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Love vs. Obsession: Understand the Difference
Description
Love and obsession can look identical from the outside.
Both look like focus.
Both look like devotion.
Both look like commitment.
Both look like “I would do anything for this.”
But they are not the same.
Love opens you.
Obsession closes you.
Love breathes.
Obsession holds its breath.
Love sustains.
Obsession consumes.
Why This Matters
When we confuse obsession with love,
We celebrate our own depletion.
We call the all-nighter dedication.
We call the constant checking presence.
We call the inability to let go passion.
And six months later,
We are exhausted,
emptied,
and still gripping
something that was always going to slip
because we held it too tightly to keep it alive.
This shows up in:
• the work you love
• the role you stepped into
• the vision you are building
• the person you love
• the version of yourself you are reaching for
Devotion and desperation can wear the same face. The body knows which is which.
For marginalized leaders, especially,
The line gets blurred.
You were taught
that opportunity is rare.
That you cannot afford to relax your grip.
That to love something is to never let it out of your sight.
So you over-attach.
You over-tend.
You over-protect.
And you call it love,
because letting go has always meant losing.
But the body has been telling the truth.
You are not loving the thing.
You are surviving the fear of losing it.
Liberation: Love releases. Obsession grips.
Liberation is the moment you notice
Which one of your hands is doing?
Are they open?
Or are they clenched?
Is your chest soft?
Or is your jaw tight at 2 a.m.?
Are you tending?
Or are you guarding?
It sounds like:
• “I love this. And I do not have to suffocate it to keep it.”
• “If holding on this hard is what it takes, this is not love.”
• “I can want this and still breathe.”
When you loosen the grip,
something shifts in the body:
the shoulders drop.
the breath deepens.
the thing you love
finally has room to grow toward you
instead of away from you.
Love opens the room. Obsession barricades it.
Visibility: Love shows up. Obsession hovers.
Love arrives.
It is present.
It is attuned.
It is in conversation with what is actually in front of it.
Obsession does not arrive.
It hovers.
It controls.
It refuses to let what is in front of it be what it is.
In a relationship, love listens.
Obsession monitors.
In leadership, love builds.
Obsession defends.
In a vision, love adjusts to the truth of what is unfolding.
Obsession demands the picture in your head.
People can feel the difference.
Love invites them in.
Obsession makes them feel watched.
Love builds the table. Obsession refuses to leave it.
Transformation: Love trusts the future. Obsession demands it.
The deepest power of love
is that it can hold a future it does not control.
Love says:
I want this to flourish, even if it grows beyond me.
Obsession says:
It must stay mine. It must stay this. It must never change.
Love can let things become what they are becoming.
Obsession freezes them in the form that first felt safe.
When you choose love over obsession,
You are not loving less.
You are loving wider.
You make room for the work to evolve.
You make room for the team to lead.
You make room for the relationship to deepen on its own time.
You make room for yourself to be