How can I know who is my soulmate?
Not by asking in lichess forums, that's for sure.
It’s not something that you can, “know”; it’s something that you can only feel. Emotions are a mess which logic cannot guide us through. When / if you meet your soulmate, you may feel it.
Trying to, “analyse” who your soulmate is will get you nowhere. Similar to how finding friends naturally is a superior approach to seeking friends.
PS: For future threads, a more descriptive title—“How Can I Know Who my Soulmate is?”—will be my recommendation.
Trying to, “analyse” who your soulmate is will get you nowhere. Similar to how finding friends naturally is a superior approach to seeking friends.
PS: For future threads, a more descriptive title—“How Can I Know Who my Soulmate is?”—will be my recommendation.
@dOnYa1386 said in #1:
> How can I know who is my soulmate?
Ask chatgpt it can even tell what will be your grandchildren's name
> How can I know who is my soulmate?
Ask chatgpt it can even tell what will be your grandchildren's name
Your blood type must match.Find out their blood type
@Shadow1414 said in #3:
> It’s not something that you can, “know”; it’s something that you can only feel. Emotions are a mess which logic cannot guide us through. When / if you meet your soulmate, you may feel it.
>
> Trying to, “analyse” who your soulmate is will get you nowhere. Similar to how finding friends naturally is a superior approach to seeking friends.
>
> PS: For future threads, a more descriptive title—“How Can I Know Who my Soulmate is?”—will be my recommendation.
The problem is that Soulmate is an abstract concept meant to designate an intermediary with a mystical and intellectual connotation between a platonic friendship and a rather platonic-oriented love and that the term soulmate would then allow to justify the passage from friendship or platonic love to the mutual desire of two people to engage in a serious, respectful and sane relationship. that is to say, the opposite of the concept of crush, which is the modern equivalent of the term love at first sight, but which does not necessarily imply the desire to engage in a serious relationship since the crush can concern fictional characters.
So theoretically, to know who can be your soulmate, you should perhaps first look at your circle of friends or ask your friends about their friends (friends or friends)
> It’s not something that you can, “know”; it’s something that you can only feel. Emotions are a mess which logic cannot guide us through. When / if you meet your soulmate, you may feel it.
>
> Trying to, “analyse” who your soulmate is will get you nowhere. Similar to how finding friends naturally is a superior approach to seeking friends.
>
> PS: For future threads, a more descriptive title—“How Can I Know Who my Soulmate is?”—will be my recommendation.
The problem is that Soulmate is an abstract concept meant to designate an intermediary with a mystical and intellectual connotation between a platonic friendship and a rather platonic-oriented love and that the term soulmate would then allow to justify the passage from friendship or platonic love to the mutual desire of two people to engage in a serious, respectful and sane relationship. that is to say, the opposite of the concept of crush, which is the modern equivalent of the term love at first sight, but which does not necessarily imply the desire to engage in a serious relationship since the crush can concern fictional characters.
So theoretically, to know who can be your soulmate, you should perhaps first look at your circle of friends or ask your friends about their friends (friends or friends)
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