Push and Pull

Car Doodle
A poem I wrote a long long time ago. Those were the days! (or not ;-))

Your head was red – you yelled at me
You squealed and shouted breathlessly
The anger soars – the vocals pitched
You said my brain was in a ditch

I listened to you furiously
I’d kick you if your ass I see
Such foolishness I saw in you
I thought I’d never speak to you

I raged – you raged a little more
I’d never seen you scream before
Your love for me could never be
My love for you died instantly

The fire in your voice was strong
My heart melted and sang a song
How could those lips so soft and kind
Speak words so harsh turn deaf man blind

I kissed those lips, I hugged that heart
In love I fall – a brand new start
To push to pull to love and hate
With you I’d like to tie my fate!

* * *

Loving too much? Don’t!

women who love too much

Baby, Baby please don’t go
I think I’m getting high on feeling low…

A chapter from Women who love to much starts out with a song. Robin Norwood, the author, is trying to drive sense into women who – you guessed it – “love too much”! That’s right, too much of anything is not a good thing, and love isn’t spared either!

I share a love-hate relationship with self-help books. I LOVE buying them, but I HATE reading them! I rarely get past the second chapter, and by then I’m outraged by the absolute obviousness of the ideas and the lack of practical techniques that actually work. Soon the book is nothing more than the Asian Sky Shop exercise belts that give you a six pack while you relax! Who would buy them, you ask?

But this book I like, probably because its not pretentious and has so far not suggested any ridiculous 10 point technique. I haven’t completed it yet, but I came across a para on portrayal of love by society which I couldn’t resist sharing!

The author explains how art and literature have always dramatized and glorified the lover who suffers and bleeds in love. From the classics to the soap operas of our times, if someone is not suffering for love, its not love. It is just “boring”. If you meet someone and sparks don’t fly and your neighbors don’t burn, its not love. It is just “boring”.

I really really liked how she sums it all up – “..the quality of emotional interplay in healthy relationships is often more subtle than the blatant drama of unhealthy relationships …”

If you too (like me, I admit) believe love without great excitement or passion is not love, you might want to read this book. May be all those boring couples aren’t so boring after all ;-)

Keep loving :)