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Does not listening to love songs create a false, illusion of the other person. So each person is in love with the illusion of the other and not the real person. Or does love songs help each other discover the real person? Personally I think it does not, but I want to get other opinions.

2006-06-17 07:51:04 · 3 answers · asked by GoldenSpirit 1 in Social Science Sociology

3 answers

I don't know but personally I'm so sick of love songs. So tired of tears. So done with wishing he was still here. Said I'm so sick of love songs, so sad and slow. So why can't I turn off the radio?

2006-06-17 11:26:08 · answer #1 · answered by The Truth 3 · 0 0

Just like a picture in a frame, a love song has captured a moment in time. I think that it depends on how much a person is influenced by artistic expression, music and poetry whether a song hurts or helps. I do not think it hurts any more than watching the 2% of the most attractive people in the world on TV and expecting the people in our daily lives to look as flawless. It helps me if it is the right song, but yes it also has the power (the music does) to p!*& me off if I'm mad at my man. For example, yesterday, I was trying to keep the lid on the frustration my husband and I'd been feeling with one another over the last day, so I played the CD my sister gave me for our honeymoon trip. I was less mad focusing on that "moment captured in time," and now we're speaking again. Great question! Now, we have a special request! This one's going out to GoldenSpirit from Sleek. Here's "You Light Up My Life," an oldie but goodie from the 70's by Debbie Boone. Keep it locked right here on WANS FM!

2006-06-18 00:04:08 · answer #2 · answered by Sleek 7 · 2 0

Hurt. I think love songs build up an ideal that no relationship can truly live up to.

2006-06-17 08:10:16 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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