See...this is what I mean by romantic. That is a very romantic gesture...but is it real true love? I suppose most men would die for the ones they "loved" at least at the time. That does not mean that they would die for that person forever. It's a shallow love because it's an easy love. It's very easy to love when things are going well and everything is perfect, it is harder to love when life has taken it's toll.
Its not romantic at all. No one feels romantic when death is there in full force, immanent. I mean fully it when I say you honestly make death the witness. I'm not imagining Tom Hanks saying "I'd die for you honey". That's useless lip service. I mean actually , fully committing oneself to the utmost, writing a blank check out to someone.
Of course not. Women have enough on their plate already - they may die giving birth. For women things are less easy to project because so much is about what is directly in front of them. But don't make the mistake of cynicism and undervalue the male ability to hold true to a sober decision and to project that through years and decades with integrity.I don't buy the whole "I will die for you" routine. I think it is a romantic gesture that fools us and keeps us away from truth. I mean how many men would have died for Hitler? Were they justified in their love for Hitler? Are they thinking clearly? How many men will die for their country? Are they thinking clearly to love a piece of land over another piece of land or another human being? Not to mention women don't usually exhibit the same "die for you" routine when it comes to the men they love. Does that mean they love less? No.
You see, you've turned what I have said about being willing to die for another into a normative syntax that I was as far from as anything. I said it sounded like a cliche, but I was not expressing it as such.Just because society has made it "popular" to die for something you supposedly love doesn't mean that love is true or real. Let's see someone still die for a love who has become ugly with age. Let's see the person who will still die for the woman who has forgotten about him in lieu of the children they have brought into the world. Let's see a person die for the one who has fallen in love with another. All these things make me believe that dying for a love is not proof of true love.
There is only myself alone in the end, and death: there are no social cues or norms that can be of any use to me in the moment of death. They are all useless. All I have left to do is to love myself and then I'm happy in the face of death. Do you see what I mean?
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You can lose beauty, wealth, youth and health if you're stuck in the way you define these things for yourself. We are only here for beauty. Did you know that? Its a fact. Everything else is secondary.mean, How easy is it to love beauty....no challenge there. Everyone loves beauty. How easy is it to love wealth, health and youth? No challenge there...everyone would love those things. But what about when you lose those things? There is the challenge. I say it is more of a sacrifice to love in spite of hardships life brings us than it is give up our lives for the one we love.
You have strange reasoning if you don't consider giving up one's life to be the greatest of hardships. Think about your last sentence in terms of how a mother feels for her children. She would much rather the hardships that come of being a mother and be with her children, than to do and not be with her children at all.
Anyway, a bit of light and relevant entertainment:
http://www.youtube.com/watch_popup?v=Yf ... q=medium#t