Love triangle

 

Love Triangle

A love triangle (also known as a romantic love triangle, a romance triangle, or an everlasting triangle) is a three-person romantic connection. While it can allude to a three-person polyamorous relationship (i.e. Person A loves Person B loves Person C loves Person A), it most commonly refers to two individuals contending for the affection of another.
                                                According to the book Beliefs, Reasoning, and Decision Making, published in 1994, "Although the romantic love triangle and the friendship trio are nominally similar, their real consequences are substantially different, as many have pointed out... Friendship is not often considered as an exclusive connection, although romantic love is." According to statistics, "most adults have been involved in a love triangle, voluntarily or not" in Western civilization.

The phrase "love triangle" often refers to a situation in which one or more of the persons involved are unhappy. At some time, one person is likely to feel betrayed (e.g., "Person A feels envious of Person C, who is having a relationship with Person B, who, in Person A's perspective, is 'his/her person.') 
                                        A triad, which is a sort of polyamory despite the fact that polyamory generally implies sexual interactions, is a comparable arrangement that is agreed upon by all participants. Love triangles are inherently unstable in the setting of monogamy, with unrequited love and jealousy being recurring motifs.

In most circumstances, the envious or rejected first party loses a friendship with the second party over the third-party love interest, and occasionally even initiates a fight with them. Love triangles have been known to result in murder or suicide by the actual or perceived spurned lover, albeit this is a rare occurrence.

"The subject of sexual love triangles and their roots in the Oedipal triangle" has been studied in psychoanalysis. "A recurring pattern of developing or being stuck in a love triangle may be greatly broken by beginning to understand the patterns of the childhood bond to each parent individually and to both parents as a couple," according to experience. 
                        When this happens, "Men who are solely attracted to married women are unable to maintain the connection if it threatens to become more than an affair. They rely on their husbands to shield them from a full-fledged connection, just as women who become connected with married men on a regular basis rely on their wives "..

Eternal triangle

The perpetual triangle is made up of three points in geometric terms: a jealous partner (A) in a relationship with an unfaithful partner (B) who has a lover (C)... A feels abandoned, B is torn between two friends, and C is the spark for a union A-B dilemma."

"A collusive network is constantly required to keep the triangle everlasting," according to one theory. This can be sad – "I saw no prospect of it ending but with death — the death of one of three individuals" – or comedic – "A guy falls down in tears and eventually becomes hysterical at the burial of a friend's wife, with whom he has been having an affair, while the husband stays emotionless." 'Calm down,' the husband adds, 'I'll be married again.'

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

What is an example of a lose-lose situation?

5 signs that say she loves you, even if she doesn’t say ‘I love you’ often

Why are Men so Selfish?