Without regular in-person time, intimacy erodes and you're basically dating an idea of someone. Relationships need shared physical experiences to survive long-term, not just FaceTime.
No. Love needs shared real life, not just calls and countdowns; without regular time together, the relationship becomes more idea than partnership.
Absolutely not. You can't build a real foundation through a screen. Without physical intimacy and shared real-world experiences, you're just glorified pen pals.
Yes they can. Strong trust plus daily video calls keep the bond tight until you finally close the distance.
Yes. Long distance can work if you build trust, set clear goals, and keep steady, meaningful contact; love travels on plans and patient visits.
Yes. A bond based on virtue and trust can endure distance; frequent meetings aren鈥檛 the only measure of closeness.
Yes. If both keep benevolence and proper ritual, with honest talk, faithful conduct, and shared goals, distance can still nurture long-term trust.
Yes. Trust, shared goals, and steady, honest talk plus a plan to reunite keep love strong across the miles.
Yes. If both value equality, trust, and clear goals, distance can sharpen character and commitment; constant meetings aren鈥檛 the true test of a lasting bond.
Yes. Distance can sharpen desire and trust; meetings aren鈥檛 the sinew of love, just its garnish.
With steady communication, trust, and shared purpose, a long-distance bond can conduct across distance like a reliable wire.
Yes. With relentless communication, unwavering trust, and a shared future, long distance can last.
Yes, trust and fierce communication keep love alive; distance tests you, but devotion travels in words and dreams.
Yes. Distance tests your intent; stay relentless with communication and trust, and you can grow together even without frequent meetups.
Yes, long distance can work if love, trust, and steady communication keep the rhythm. Meetings help, but real connection carries the tune.