What If Everything You Were Told About Love Was Only Part of the Truth?
Love is one of the most spoken about, yet most misunderstood experiences in human life.
People say, love is a feeling, others say, love is action, and some say, love is sacrifice. But if love is only one thing, why does it show up in so many different forms, expressions, and experiences? Why does one kind of love heal, while another confuses? Why does one love feel safe, while another feels like loss of self? The truth is that love is not one-dimensional.
Love carries many faces. Some we recognize easily, and some we mistake for love when they are something else entirely.
This book is not here to complicate love.
It is here to bring clarity to it. To break it down. To explore it.
To understand it in its human depth and its divine expression.
Because once you understand the many faces of love, you will no longer confuse attachment for connection, or desire for devotion, or presence for purpose. You will begin to see love for what it truly is in its many forms. Love is one of the most used words in the world, yet one of the least understood. People say it freely. They say, I love you, I love this, I love that, as if love is simple, as if it means the same thing in every situation. But if you pay close attention to human experience, you will realize something important: not everything called love is actually love.
Some people call it love when it is comfort. Some call it love when it is attraction. Some call it love when it is attachment. Some call it love when it is dependency. And some call it love when it is simply familiarity. So, the question becomes, what is love really? Love cannot be reduced to just a feeling, because feelings change. Love cannot be reduced to just words, because words can be empty. And love cannot be reduced to just actions, because actions can be motivated by hidden needs.