by Bonachichi
A man told me he loves me today. He's one of my show-biz friends/clients, so I said, "Yeah, ya luv me. You guys luv everyone." "No," he said. "I really do love you." WTH?
I don't like that word, simply because it's over-used. People love food. They love chairs. They love their cars. It's especially dangerous when saying it to a member of the opposite sex. When that happens, the other party has to wonder, "HOW do you love me?" I don't mind a gay man telling me he loves me. If a girlfriend says it, I know she is fond of me. When a straight man other than my husband says it, alarms go off. This opens a potential can of worms. How do you prove that the fondness you feel for a member of the opposite sex (okay, same sex for some of us), is innocent love and not lust?
When a woman tells a man she's dating that she loves him, it's our secret code. We're letting them know they're in our sites. We want more. So when a man says it to a woman, what's that mean? My client/friend hates his drunken wife. It's not a rumor, I've met her. She's a drunk. Still, I don't want to put myself in a position where I'm accused of being in the middle of someone else's marriage.
I wish people would stop using that "L" word. I say, "adore." You can back-pedal from that. That one word, "love" has destroyed more relationships than it's built. When you tell someone you "love" them, what's it mean to you? Did you ever think it could make someone else uncomfortable?