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Funny Love Quotes

A bride at her second wedding does not wear a veil. She wants to see what she is getting.
— Helen Rowland

 

A guy knows he’s in love when he loses interest in his car for a couple of days.
— Tim Allen

 

A husband is what is left of the lover after the nerve has been extracted.
— Helen Rowland

 

A man is already halfway in love with any woman who listens to him.
— Brendan Francis

 

A man is incomplete until he is married. After that, he is finished.
— Zsa Zsa Gabor




A wife is someone who’ll stand by you through all the trouble you wouldn’t have had if you’d stayed single.
— Anonymous

 


A woman in love can’t be reasonable–or she probably wouldn’t be in love.
— Mae West

 


A woman might as well propose: her husband will claim she did.
— Edgar Watson Howe

 


A woman with one lover is an angel. A woman with two lovers is a monster. A woman with three lovers is a woman.
— Victor Hugo

 

After a quarrel, a husband said to his wife, “You know, I was a fool when I married you.” She replied, “Yes, dear, but I was in love and didn’t notice.”
— Anonymous

 

Alimony is like buying hay for a dead horse. — Groucho Marx
All marriages are happy. It’s trying to live together afterwards that causes all the problems.
— Shelley Winters

 


All tragedies are finished by a death, all comedies by a marriage.
— Lord Byron

 

All you need is love. But a little chocolate now and then doesn’t hurt.
— Charles M. Schulz

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Love Quotes

Love Quotes

 

Have a heart that never hardens, and a temper that never tires, and a touch that never hurts.

— Charles Dickens

 

A simple ‘I love you’ means more than money.
–– Frank Sinatra 

 

He felt now that he was not simply close to her, but that he did not know where he ended and she began.
-– Leo Tolstoy







A wise girl kisses but doesn’t love, listens but doesn’t believe, and leaves before she is left.

–– Marilyn Monroe      

 

He who loves touches, walks not in darkness.
— Plato   

 

And in the end, the love you take is equal to the love you make.
–– Paul McCartney      

 

I seem to have loved you in numberless forms, numberless times, in life after life, in age after age forever.
— Rabindranath Tagore

 

As long as you know most men are like children, you know everything.
–– Coco Chanel   

 

Last night I looked up and matched each star with a reason why I love you; I was doing great, until I ran out of stars.
— Anonymous    

 

Better to have lost and loved than never to have loved at all.
–– Hemingway    

 

Last night I sent an angel to watch over you while you were sleeping. It came back early and I asked it why? It said Angels don’t watch other Angels.
— Anonymous    

 

Don’t forget I’m just a girl, standing in front of a boy, asking him to love her.
–– Notting Hill   

 

Love asks me no questions, and gives me endless support…
— William Shakespeare

 

Don’t settle for a relationship that won’t let you be yourself.
–– Oprah Winfrey



Love at first sight is cured by the second look.
— American proverb   



Hearts will never be practical until they are made unbreakable.
–– Wizard of Oz

 

Love built on beauty, soon as beauty, dies.
— John Donne   

 

I’m scared of walking out of this room and never feeling the rest of my whole life the way I feel when I’m with you.
–– Dirty Dancing 

 

Love compels cruelty, to those who do not understand love.
— T. S. Eliot   

 

I’m selfish, impatient and a little insecure. I make mistakes, I am out of control and at times hard to handle. But if you can’t handle me at my worst, then you sure as hell don’t deserve me at my best.
–– Marilyn Monroe




Love is of all passions the strongest, for it attacks simultaneously the head, the heart, & the senses.
— Lao Tzu

 

Love never claims, it ever gives…
— Mohandas K. Gandhi

 

Love is of all passions the strongest, for it attacks simultaneously the head, the heart, and the senses.
— Lao Tzu

 

Love seems the swiftest, but it is the slowest of all growths. No man or woman really knows what perfect love is until they have been married a quarter of a century.
— Mark Twain   

 

Love means never having to say you’re sorry.
–– Ali McGraw, Love Story

My most brilliant achievement was my ability to be able to persuade my wife to marry me.
— Winston Churchill   

 

Men should be like Kleenex… soft, strong, disposable.
–– Cher   

 

No, this trick won’t work. How on earth are you ever going to explain in terms of chemistry and physics so important a biological phenomenon as first love?
— Albert Einstein




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love and its Evolutuon

Love has always been a popular topic among friends and peers. We teens are no different and it is the best topic of discussion among us too. Everybody wants to know who is dating who and who is hitting on whom. Teens are the most active in exploration of this elusive emotion and understanding what is love.

 

Love has been defined as the best experience in one’s life. However, the hectic life that we have now, we fail to pay heed to our feelings and sometimes are forced to ignore or misunderstand them. Problem arises when a person does this. Most of the times a person do not know whether he or she is in love. Or worse, s/he chooses the wrong person to fall for.

 

Love is as old as the earth itself. As the centuries passed not only the lives of people have changed, approach to the feeling of LOVE too has changed drastically. Gone are the days when a lover ‘wasted’ loads of time wooing his beloved. Gone are the days of Devdas or Romeo & Juliet. Nobody believes in cheesy lines and love letters today. We are living at a time when pizza reaches home faster than an ambulance! This is the time of instant love and bad karma.

 

 

21st Century Love: Good or Bad?

 

‘21st Century’…sounds pretty cool and modern, doesn’t it? So what is love in 21st century? We are the generation who boast of a fast approach towards life. We laugh and snigger at the slow paced minds of the older generations. Each and every one of us want to brag about our love. We take pride in using Google and Facebook. We might remain far away from our dears yet we feel so close, thanks to Mark Zuckerburg. Whew! What inventions.

 

In the midst of Android and Twitter, do any of us wonder whether our emotions are getting mechanical or not? Love in our generation seems a far-fetched stuff…something that can only be seen in movies. We do not like to commit. Are we not getting a bit too mechanical?

 

David and Linda (fictitious characters) meet one day.

They ‘hook-up’ the next day.

‘Facebook-ed’ each other for the entire third day.

Make-out on the fourth day.

Fifth Day?.. They break up and ‘move on’.

 

The term ‘Moving On’ is very contradictory. So what you had a break-up…move on buddy! Life goes on even if you stop in your tracks. That is what 21stcentury love is all about. There are only handfuls who want to commit to ONE person and stick to him/her for the entire life. Otherwise, who would want to date ‘only one’ when there are a lot others waiting in line? If one can go out with 7 people on 7 days, why stick to that “one-boring-person”.

 

Not only this, we date innumerable people and get married to a complete stranger. Or better not get married at all. It does not trouble the 21st century generation that they are losing out on the emotional values. Moreover, the person who really falls in love and gets betrayed suffers the most. But, who cares?? You have a long list of options waiting for you at the Facebook page.

 

And lastly, friends are ‘only’ friends today. Nobody turns to your husband/wife!

Are we really moving on from our ex or moving ‘away’ from love?

 

 

Love…Obsession…Infatuation

 

‘No honey, you were not in love…it was only infatuation’

‘Don’t love so much that it turns to an Obsession!’…

 

The difficulty of differentiating between the three has been posing a problem since the days of ‘Adam & Eve’. We are standing at a point of time when it is very much possible to misunderstand what is love and what is not. We do not stick to one person and search for the next. We do not have count of the number of ex-es we have. Hence, the question…’I am in Love, or Am I?’

  • If you cannot think about anything or anybody else except that special one… go on buddy, you are in LOVE!
  • If you have a partner and still think about the guy/girl next door, leave the present! It’s an infatuation!
  • Obsession is when you spend sleepless nights or cannot stand anybody near your partner. That is great problem because you need to give him/her the space!

LOVE, OBSESSION, and INFATUATION are very similar. They can be placed side by side. Yet they are very much different. If you mistake one for the other, you are going to face serious trouble, my dear!

 

So, gear up and fear not to love! Because, no matter how cheesy you think it is, it is Love that makes the world go round! Think twice before leaving a person, he/she might just be the special one!

 

 

 

 

 

Other posts that you might like…..

What is Love Quotes
What is love? Practical suggestions
What is Love and its tell tale signs

 

 

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What is Love

A few years ago, I spoke to a group of high-schoolers about the Jewish idea of love.

"Someone define love," I said.

No response.

"Doesn't anyone want to try?" I asked.

Still no response.

"Tell you what: I'll define it, and you raise your hands if you agree. Okay?"

Nods.

"Okay. Love is that feeling you get when you meet the right person."

Every hand went up. And I thought, Oy.

This is how many people approach a relationship. Consciously or unconsciously, they believe love is a sensation (based on physical and emotional attraction) that magically, spontaneously generates when Mr. or Ms. Right appears. And just as easily, it can spontaneously degenerate when the magic "just isn't there" anymore. You fall in love, and you can fall out of it.

The key word is passivity. Erich Fromm, in his famous treatise "The Art of Loving," noted the sad consequence of this misconception: "There is hardly any activity, any enterprise, which is started with such tremendous hopes and expectations, and yet, which fails so regularly, as love." (That was back in 1956 ? chances are he'd be even more pessimistic today.)

So what is love ? real, lasting love?

Love is the attachment that results from deeply appreciating another's goodness.

Love is the result of appreciating another's goodness.

The word "goodness" may surprise you. After all, most love stories don't feature a couple enraptured with each other's ethics. ("I'm captivated by your values!" he told her passionately. "And I've never met a man with such morals!" she cooed.) But in her study of real-life successful marriages (The Good Marriage: How and Why Love Lasts), Judith Wallerstein reports that "the value these couples placed on the partner's moral qualities was an unexpected finding."

To the Jewish mind, it isn't unexpected at all. What we value most in ourselves, we value most in others. God created us to see ourselves as good (hence our need to either rationalize or regret our wrongdoings). So, too, we seek goodness in others. Nice looks, an engaging personality, intelligence, and talent (all of which count for something) may attract you, but goodness is what moves you to love.

Love is a Choice

If love comes from appreciating goodness, it needn't just happen ? you can make it happen. Love is active. You can create it. Just focus on the good in another person (and everyone has some). If you can do this easily, you'll love easily.

I was once at an intimate concert in which the performer, a deeply spiritual person, gazed warmly at his audience and said, "I want you to know, I love you all." I smiled tolerantly and thought, "Sure." Looking back, though, I realize my cynicism was misplaced. This man naturally saw the good in others, and our being there said enough about us that he could love us. Judaism actually idealizes this universal, unconditional love.

Obviously, there's a huge distance from here to the far more profound, personal love developed over the years, especially in marriage. But seeing goodness is the beginning.

By focusing on the good, you can love almost anyone.

Susan learned about this foundation of love after becoming engaged to David. When she called her parents to tell them the good news, they were elated. At the end of the conversation, her mother said, "Darling, I want you to know we love you, and we love David."

Susan was a bit dubious. "Mom," she said hesitantly, "I really appreciate your feelings, but, in all honesty, how can you say you love someone you've never met?"

"We're choosing to love him," her mother explained, "because love is a choice."

There's no better wisdom Susan's mother could have imparted to her before marriage. By focusing on the good, you can love almost anyone.

Actions Affect Feelings

Now that you're feeling so warmly toward the entire human race, how can you deepen your love for someone? The way God created us, actions affect our feelings most. For example, if you want to become more compassionate, thinking compassionate thoughts may be a start, but giving tzedaka (charity) will get you there. Likewise, the best way to feel loving is to be loving ? and that means giving.

While most people believe love leads to giving, the truth (as Rabbi Eliyahu Dessler writes in his famous discourse on loving kindness) is exactly the opposite: Giving leads to love.

What is giving? When an enthusiastic handyman happily announces to his non- mechanically inclined wife, "Honey, wait till you see what I got you for your birthday ? a triple-decker toolbox!" that's not giving. Neither is a father's forcing violin lessons on his son because he himself always dreamed of being a virtuoso.

True giving, as Erich Fromm points out, is other-oriented, and requires four elements. The first is care, demonstrating active concern for the recipient's life and growth. The second is responsibility, responding to his or her expressed and unexpressed needs (particularly, in an adult relationship, emotional needs). The third is respect, "the ability to see a person as he [or she] is, to be aware of his [or her] unique individuality," and, consequently, wanting that person to "grow and unfold as he [or she] is."

These three components all depend upon the fourth, knowledge. You can care for, respond to, and respect another only as deeply as you know him or her.

Opening Yourself to Others

The effect of genuine, other-oriented giving is profound. It allows you into another person's world and opens you up to perceiving his or her goodness. At the same time, it means investing part of yourself in the other, enabling you to love this person as you love yourself.

The more you give, the more you love.

Many years ago, I met a woman whom I found very unpleasant. So I decided to try out the "giving leads to love" theory. One day I invited her for dinner. A few days later I offered to help her with a personal problem. On another occasion I read something she'd written and offered feedback and praise. Today we have a warm relationship. The more you give, the more you love. This is why your parents (who've given you more than you'll ever know) undoubtedly love you more than you love them, and you, in turn, will love your own children more than they'll love you.

Because deep, intimate love emanates from knowledge and giving, it comes not overnight but over time ? which nearly always means after marriage. The intensity many couples feel before marrying is usually great affection boosted by commonality, chemistry, and anticipation. These may be the seeds of love, but they have yet to sprout. On the wedding day, emotions run high, but true love should be at its lowest, because it will hopefully always be growing, as husband and wife give more and more to each other.

A woman I know once explained why she's been happily married for 25 years. "A relationship has its ups and downs," she told me. "The downs can be really low ? and when you're in one, you have three choices: Leave, stay in a loveless marriage, or choose to love your spouse."

Dr. Jill Murray (author of But I Love Him: Protecting Your Daughter from Controlling, Abusive Dating Relationships) writes that if someone mistreats you while professing to love you, remember: "Love is a behavior." A relationship thrives when partners are committed to behaving lovingly through continual, unconditional giving ? not only saying, "I love you," but showing it.

Reprinted with permission from "HEAD TO HEART" by Gila Manolson.

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which Is Your Favorate Subject????

My Fav Is Botany

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