From Love Not For Love
Life’s strangest paradox may be this:
LOVE ARRIVES PRECISELY WHEN YOU NO LONGER BEND
OR BREAK IN YOUR QUEST TO FIND IT.
It comes not as you plead or strain but in the quiet radiance of self-reclamation.
You no longer barter tenderness for loyalty nor compromise your integrity for fleeting passion or devotion.
You cease bargaining with your soul and stop paying the toll of self-sacrifice to stay close to another's warmth.
Instead, you build a sanctuary within, where self-respect becomes the cornerstone and independence your unwavering fire.
And then, like a sudden spring rain, from love appears—not a love born of need, but of a shared strength that no longer seeks to market, sell, devour or control.
In your stillness, your partner is drawn closer, no longer resisting the pull of desperation but softening, opening, and sensing the freedom in your wholeness.
It’s not by chance.
When we release the chorus of “Stay, or I will fall apart,”
we liberate ourselves and our lovers from the grip of emotional debt.
True reciprocity, real love, only flowers in the soil of freedom, where no one is bound to another by chains of expectation.
In reclaiming your self-worth, you offer one last invitation to real intimacy.
Either love begins to breathe again, flourishing in mutual respect, or the relationship based on clinging and fear must quietly fade.
The highest form of love, paradoxically, can only come when you no longer cling to love—when you release it, even as it returns to you like the sweetest echo of all you once dreamed.
~ Katie Kamara