time — but not just seeing with your eyes, but with your soul, with some part of you that comes to life because you are falling in love.

The feeling of first love also makes us realize that we too exist. We too are worthy of love and that someone is falling in love with us.

No matter how old, and no matter how jaded, when we are struck with falling in love, sincerely and openly struck, it’s always a first love because it takes us into parts of ourselves we’ve never known before. And we get to first love the one we’re falling in love with, and then love ourselves.

To rely on the flowers image one last time, it’s like a love field of spring flowers. Perhaps that’s why so many men and women choose flowers to express their love.

Are you open to falling in love?You can enjoy “Opening to Love 365 Days a Year.” Just visit us at (URL) and discover how you can have first love everyday.

 Falling In Love Always Feels Like First Love

Share and Enjoy: Digg Google Live del.icio.us Facebook Mixx YahooMyWeb Webride Fark Technorati Furl MySpace NewsVine Ping.fm LinkedIn E-mail this story to a friend! StumbleUpon

 
02-20-2009

The idea that there are seasons of love is not a new idea, but it’s one that very few people know about, and that leads to no end of heartache.

Everyone knows about and wishes to feel that sweet honeymoon period at the beginning of a relationship. That’s the first of the seasons of love and it is often the most romantic.

But tragically, that’s usually all they know. And when the romantic honeymoon ends, sometimes gently sometimes with heartache, they wonder — What is love?

What is love? Good question.

Love is not a static thing. It grows. And like anything that lives and grows, love must grow through it’s seasons of love.

What seasons of love?

We have identified four major seasons, each with it’s own romantic core.

The First of the Seasons of Love, most known as the honeymoon season we call “A Glimpse of what is Possible.” The most intensely romantic of all the seasons of love.

The Second of the Seasons of Love we call “The Clash of Differences” — when most couples ask— What is love? — because they have to make their way through the differences that always arise in every relationship.

The Third of the Seasons of Love we call “The Magic of Differences” — when the answer to the question “What is love?” begins to emerge. This is not love at first sight, or puppy love. This is deep and deeply romantic love— the kind of love that will last your lifetime.

The Fourth of the Seasons of Love, and by far the most romantic we call “The Grace of Deep Intimacy” — when a couple has learned each other, accepted each other, and now they admire, respect and cherish each other, because they are different. It’s in the differences between them that the answer to “What is Love? becomes clear.

So, what is love? Not in a philosophical sense. Nor in a romantic novel sense. But in a real day-to-day sense. What is love?

Love is a living, breathing, growing experience that evolves with a couple as they evolve together through their seasons — seasons of love, each with its own romantic lessons and delights, all in answer, a living answer to the question — what is love?”

So, thrill to the seasons of love. Get your own copy of “Be Loved for Who You Really Are” at (URL). That’s the ultimate gift.

 

 There Are Seasons of Love in Every Romantic Relationship

Share and Enjoy: Digg Google Live del.icio.us Facebook Mixx YahooMyWeb Webride Fark Technorati Furl MySpace NewsVine Ping.fm LinkedIn E-mail this story to a friend! StumbleUpon

 
1 2 3 4
Copyright 2009LoveLife Express

Powered by The Romantic IQ Network
Dating Advice   |   Take tour   |   Success Stories   |   Testimonials   |   Terms of Service   |   Press

Contact Us   |   Help   |   News   |   Site Map