Love at first sight.

I used to believe that love at first sight was a fantasy. I still believe that the way it's portrayed in movies--looking across a room and BAM, you're in love--is fake.

However, I have found that the deepest and most lasting friendships I've ever made started with a kind of instant recognition. At a party, or out with friends, I saw someone I didn’t know. Yet the way they moved and talked was instantly familiar, and spoke to something inside of me that was comforting and uplifting at once. And, after a single conversation, I felt as though I’d known this other person for years, and that I wanted to know them forever.

I thought it was just me, the way I formed attachments, but recently I spoke to a man who lamented that a friendship he’d formed while here in Japan was being interrupted by the friend leaving for his home country. He struggled to explain how from their first night out drinking they’d “told the same jokes” and “understood each other’s half-finished sentences.” This man had plenty of friends, and other people he loved, but the instant ease and familiarity he’d found in his leaving friend had never happened to him before. And perhaps it never will again.

None of my “love at first sight” experiences have been romantic, nor was the young man’s example from above. Maybe that’s why love at first sight as it actually is doesn’t interest a lot of writers, who would rather show sexually-driven chemistry. Yet having experienced how truly special it is to look at a stranger and know that they will become dear to me, it’s something I’d like to try and write. It’s a small bit of magic in day-to-day life, not an incomprehensible miracle, but a wonderful slice of reality. Life has too little magic. It’s good, to celebrate when you find some.


-Elizabeth Reuter
Author, The Demon of Renaissance Drive
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Published on June 30, 2013 05:16 Tags: real-life, thoughts, writing
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message 1: by Michael (new)

Michael King I always feel a strong desire after people talking using cliches like "love at first sight" or what not to stand up for the little man. I can tell you about an ex girlfriend of mine. A total looker!!! But socially she was inept!!! Totally inhibited, and couldn't look at people or communicate with anyone freely. Also she was depressed and riddled with reasons that your first impression wouldn't be ease, it would be that you must squeeze blood from stone to get anywhere. Admittedly, I probably wouldn't have chased her if it weren't for her looks. But I did. And it took a year to get to a slightly easy, familiar stage. We didn't "click" because she couldn't. Not with anyone. But we could build something. It was far more beautiful to me, and just better in every way than most relationships in which I instantly click and not just because she was stupidly hot, but because we helped each other out of jams.

so ... love at first sight? Or 2 fortunately adept people "clicking"?


message 2: by Russell (new)

Russell Wilkinson That made me smile. I have a agree with you there that there is something wider to love at first sight...even though on the few occasions I have had that feeling, probably a grand total of four times, one is my best friend, i've kissed two and married the other =P so I think there is definitely something to it


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Elizabeth Reuter
As a huge fan of dark fantasy, horror, and the like, that's most of what I'll write about here. Most horror/fantasy/sci-fi is badly made, and there's this silly idea that that means the genres themsel ...more
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