This is about him, not you.

This is about him, not you.

Love is not primarily a feeling.
Love is a pattern of choices over time.

Feelings are weather.
Love is climate.

Someone can feel intense attachment, longing, obsession, dependency, craving, familiarity, nostalgia, lust, fear of abandonment, or even ownershipโ€ฆ and label the whole messy smoothie โ€œlove.โ€ Language lets them. Reality does not.

So when someone says, โ€œI love you more than anything,โ€ but their behaviour says: โ€œI lie to you, betray you, minimise you, replace you, scare you, exhaust you, or ignore you,โ€ they are not describing love.
They are describing attachment plus entitlement plus self-soothing.

That cocktail is (sadly) common. It is also not love.

Some people want love to be defined by declaration, because if love is whatever they say it is, they never have to change what they do.

Attachment

Attachment sounds like:

  • โ€œI feel connected to youโ€
  • โ€œYouโ€™re familiarโ€
  • โ€œYou regulate my emotionsโ€
  • โ€œI donโ€™t like the idea of you being goneโ€

Attachment answers the question:

What happens to me if you disappear?

Attachment can exist without care, respect, or kindness. Babies attach to caregivers who hurt them.
People attach to substances that destroy them. Attachment is not moral. It is neurological.

Entitlement

Entitlement sounds like:

  • โ€œBecause I feel this way, you owe me accessโ€
  • โ€œBecause I chose you, you should tolerate my behaviourโ€
  • โ€œBecause Iโ€™m attached, I get to define the rulesโ€

Entitlement reframes another human being as a resource. Not a person with autonomy.

Not a collaborator. A utility.

Entitlement answers the question:
What am I allowed to take from you without your consent?

This is why cheating, belittling, neglect, and control coexist so comfortably with โ€œI love you.โ€
Entitlement dissolves responsibility.

Self-soothing

Self-soothing sounds like:

  • โ€œYou calm me downโ€
  • โ€œYou make me feel better about myselfโ€
  • โ€œI need you when Iโ€™m dysregulatedโ€

Here is the key distinction:
Love asks, โ€œHow is this affecting you?โ€
Self-soothing asks, โ€œHow are you affecting me?โ€

When someone uses another person primarily to manage their own discomfort, they are not loving.
They are coping.

Now, put the three together:
Attachment + entitlement + self-soothing =
โ€œI feel strongly about you, I believe I have rights over you, and I use you to regulate myself.โ€

That is not love. That is dependent with branding.
Why the resistance?

Because accepting your framing would require one brutal admission:
Feelings do not grant moral authority.

You do not get credit for intensity.
You do not get absolution for desire.
You do not get to rename harm because you did not mean it.

Love is not whatever the loudest person insists it is.
Love is constrained by reality.

Reality says: If your behaviour diminishes someone, you are not loving them.
If your presence requires them to shrink, you are not loving them.
If your comfort depends on their confusion or silence, you are not loving them.

Calling this love is like calling theft โ€œborrowingโ€ because you felt nervous.
Words do not bend physics.

And if this strikes a chord with you, understand this:
If love were purely self-defined, abuse would be impossible.

Everyone would get to say:
โ€œI hurt you because I love you.โ€
โ€œI control you because I love you.โ€
โ€œI betray you because I love you.โ€

That is not a worldview, dearhearts.ย  It isย a loophole.
Actual love is externally verifiable. It leaves witnesses, consistency and repair.

 

 

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