In this world, there are too many people who are easily saying the three words "love you". From childhood to adulthood, we are taught to do something, to say something, but to think little about the consequences. The word "love" seems to have become the easiest word to hang on everyone's lips in life, but it has often become one of the least cherished emotions.
We are always prone to making promises when we express our love, forgetting that making promises is a debt.
Love is a commitment, a responsibility, but also an unforeseen pain. When we talk about love, we may not really understand the meaning of love, just because of loneliness, because of loneliness, because of the impulse of the moment.
Love should not be said casually. Every "I love you" should be a promise, a responsibility, not a word of duplicity. Do those who have said they love you remember your birthday after they leave?Do you remember every promise you made?Do you remember your commitment together?Or is it just a lie told to someone else?
Perhaps, we have all said "I love you" at one time, but love is not just three words. It needs to be taken accountable, it needs to be operated, and it needs time to sharpen. And how many people can actually do that?
When love has become a thing of the past, when promises have come to naught, we will understand that it is too easy to say love and too difficult to keep love.
We probably shouldn't say those three words lightly, and we shouldn't make those promises at will. We should learn to cherish, learn to protect, and learn to interpret the true meaning of love with actions.
Because, a promise is a debt. When we say "I love you", we should also be prepared to take all the responsibility instead of choosing to run away from it when it comes. Perhaps, love is such a contract, a promise, an inescapable debt.