360'
Three sixty degrees is same as zero degrees,or so I've learned.What about three hundred and fifty nine degrees? How close is it to,say,one degree? If human emotions were analogous to geometry,then where would love and hate be featured? Where would one place zero or three sixty or where would one end and the other begin? I hear,that if we hate something vehemently,we may end up falling in love with the same thing and conversely when we are obsessed with something or someone,we may end up hating the very same thing or person.
Taking a look around I see examples galore justifying this theory.Why else would two people from the opposite sex with a history of a series of quarrels between them end up falling in love with each other? Why else would a couple who couldn't have been more affectionate to each other at the time of their nuptial,file for a divorce after a few years,or in some worse cases,a few months into their marriage? More often on screen than in real life I have seen an obsessed lover turn fiercely hostile against the very object of his or her desire.
The fact is,the more we hate something or someone,the more we find ourselves immersed in thoughts about the very same thing or person.The culmination of which may leave us shocked since it is not everyday that we take a U-turn in our approach,attitude and emotional inclination.And love is no different.The more we love something,the greater the chance to feel bored with the monotony of the very same thing.An overdose of love between two people may leave them prone to feel offended at the slightest of provocations from the other's side.That's where the analogy comes in.Some things should be restricted to within or around one hundred and eighty degrees.The existence of love and hate in that list of things is a pivotal one.


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