Upon reading the deeply serious opening of Scott Spencer’s ‘Endless Love’, you will very likely laugh out loud. The tone is something like what you might find in a teenager’s diary: verbose, feverish, furiously self-important.
I can speak with the eyes, but I find saying ‘I love you’ very tacky. It’s too mushy.
Mine is only one of the millions of hearts broken over the death of Whitney Houston, I will always be grateful and in awe of the wonderful performance she did on my song, and I can truly say from the bottom of my heart, ‘Whitney, I will always love you. You will be missed.’
If a relationship is going wrong, if a marriage is going wrong, the answer cannot simply be to say, ‘You can’t afford to break up because you are going to lose the house.’ The answer has to be only one thing, which is ‘I love you.’
I have always felt that just to show love, you don’t have to make two people do intimate scenes. That is not the idea of ‘I love you.’
I’ve never fallen in love right off the bat. I get scared to say I love you too soon because it means so much. It means you’re not seeing an end to things.
I don’t use the phrase ‘I love you’ very often, but I say it every time I talk to my children.
Love what you do, not the love you get for doing it.
When you feel fulfilled, you feel happy – You feel love. When it comes to love, you always come first. If you don’t love yourself, you can’t truly love anyone else, either. I always tell myself to stay in love.
Nobody is gonna love you like you. You’re gonna be your best salesman.