Love is friendship set on fire. — Jeremy Taylor

Love is friendship set on fire.

Author: Jeremy Taylor

Insight: We often chase the spark and ignore the wood. In the early stages of romance, everything feels electric, but that intensity isn't sustainable on its own. When the butterflies settle, many people panic, assuming the love has disappeared. This view flips that fear on its head. The fire doesn't replace the friendship; it relies on it. Without a foundation of genuine liking, shared jokes, and mutual respect, passion is just a flare that burns out quickly and leaves nothing behind. Think about the couples who last decades. They aren't always staring into each other's eyes with burning intensity. They are talking about groceries, navigating stress, and sitting in comfortable silence. The fire transforms the friendship into something more urgent and vital, but the friendship is what keeps the heat going when life gets cold. If you want the flame to last, stop worrying about keeping the fire roaring every single day and start tending to the friendship underneath. That is the actual fuel.

Friendship is the fuel, not the spark

Love is friendship set on fire.

We often chase the spark and ignore the wood. In the early stages of romance, everything feels electric, but that intensity isn't sustainable on its own. When the butterflies settle, many people panic, assuming the love has disappeared. This view flips that fear on its head. The fire doesn't replace the friendship; it relies on it. Without a foundation of genuine liking, shared jokes, and mutual respect, passion is just a flare that burns out quickly and leaves nothing behind.

Think about the couples who last decades. They aren't always staring into each other's eyes with burning intensity. They are talking about groceries, navigating stress, and sitting in comfortable silence. The fire transforms the friendship into something more urgent and vital, but the friendship is what keeps the heat going when life gets cold. If you want the flame to last, stop worrying about keeping the fire roaring every single day and start tending to the friendship underneath. That is the actual fuel.

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Jeremy Taylor

Jeremy Taylor was a 17th-century English cleric and writer, known for his influential works in Christian spirituality and pastoral literature. Born in 1613, he served as a bishop and is best known for his books "Holy Living" and "Holy Dying," which emphasize the importance of piety and the moral conduct of life. Taylor's writings significantly contributed to the Anglican tradition and continue to be studied for their theological insights.

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