So I'm not sure this is the right forum for this (as usual, I think I'm overthinking forum placement) but since we have younger/teenage members - being 20 (and 1/2 ), I'm not far from it myself~! - and since I've seen it sprouting up in the blog posts lately, I figured this would be an interesting topic. I'm hoping that we can all remain mature enough to accept other's opinions, whether or not we like them, and not start a debate. It's not usually a problem on this forum, but this can be touchy, so I want to make it clear that the intention is to see where people stand, not spark a debate or any negative feelings.
I feel like people tend to be overly critical of "young love." I feel like when you're 16, you're critical of the 12-year-olds who claim to be in love and break up within a week, or there are times you're even critical of your peers. I can't tell you how many times I heard "I mean, it's nice that Stacy's found someone, but she's never had a long-term relationship. Me, I'm someone who requires love to be a part of my relationships. When I love someone, I love them completely, and I want my relationships to be for the long-term" in high school. It seems that you hit your 20s, mid-20s, and you become critical of the teens and pre-teens. And then people in their 40s seem to be critical of us naive 20-year-old youngsters. :P It seems like love is always up for debate, always cause for question, as for when it's real and when the person has no clue what love is. So, where do you stand?
Personally, the way I see it is that we love for as much as we're capable, and I see love as being an emotion that is constantly growing and maturing with you. For example, that boy/girl you're convinced you're going to marry when you're 5? I do consider that "love" in the sense those feelings of affection and that sense of wanting to spend your life with that person is very real at that time. No, at that age, you have no concept of what it means to be in a relationship or what it means to be married, but what you have with that person is real, however limited in capacity it might be. I feel the same way about someone who's 14. They may experience love a lot differently than someone who experiences it at 16, and that 16-year-old will experience love differently than someone who's 25. No, I won't go so far as to say I believe in love at first sight in the sense you can love someone and know they're "the one" within a day, same as I don't think you can love someone without ever having said a single word beyond "hi" to them. :P But to me, love is a very real emotion whether you're experiencing it at 14 or 40. To me, what's different between the different stages is the maturity of the feeling, because I think that love not only develops but flourishes with experience. I think experience comes in having different relationships and different experiences with your partner and also different experiences as you age, and I think that all of that helps contribute to more mature forms of love. I think my mother, for example, can probably love more maturely and with more wisdom than me, not based on her age but on what she's learned in that time and also in what she's learned from her divorce. I think some of the members on this site, such as Moon (I believe Moon has mentioned a divorce/offered some wise words on threads about marriage), probably have more wisdom in the way of relationships than I do at 20, with fewer not only romantic experiences but life experiences as well. That doesn't mean I think that their love is any more real than the love I feel for my partner.
I suppose I got curious because I see a lot of people saying "and don't try to tell me what love is. I know that I'm young but I also know that I love my partner" and it's made me wonder why there's such a stigma or why people hold so many negative feelings towards young love. I think I'm more likely to judge someone on the way they act or on the way they portray their relationships. For example, someone who's 15 and considers the forum "stupid" because we don't think it's a good idea to be getting engaged within two weeks of meeting their partner is likely to bring out a more negative reaction in me than someone who's 15, says they love their partner, and has as much realistic expectation for their relationship as any of us. But I feel this way about anyone at any age. I would think it about me, too, if I felt and acted the same. :P But it has nothing to do with their feelings for the person, rather the maturity with which they carry themselves and present their relationships.
So I'm curious, what do you think? What are your opinions on young love? And if you've ever criticised it, has it been their feelings or their way of presenting and conducting themselves/their relationships?
I also feel like there's a trend, that we hit in high school and again in college, of thinking that we are the exception. Like I feel like it's pretty universal when you hit those stages where your entire life is turned upside down and you're at yet another point of rediscovery (often adolescence and then college/fresh out of college, when you hit the "adult world"), people tend to think - I can be guilty of this as well - that however it happened for others, it's not going to happen for them as well. I try not to be too much like that for as much as I can help it, especially since the attitude of "it will never happen to me/us" tends to irk me a bit, but I'm assuming that that may also play into irritation?
I feel like people tend to be overly critical of "young love." I feel like when you're 16, you're critical of the 12-year-olds who claim to be in love and break up within a week, or there are times you're even critical of your peers. I can't tell you how many times I heard "I mean, it's nice that Stacy's found someone, but she's never had a long-term relationship. Me, I'm someone who requires love to be a part of my relationships. When I love someone, I love them completely, and I want my relationships to be for the long-term" in high school. It seems that you hit your 20s, mid-20s, and you become critical of the teens and pre-teens. And then people in their 40s seem to be critical of us naive 20-year-old youngsters. :P It seems like love is always up for debate, always cause for question, as for when it's real and when the person has no clue what love is. So, where do you stand?
Personally, the way I see it is that we love for as much as we're capable, and I see love as being an emotion that is constantly growing and maturing with you. For example, that boy/girl you're convinced you're going to marry when you're 5? I do consider that "love" in the sense those feelings of affection and that sense of wanting to spend your life with that person is very real at that time. No, at that age, you have no concept of what it means to be in a relationship or what it means to be married, but what you have with that person is real, however limited in capacity it might be. I feel the same way about someone who's 14. They may experience love a lot differently than someone who experiences it at 16, and that 16-year-old will experience love differently than someone who's 25. No, I won't go so far as to say I believe in love at first sight in the sense you can love someone and know they're "the one" within a day, same as I don't think you can love someone without ever having said a single word beyond "hi" to them. :P But to me, love is a very real emotion whether you're experiencing it at 14 or 40. To me, what's different between the different stages is the maturity of the feeling, because I think that love not only develops but flourishes with experience. I think experience comes in having different relationships and different experiences with your partner and also different experiences as you age, and I think that all of that helps contribute to more mature forms of love. I think my mother, for example, can probably love more maturely and with more wisdom than me, not based on her age but on what she's learned in that time and also in what she's learned from her divorce. I think some of the members on this site, such as Moon (I believe Moon has mentioned a divorce/offered some wise words on threads about marriage), probably have more wisdom in the way of relationships than I do at 20, with fewer not only romantic experiences but life experiences as well. That doesn't mean I think that their love is any more real than the love I feel for my partner.
I suppose I got curious because I see a lot of people saying "and don't try to tell me what love is. I know that I'm young but I also know that I love my partner" and it's made me wonder why there's such a stigma or why people hold so many negative feelings towards young love. I think I'm more likely to judge someone on the way they act or on the way they portray their relationships. For example, someone who's 15 and considers the forum "stupid" because we don't think it's a good idea to be getting engaged within two weeks of meeting their partner is likely to bring out a more negative reaction in me than someone who's 15, says they love their partner, and has as much realistic expectation for their relationship as any of us. But I feel this way about anyone at any age. I would think it about me, too, if I felt and acted the same. :P But it has nothing to do with their feelings for the person, rather the maturity with which they carry themselves and present their relationships.
So I'm curious, what do you think? What are your opinions on young love? And if you've ever criticised it, has it been their feelings or their way of presenting and conducting themselves/their relationships?
I also feel like there's a trend, that we hit in high school and again in college, of thinking that we are the exception. Like I feel like it's pretty universal when you hit those stages where your entire life is turned upside down and you're at yet another point of rediscovery (often adolescence and then college/fresh out of college, when you hit the "adult world"), people tend to think - I can be guilty of this as well - that however it happened for others, it's not going to happen for them as well. I try not to be too much like that for as much as I can help it, especially since the attitude of "it will never happen to me/us" tends to irk me a bit, but I'm assuming that that may also play into irritation?
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