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People tend to cling to anything that claims to mediate between desire and chaos, especially if it has just a few easy-to-follow rules.
The economy of love doesn’t respond to hard work, to sheer will. No, the sort of relationship that we’re discussing requires, at minimum, two participants, which means that it is always reliant on the ultimately unknowable thoughts and feelings of another person. Sure, you can probably seduce someone into falling in love with you, but that leads to a lifetime of never being loved for your true self.
Actually, the most valuable effect of list making might be the realization that you are allowed to ask for something, that you are not a mere supplicant at the feast of love.
“The List makes you face outward, which is never where the relationship is going to be. The process of looking for love is really a relationship with yourself.”
If I were to make a List now, though, it would have only one line: someone who truly enjoys being a person in the world.
“Rather than judging love by its duration, we should give up judging love at all. Love is the life force flowing through us. Love is the moment when the walls that separate us from the rest of the universe come tumbling down. And we stand there, naked and afraid, but not alone. Even a glimpse of that not-aloneness is worth it. Because it’s proof that we are part of something larger and more important than ourselves.”
Even if your life is full of people you love and care for, you have to breathe for yourself first.

