Unrequited Love is Regret; What to Do If You Meet True Love Outside of Marriage?
Late love, belated destiny, is the most painful and bitter love in the world. People don't fear not having love in their lives, they just fear love only to be lost. Love is something that only those who have experienced it themselves can truly understand. In the mortal world, everyone has the right to pursue perfect love, but sometimes, such love comes too late. Wanting to love but unable to, yearning to let go but unable to – this may be the encounter of shallow but deep affection.

A person can't understand love when they can, and they can't love when they do. In real life, many marriages come together due to various reasons, not born from love, but marriages for the sake of marriage. Such families are simply formal couples; these marriages are like shackles in life. Imagine living without love – how sad and heartbreaking it would be. If a person doesn't feel the warmth of home, that's a lifelong pain.
In the world of emotions, being loved and unable to have it is a regret. Wanting to be together but failing to do so is heartbreaking. If you encounter true love outside of marriage, how to handle it depends on your choices. If you only want to pursue true love, you must give up your current family. If you're unwilling to give up your family, you must keep this late love hidden in your heart, carefully nurturing it. This late love is a kind of possession, a warm and beautiful experience. Loving someone isn't always about having them; sometimes, it's about sharing a beautiful moment even if you can't be together.

Sometimes, love isn't about being inseparable. Late love and delayed destiny test a person's sense of responsibility. When you encounter true love outside of marriage, you can't simply follow your heart. If it's true love, it requires you to give more. That's the pain of solitary longing. Loving someone and not being able to have them is destined to be accompanied by yearning. The most painful emotion in the world is being loved and unable to have it, the most aching longing is not being able to see or speak to them. Someone might say, 'Why did you not love when you first met?' Marrying is a matter of choice, and when you're married, you still have the chance to love someone else – it's like eating a bowl while thinking about a pot. But emotional affairs are something everyone will inevitably struggle with; it's a matter of human nature!'
Sometimes, love isn't about being inseparable. Late love and delayed destiny test a person's sense of responsibility. When you encounter true love outside of marriage, you can't simply follow your heart. That's the pain of solitary longing. Loving someone and not being able to have them is destined to be accompanied by yearning. The most painful emotion in the world is being loved and unable to have it, the most aching longing is not being able to see or speak to them.