Bella Caracappa: The Negatives of Love
Now, I love reading about love. To me, a book is never truly good without love, whether romantic or platonic. Love serves as an avenue of connection between other people and is beautiful to watch. However, in literature, this attachment to others often leads to some kind of repercussion. Sometimes, love forces us to make hard choices in life, and it's not always sunshine and rainbows.
In epics or other heroic stories, characters often choose between the world they love or the person they love. This, consequently, forces the hero, in most cases, to select the world, which provides a negative connotation to the positive relationships that heroes form in their stories. On the opposite spectrum, some characters choose the person instead of the world, which usually makes them the villains of their narratives. For example, in Odysseus's story, he does all he can to get back to his wife, a goal often detrimental to himself and the people for whom he is responsible. So, it is a no-win situation, which, on a surface level, teaches the audience never to love, as we see its destructive power.
However, all these sacrifices about love are meant to teach us its positive power. We see that it can work in both ways, meaning that if the negative must be true, so should the positive.
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