There are few things scarier than letting your guard down enough to accept love from another person — especially if you secretly fear you don’t deserve to be loved.
We all want to be loved. Most of us say we want a healthy and happy relationship. So we plant seeds and eagerly watch for love to grow. When the buds of love start growing, our warm hearts believe we’ve found what we’ve been looking for. We feel joy and happiness.
So why do so many of us find ways to block love at that point? Why do we feel panic when it’s time to accept what’s being offered? Why do we find excuses to slam the door in the face of the one who says, “I really love you and I accept you as you are?”
I see this pattern in other people pretty easily. It’s easy for me to smugly point my finger at another’s mistakes — but it’s humbling and horrifying when I realize I’ve made the same arrogant mistake.

When people show you who they are, trust their actions, not words
Our inexplicable behavior ‘signals’ to the world who and what we are
To think clearly, turn off the tube: Your television is not your friend
I haven’t learned to stop walking on eggshells around angry people
If you ask wrong questions about politics, you’ll get wrong answers
Just a sandwich: Why do people make everything so political?
Let’s quit trying to force others to choose our shopping preferences
It might not matter who’s right; just fix the problem and move on