The Love We Imagine vs The Love That Exists


There is a phase in life where love is not seen clearly.

It is felt strongly, imagined deeply, and believed completely.

In that phase, small things look big. A few kind words feel like commitment. A little attention feels like care. And slowly, without realizing, we start building a picture in our mind that may not actually exist in reality.

The tricky part is not the other person. It is how our mind fills the gaps.

When someone is warm only at certain times, we don’t question it. We justify it. When effort feels one-sided, we don’t pause. We compensate. When clarity is missing, we don’t step back. We hold on tighter.

And all of this happens because we are not seeing what is happening. We are seeing what we want to happen.

In such situations, the relationship starts becoming dependent on one person’s effort. One person gives more, adjusts more, waits more. The other person remains undefined, sometimes present, sometimes distant.

But since there is no clear break, no clear rejection, it continues.

That is where confusion grows.

Over time, one realization becomes very clear.

Love is not something that needs constant interpretation. It does not leave you in doubt. It does not make you question your place again and again. And it definitely does not survive on one person’s continuous effort alone.

What often feels like love in these situations is actually a combination of attraction, imagination, and emotional investment. The more we invest, the more real it starts feeling, even if the foundation is weak.

Clarity usually comes later, not during.

And when it comes, it is surprisingly simple.

Love is consistent.
Love is balanced.
Love makes you feel settled, not unsettled.

Everything else may look like love.
But it is not.