12.06.2008

Which do you prefer?

"I love you... despite your flaws."

or

"I love you... because of your flaws."

8 comments:

  1. I want both.
    Is that too demanding?

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  2. what about...

    i love you...knowing your flaws.

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  3. I love you...knowing your flaws.
    AGREED

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  4. ditto to the comments above!

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  5. Despite.

    People are not perfect. People need improvement. People can change.

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  6. And despite people, love continues to exist, prevail, and perfect.

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  7. Despite:
    It implies that there is more behind the flaws, that such flaws can be pushed aside to reveal a fuller person.

    Because:
    It limits the scope of what a person sees. "I love you, because of your flaws." "I only see your flaws." And, if you overcame or corrected your flaws, will I still love you?

    So which one?
    Well, I want to fall in love with my husband, not his flaws. :)

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  8. I'd prefer I love you because of your flaws, but I'd take I love you despite your flaws.

    There's something naive and first-year-relationship-jiraley about "I love you because of your flaws". Every time I say something like that about someone, it's because I'm caught up in a moment of more-than-average stupidity.

    I do not want to be loved stupid.
    I do want to be loved, stupid.

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