(Untitled)

Aug 24, 2016 19:54

I heard someone mention a while ago that saying "I love you, but" was telling the person that while you loved them, this made you love them slightly less. Which is never my intention. They (yeah, I've got no idea who, when or where it was) suggested either making two separate statements that aren't connected at all or use "I love you and" with the ( Read more... )

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bkwrrm_tx August 25 2016, 13:41:59 UTC
Oh, I like 'I love you and...' I may have to try to work that in around here. Luckily, Cassie's old enough that if I follow it with 'you're being a bitch and need to get away from me right now', it's not as bad as saying it to a young 'un. ;-)

Are y'all moving again? I feel like I missed something, what with the boxes and stuff.

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dandelion_diva August 25 2016, 21:45:05 UTC
Not till next spring. Right now I'm making a push to clear things out for Goodwill. Other people should enjoy some of my book choices. :D

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dandelion_diva August 25 2016, 21:44:03 UTC
I had no idea! Thank you. :)

So that's why I feel the need to reject them. ;)

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johnpalmer September 6 2016, 17:54:57 UTC
I think I agree - "I love you but..." is best reserved for a teasing joke, and then, only if you're sure the joke is funny to everyone.

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