xmh wrote:
I always have a crush/ unrequited love for somebody. The person changes every few years, but the feelings still seem the same.
I'm the same. Except i had a massive break after i got involved with a perfectly nice girl that was the object of a crush. Things worked out really well but she was nt and she had social urgings that i didn't share or understand. She cared so much about what other people thought of her, was always expecting public displays of affection. She used to annoy me when she'd make out that the reason i didn't like public displays of affection was because i was ashamed of her but the real truth was that i was ashamed of myself. I used to worry that other people would see me with her and wonder why she was seeing someone like me. God, i don't even think it ever occurred to me to tell her that, i sorta expected her to know somehow i guess. Which i suppose sums up why i ended it, i had to explain a lot of what i am and i don't like that, i want someone that understands how i am because they're like that too.
xmh wrote:
In a way I think of unrequited love as "love gone wrong". Whereas other forms of love (such as family, romantic and friendship) have advantages to both giver and receiver, unrequited love does not. If it only exists, possibly as an obsession, within one persons mind then it can be destructive, without benefiting its target.
Yeah, i agree, it's extremely destructive. You just need to do whatever u need to do to get over it, it's like an illness if you're getting nothing out of it.
I think there are plenty of ways to get over someone but it all depends on how deeply you felt. Personally i'd say the quickest and least painful way is probably telling the person and getting an answer one way or the other, but im famous for not following my own good advice so you'd probably never catch me doing that. Probably seperating yourself from that person is best, if you can manage that. Hmm, i guess my advice would be best in the case where you can't seperate yourself from them socially, it'd become too big of a problem otherwise, too distracting.