Skip to main content

Types of Love

Types of Love A part of knowing what is love involves understanding different types of love. The type that most people think of first is romantic love. Romantic love is the feeling that you experience when you develop a deep attachment to someone and you want to become involved in a relationship with that person. You may fall into romantic love several times over the course of your love when you meet someone and slowly grow to form an attachment to them.
Platonic love is the other main type of love. This is the type of love you feel for your parents, children, siblings and friends. With this type of love, you don't necessarily need to develop or build the feelings over time. Instead, you feel this type of love because you are part of a family and because you provide care and support for each other.
Each of these types of love can take the form of unconditional love. Unconditional love means that, no matter what a person does, the feelings of love and care will not diminish. While unconditional love is most common between parents and children, it can also exist in other relationships as well. It is this type of love that people think of in famous quotes from movies such as "love means never having to say you're sorry." This is also the type of love which parents express when they tell their children they will love them no matter what.
Finally, the saddest type of love is unrequited love. This type of emotion exists when the strong feelings of affection are one-sided. For example, a person may believe he is in love with a friend, and the friend may not return those feelings or feel as strongly. Unrequited love is most common in romantic love.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Wireless interconnecting in USA

Existing communications and computer architecture are increasingly being limited by the pedestrian speed of electrons moving through wires, and the future of high-speed communication and computing is in optics, experts say. The Holy Grail of results would be "wireless interconnecting," which operates at speeds 100 to 1,000 times faster than current technology. The new discovery, made by researchers at Oregon State University, the University of Iowa and Philipps University in Germany, has identified a way in which nanoscale devices based on gallium arsenide can respond to strong terahertz pulses for an extremely short period, controlling the electrical signal in a semiconductor. The research builds on previous findings for which OSU holds an issued patent.

Updating our Google Account inactivity policy

Every day Google works hard to keep you and your private information safe and secure by preventing unauthorized access to your Google Account with our built-in security protections. And keeping you safe means having strong privacy practices across our products that minimize how long we store your personal files and any data associated with them. We want to protect your private information and prevent any unauthorized access to your account even if you're no longer using our services. Therefore, we are updating the inactivity period for a Google Account to two years across all our products and services. This change starts rolling out today and will apply to any Google Account that's been inactive, meaning it has not been signed into or used within a two-year period. An inactive account and any content in it will be eligible for deletion from December 1, 2023. What this means for you: These changes do not impact you unless you h

PHƯƠNG PHÁP HỌC TẬP HIỆU QUẢ