In the media, all of us have often heard the relationship
experts and psychologists say, if you have a great need
for love from another person(especially the opposite sex),
then something must be lacking in yourself.
According to
many of them, if you're happy with who you are, then you
won't always be seeking love from an outside source.
Truth or a misconception? Well ... read on, and then you
decide.
It is a basic human desire to seek out love. If it
weren't, most of us would live as hermits. Humans are
social creatures. When we're younger, we yearn for
friends and acceptance. As we grow older, we yearn to
find that special someone to share our lives with, for
companionship, emotional support (not as a crutch),
maybe even to start our own families.
When is this desire wrong, and when is it right?
Certainly if we are searching for love in order to
solve all of our emotional problems, we will be
disappointed in the results -- much as when people think
losing weight or coming into a lot of money will solve
all of their other problems for them. No outside person
can fix what's wrong within our own souls.
However, a person who is already secure in their life
-- has friends, a job they enjoy (or relatively enjoy),
enough money to survive comfortably, good relations with
their relatives, etc. -- shouldn't be condemned to believe
how something "must" be wrong deep inside them, if they're
looking for a soul mate.
So, what do you do when you're confronted with such
criticism?
Don't listen! You can be secure in knowing that there is
nothing wrong with you. Don't argue about it with anyone.
That's pointless. Don't let it plunge you into a deep
depression either, and start you on a search for some
elusive something that's not really missing from your
life.
Hold this thought close to your heart: "The search for
a soul mate is not to complete my life, but to enhance it
-- the desire to share love is a natural and normal
function of human nature."
If you're searching for love, continue with your journey.
There is someone out there for you. And no matter how
corny it might sound, you "can" create your own story book
ending and live ... happily ever after.