Some of my friends say yes, some say no. I'm inclined to say yes....but I am open to differing opinions.
I think if two people were already in love and in a committed relationship (whether monogamous or polyamorous) and they had to live far away for work opportunities it would work.... but if we are talking people "falling in love" over long distances I don't think those work or work out for very long... I think people fall in love with the idea of the person and not who the person actually is and then when they have to live together or have kids together the person's true self comes out, which I think often leads to divorce or separation/breaking up. So my answer is IT DEPENDS.
I had a friend who moved from America to Australia to live with someone she’d been in a long distance relationship with. It turned out he was at least 10 years older than he’d said. They had a relationship for a while, but are just friends now.
Love is not dimmed by distance, time or death
@Doraz thank you
Love can happen at any distance and the question is about whether it can survive distance or be willing to sacrifice for it.
This depends on whom and what else you truly love and all you'd be willing to leave behind. I know of people who dream about escaping their current life.
I truly love my family and couldn't leave them. I also love my work and would have to start from scratch in another city or country.
So, I choose to love more locally.
Ditto.
I can't imagine to love happening over a distance. Maybe that's because it's never happened to me.
I haven't had much luck with it myself. And pickings around my tiny town are pretty slim as is.
My best relationship came from a long distance connection. Chemistry, which many say one needs to heed, tells us nothing and, in fact, often sends the wrong message. Getting to know someone over a distance (even before meeting them) can help really get to know someone. In my case it was over the phone for 2 months before we met. After a couple of failed relationships and a couple of good ones it was the distance one that was the best. However, compromises have to be made by both sides. It's often a matter of priorities.
@Bierbasstard Same with me. We talked on the phone for 2 months. I went to Dallas (my birth home and where most of my family still lives) to meet her. I told her Dallas Seattle is no contest so she decided to visit Seattle. She fell in love the first day. Back and forth to the area and every time the weather was beautiful and every time she got to experience something totally new (ferries, islands, mountains, city parks the sights). Sometimes I wondered if she was attracted more to the area or me. However, it was her choice to move the the San Juan Islands and I have never regretted it.
@OwlInASack It seems to be in the minority from what I read. If one has had a great relationship ones standards go up. If one has only had poor relationships the bar is set low and often so are the expectations. Problem is, one has to let go of the past only insofar as it becomes a guide for the future.
True love? I'm not sure there is such a thing. In the off chance that there is... I would meet someone long distance if we connected well online.
On this site I feel it needs to come in stages, public interactions, messages, E-mails and then phone calls and finally some visits from each party. One needs to be very careful, there are a lot of scammers out there and we have heard some real horror stories.
@JackPedigo one needs to always be careful. But it's pretty easy to identify a scammer... or an abuser.
Ill get to this once i finalize my answer to "how many angels can fit on the head of a pin"
Lol
..depends on if you believe in Angel's. I dont