When you say a person you love takes from you a lot more than they give it sounds very negative - and it can be oc - but sometimes the proper word is "receive" which has a complete different meaning.
Just wondering if you mean to say take.
What's the difference? Unless you think it can't happen in reality. After all if we start describing other people we are bound to make mistakes and if we describe ourselves we are bound to become misunderstood.
Madame Bovary came to mind. Though one can't say she dodn't give anything to his lovers and husband but she did give very little. And yet I don't suspect that she loved very much.
Love=affection
We get used to people and begin to feel affection which can be confused with or interpreted as love.
Merriam webster:
": a feeling of liking and caring for someone or something : tender attachment : FONDNESS"
Depends whose love.
Since love cannot be measured it cannot be compared objectively.
I believe in most cases where love occurs in the world it is mere affection far gone.
The Jews are unbelievers according to Quran because, among other things, they twisted the words in the Torah to better fit their needs.
I understand that that is their permanent crime, and another is that they mocked Mohammad and his teachings.
But this complicates the words unbeliever to me...
Specific treaties. If you know so well I'm sure you can be specific. I really am not interested enough to go through all the info to find something only you claim is there. I tried finding correlation to the so called crash and separation from UN but the search engine has not heard of such a...