Romantic love is a game that is both dreamy and hard to play. Most of us were taught that this feeling is the key to happiness, so we go into the rough waters of dating with a strong desire to find a soulmate and experience this bliss. And let’s be honest, there’s nothing better than meeting someone you love and knowing that you’re meant to be together for the rest of your life.
But in this digital age, we’re surrounded by breakups, love rats, and unhappy couples, which makes it easy to lose faith in the idea of eternal love. Hiptoro put together a list of beautiful and heartwarming pictures that show some couples are meant to be together. We did this to show you that it is real.
These photos show that the universe works in mysterious ways and that two people can be magically connected even before they realize it. Like finding yourself in a family photo taken seven years before you met your partner. Keep scrolling to see these good examples and vote up the ones you like best.
My wife’s grandparents have dementia, but their love for each other is so strong that she fixes his shirt, blows him kisses and hopes he’ll be her boyfriend.
We met when we were in preschool. One of my earliest memories is of being 3 years old and standing up in front of my preschool class and saying that I would marry her someday.
People from all over the world are drawn to the idea of “The One.” Everyone wants to find their perfect match, and there are many reasons why people think their perfect match is out there. At the same time, it’s easy to feel pressured to have a love story where everything goes so well that it must have been written in the stars.
Research has shown that an amazing number of people hope to meet the person they were meant to be with. For instance, a 2021 YouGov poll of almost 15,000 adults found that the US seems to be the land of romantics. It found that 60% of Americans believe in the idea of soulmates. Women (64%) are more likely than men (55%) to say they believe in this idea of a perfect romantic partner.
But how do we know that this person is “The One” out of the nearly 8 billion people on Earth? Aren’t we just giving in to the idea that somewhere out there, our perfect match is waiting to give our lives the meaning we’ve been looking for?
This picture of my parents didn’t really happen, but it’s made up of two separate pictures that fit together perfectly.
Critics told a couple with Down syndrome not to marry, but 25 years later, they show that they were wrong.
Dr. Nathalie Martinek, a narcissism hacker and relationship coach based in Melbourne, Australia gave some insights on the same subject.
The term ‘soulmates’ describes a powerful bond between two people who both feel an immediate familiarity with each other, as if they’ve known each other their entire life or in a past lifetime,
she said.
In spite of what most people think, soulmates are not always tied together by romantic relationships. It could be a friend, a family member, a business partner, or even a stranger we just met but feel a strong connection to. But, as Dr. Martinek said, we usually use this word to talk about close relationships.
Since humans grow, develop, and mature, they will be drawn to different people at different phases of their life, or at different stages of emotional maturity. Rather than there only being one person perfect for us, there are people who match what we need for our maturation process at any given time, whether it’s one person during adulthood, such as a spouse, or many different ideal partners
she said, adding there is no one way to be with a soulmate.
A woman finds out 11 years later that the blood donor who saved her life was actually her husband.
Mom finds out that the engaged couple thought they met in college, but they actually met on a family trip in 1997.
A photo of my grandfathers, who were friends long before my parents met.
It’s nice to think that if you meet your soulmate, you’ll fall in love instantly and stay in love forever. But there are signs that movies and TV shows may have taught us to think this way. Researchers from the University of Michigan did a study and found that our romantic ideas are often influenced by what we see and hear in the media. They looked at the survey answers of 625 college students who said they watched romantic movies, sitcoms, and reality shows about marriage.
The study found that people who watched more romantic movies were more likely to believe that “love finds a way.” People who watched more reality shows about marriage were more likely to believe in “love at first sight” and “true love.”
A married couple in China finds out that they were both in the same picture when they were teenagers.
My wife and I accidentally gave each other the same Christmas gift.
Me In 1998 And My Wife In 2000.
True love is a concept that comes out of fairytales, stories, and myths that we read about in books that have been brought to life in films, love songs, and other media and don’t always reflect reality,
Dr. Martinek said.
Unfortunately, these stories have influenced us to believe that we should strive for the fantasy of true love rather than strive for healthy and secure relationships.
Alarmingly, these dreams also make us more likely to form traumatic bonds with people who give us these dreams or see us as the dreams.
These relationships start with one person being swept off their feet by the other (like the hero or savior of their fantasy), convinced they found their soulmate. They quickly form an emotional bond and trust toward each other only to become disappointed and hurt by each other when one person discovers that the other person can’t live up to the fantasy.
In their teens, they went out on dates, but they ended up marrying other people. After 65 years, they got back together. My grandma and the man she was seeing.
Twenty years after being the flower girl and ring bearer at a wedding, they got married.
A woman starts dating a man she was married to before the head injury that made her forget everything since she was 17.
My wife and I were always meant to be together, it seems.
In 1997, we met in the second grade. After 21 years, here we are.
We didn’t know it when we met, but it turns out that the birthmarks on our thighs look pretty much the same.
Last month, I got married. We thought we met for the first time when we were in our 20s. We found out a few years later that our moms were best friends in high school.
In the early 1960s, when my parents lived in different towns in Mississippi, a door-to-door photographer with a pony came to both of their houses.
Tomorrow is my parents’ 25th wedding anniversary, and they still love each other as much as they did when they first met 45 years ago. At 2 and 4 years old, they were next-door Neighbors.