What’s the difference between like, love, and in-love?

What’s the difference between like, love, and in-love?

By Derek Sivers

What’s the difference between like, love, and in-love?

How do you know when you love someone instead of just liking them a lot?

How do you know when you’re “in-love” with someone instead of just loving them as a person?

I asked a bunch of friends these questions, and got a huge variety(vəˈrīədē) of answers:

“If I like anything about someone, I like them. If I like everything about someone, I love them. If I like everything about someone and we have great sex, I’m in love.”
“Like is liking someone, but conditionally. Love is liking someone unconditionally. In-love is just glorification(ˌɡlôrəfəˈkāSH(ə)n) of a temporary infatuation(inˌfaCHəˈwāSH(ə)n). Eventually it becomes love.”
“This sounds morbid(ˈmôrbəd), but I think of it in terms of how I’d react if they died. If I like someone and they died, I’d be sad and cry once or twice. If I love someone and they died, I’d be devastated(ˈdevəˌstāt) and cry for days or weeks. If I’m in love with someone and they died, I’d want to die too.”

How do you know?

Do other languages have different terms for “love” versus “in love” that make it more poetically(pōˈediklē) distinct?

https://sive.rs/inlove