Originally Posted by
melancholia
Love can be many different things to many different people. Everyone expresses love, and received love, in different ways. There's platonic love, familial love, and romantic love. There's infatuation and obsession as well, that many people misinterpret as love, but is really a facade. For me, love is not about reciprocity, it's about giving as much as you can to someone without the expectation of receiving anything in return. Assuming you are asking about romantic love, I think a lot of the time we forget to love a person for exactly who they are, and instead, we try to look for what they have to offer us, when we should be looking at what we can offer them. We try to mold people into a version of someone we wish they were, and generally, it's a version of ourselves we wish to see in them, or a version of what we think love should be because of a skewed perception we've created based off fantasy (i.e. television/movies/books/media etc.). I think when you truly love someone, you are happiest when they are happy and healthy and they are free to be exactly who they want to be, and you consistently offer them support, love, encouragement, and positive energy to allow themselves to be who they want to be. Having said that, it is still important to be with someone who can give you love, too. I think it's important to find someone whose idea of what love is, aligns with yours. If you find someone who speaks a different love language than you do, it can be difficult to communicate your needs, and if you fall into a pattern of dating the same kinds of people, who show love in a different way, it can lead to disappointment if what they have to offer is different from what you need or want.
I am someone who has spent a lot of time pondering the exact same question you're asking, and so my answer comes from personal experience and reflection on years of relationships and varying degrees of love. I was in a relationship for 5 years with someone I loved deeply as well, but our relationship was extremely unhealthy and it came to the point where I could no longer offer him support and love without damaging myself at the same time. It was hard to walk away from, but it was the best decision I could have made. I chose to be single after that and dated casually for just over 3 years before I met my current boyfriend and I could not be happier.
Try to figure out what love means to you, and do not settle for anything less than what you want; but keep in mind that love feels best when you are able to offer as much as you can to someone, and also receive the same love back.
I hope that helps.