Forgotten Dairies
Love Without Respect Is Not Love -By Daniel Othegbemeh
Walking away is one of the hardest decisions anyone can make, especially when genuine feelings are involved. Yet there comes a point when staying hurts more than leaving. In my opinion, no relationship is worth constant emotional turmoil. Healing is never instant, but there was a time before we met certain people, and life continued. With time, painful memories become lighter, and we slowly rediscover the parts of ourselves that heartbreak tried to take away.
Love is often described as one of the greatest experiences anyone can have, but I have come to believe that love alone is not enough. Love can survive difficult seasons, misunderstandings and disagreements, but it cannot survive the continuous absence of respect. When respect disappears, love slowly transforms into pain. In my opinion, love without respect is not love at all; it is emotional suffering disguised as affection.
To me, respect is simple. If an action would hurt you, do not do it to the person you claim to love. No one has a thicker skin. We all bleed, we all hurt and we all long to be treated with dignity. A relationship should never become a place where one person’s feelings matter while the other’s are constantly ignored. Respect means considering your partner’s emotions before your actions, not after the damage has already been done.
Sadly, many relationships today have normalised emotional disrespect. We have become comfortable dismissing genuine concerns with phrases like, “You’re overreacting,” instead of asking, “What did I do that hurt you?” When someone’s pain is repeatedly brushed aside, they eventually begin to question their own worth. A person who constantly feels unheard will eventually stop speaking, not because the pain is gone, but because they no longer believe anyone is listening.
I also believe that love has made many people tolerate what they should never have accepted. We celebrate sacrifice in relationships, but sometimes we confuse sacrifice with losing ourselves. Enduring repeated disrespect is not proof of commitment; it is often a sign that we have placed another person’s happiness above our own peace of mind. Love should never demand the destruction of one’s dignity.
Respect is a choice. No relationship is perfect, and everyone makes mistakes. However, there is a difference between making a mistake and repeatedly choosing behaviour that hurts someone after knowing how deeply it affects them. Real love is reflected in the willingness to protect the heart you have been entrusted with, not in expecting someone to endlessly endure the same wounds.
Walking away is one of the hardest decisions anyone can make, especially when genuine feelings are involved. Yet there comes a point when staying hurts more than leaving. In my opinion, no relationship is worth constant emotional turmoil. Healing is never instant, but there was a time before we met certain people, and life continued. With time, painful memories become lighter, and we slowly rediscover the parts of ourselves that heartbreak tried to take away.
At the same time, we should never take people who genuinely love us for granted. Not everyone is replaceable. Some people come into our lives only once, and if they are treated carelessly, they may be gone forever. We often realise the value of respect only after trust has been broken and silence has replaced conversations. By then, apologies may no longer be enough to repair what repeated disregard has damaged.
As young people, we must stop measuring relationships by how intensely we feel and start measuring them by how respectfully we are treated. Love should bring peace, not constant confusion. It should make us feel valued, not invisible. My opinion is simple: before asking whether someone loves you, ask whether they respect you. Because where respect is absent, love eventually loses its meaning.
Daniel Othegbemeh (full name: Othegbemeh Daniel Omokhape) is a 200-level Journalism and Media Studies student at Delta State University, Abraka. He is an emerging opinion writer passionate about social issues, youth development, governance and contemporary affairs. Through his writing, he seeks to provoke thoughtful conversations, encourage public discourse and advocate for positive societal change.