If you've been single for a long stretch of time, despite your best efforts to
 find love, you’ve probably grown weary of seeing happy, romantic 
couples at every turn…among your friends and family, featured in 
internet accounts, described in magazine stories, and on and on. The sense of feeling left out and left behind can be especially acute
 at certain holidays  when
 loved ones snuggle close and make new memories (Christmas and Valentine’s Day immediately come to mind). It can leave a lovelorn
 single person feeling downright depressed and ready to punch some boo'd up couple square in the throat.
If that describes you, take heart. Seeing other people in love
 validates the belief that it can happen to you too. Despite your sense 
of being “on the outside looking in,” the potential for genuine, lasting
 love in your life is as real today as it’s ever been. Here are four things to remember as you anticipate the arrival of your magnificent man or wonderful woman: 
1. Today is always packed with possibility. Here’s a
 bit of common sense we can all agree on: Just because you’ve waited a 
long time for love to arrive doesn’t mean you still have a long time 
left to wait. Many frustrated singles fall into a psychological trap
 that begins to pull them downward like quicksand. They behave as if 
yesterday was a just a preview of today, as if this couldn’t possibly be
 the day that everything changes. The truth is, romantic potential has no shelf life. The odds against 
finding lasting love does not grow longer with time. That means in each 
moment of every new day, you are equally likely to turn a new corner and
 fall head over heels into the relationship you’ve dreamed of. 
Your age?
 Irrelevant. 
Number of previous strike-outs? Meaningless. 
The opinions 
of naysayers? Please!
You have to start moving through your life like you expect a surprise 
party to be thrown in your honor at any moment. I bet that your whole demeanor will change about everything! 
2. Attitude matters. Your romantic beliefs, 
intentions, and expectations have a dramatic effect on how your search 
for love turns out. This idea is far less rooted in wishful thinking and
 New Age mumbo jumbo than it may sound at first. The connection between 
what you think, and the life you lead, is actually quite clear and simple. Think of it this way: Someone who believes she’s cursed with bad luck
 is unlikely to invest a few bucks in a lottery ticket, no matter how 
large the jackpot grows. A person who has given up on love will probably
 think it is pointless to go where he might meet someone new, or to put 
their best foot forward if he does go anywhere. When you no longer have faith in the
 payoff, why bother placing a bet? That might sound like good reasoning —
 until you realize how self-defeating and self-fulfilling it is. Keep 
your romantic radar on.
3. “Failure” is progress. Learning what you don’t 
want in a partner, and how to recognize it when you see it, is every bit
 as valuable as knowing what you do want. In this way, romantic misfires
 serve an important purpose. Where many people see each dead-end as a 
step away from their goal, you can choose to see things the way Thomas 
Edison did when he said, “I have not failed. I have just found 10,000 
ways that won’t work.” Every rejected lover is one you no longer have to consider. Every 
lesson learned is one that makes you more ready to handle real love when
 it comes along.
4. Love, when it arrives, heals the wounds caused by its absence.
 Just as the poets, mystics, and songwriters have said for centuries, 
love really is a magical thing. Before you find it, time drags, your 
heart aches, and you begin to fear that the damage is permanent. But on 
the other side of meeting the one you’ve looked for, you quickly forget 
all that. The joy of fulfillment is a salve that soothes every hurt, 
scars and all. When you are still in the romantic doldrums, it may help 
to remember that the love you seek, and are sure to find, is far more 
than an end to loneliness; it is a brand new beginning that erases what 
came before.
Love is always at your fingertips. So be sure your hand is always open...
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