You Reap What You Sow in Love
How is it that a heart can change so easily? How does someone leave the pure meal placed before them to willingly take a bite from something already tainted? This isn’t just about food—it’s about nature, values, and loyalty.
We often see people who, while in a committed relationship, know their partner well—know their joys, their sorrows, their likes and dislikes—yet they still choose to trust a stranger with their heart. They know their partner belongs to them, and still, they give their attention to someone new. They think, Even if I wander from place to place, tasting from every plate, I will still return to someone pure and untouched.
But life doesn’t work that way. Whatever you do comes back to you. If you break someone’s heart, trample their trust, and treat their love as if it were disposable, life will hand you the same fate. If you taste someone’s love and leave it behind, then by God, you will one day find someone who will do the same to you—try you, then leave you.
People forget that love isn’t merely physical closeness or shared time. It is a vow, a trust, a bond that takes root deep within the soul. When you betray that bond, you don’t just hurt the other person—you wound your own destiny.
The law of life is simple: plant the seeds of love, and you will harvest fragrance; plant the seeds of betrayal, and only thorns will grow. The world becomes to you what you are to it. Whatever you give will return to you—maybe today, maybe tomorrow, but it will come.
So, my friend, change this belief that you can betray and still expect unwavering love. Love is sacred, and its return is equally sacred. If you defile it, you will one day receive the same wound—perhaps at the very moment when you crave love the most.
Comments
Post a Comment