Love is a decision. It is a decision to place one person above all others in your life. To care for them, nurture them, honor them, respect them, be loyal to them above and beyond all others.
I understand and agree. In fact, this was something we discussed recently in our Retrouvaille classes. It gives me a new way to look at love, not in the Disneyesque, happily-ever-after way, but in a real and adult sense, one based on actually commitment and responsibility in addition to the feelings and emotions involved and required.
That being said however, I will toss this thought at you, not as an argument or a judgment, just something to chew on, and to help demonstrate the complicated thought process that leads me to ask questions such as "what is love?".
One of the most important things (habits?) I've learned since the A, and in my journey to understand not only what I did, but who I am and why, is to dig deeper. (Read "Rising Strong" by Brene Brown). There is a process of always digging deeper, trying to get past the "because I wanted to" thinking that can be so convenient, and really making an effort to understand "why" I feel a given feeling, or react a certain way, or make a given decision. I freely admit this can sometimes become an endless rabbit hole, and there are many times I need to either guess or extrapolate based on the information I have. But it has been a valuable process for me and a great catalyst and motivator for change and self-understanding, and to be the best person I can be based on what I understand and on what I want.
So here are some thought-invoking questions I have. If love is a decision, then what is that decision based on? Why did you make that decision and not another one? What would change your reasoning and thus change your decision? Is it even really your decision or is it possible it was made for you (e.g. by religious doctrine, parents expectations, society)?
So yes, lust, fondness, respect, affection, these may all be feelings that have nothing to do with actually loving someone so much as a driver for wanting someone, things that represent our own desires (selfish needs).
But why do we choose to love or not love, and what is that based on? As an example, you said that you stopped loving your XWW when she chose to stop putting you first in her life (and bedded down with someone else, please don't think I'm ignoring that). So what does that mean as it pertains to your decision to stop loving her? Does it mean that you only loved her before for what she gave to you or how she made you feel? If so, does that mean that you never really loved her? Was your love based on selfish needs given that you stopped loving her based on her not putting you first? If it was based on selfish needs, then was it false love?
Or was the reason you stopped loving her because she betrayed you? Was the problem that you weren't first in her life, or was it that you were made to feel unimportant at all? And if so, was your decision to love based on a feeling? And again if so, was love really a decision or was it a feeling? Was your decision simply a consequence of her decision? If we love someone, and then stop loving them, then did love ever really exist or have any actual value to begin with?
I won't even begin to go into all the "even deeper" questions such as digging into our FOO and trying to answer all those questions based on how we were raised, how love was modeled to us, what our beliefs and ideals are and where those beliefs and ideals came from... like I said, it's a rabbit hole.
Anyway, I'm not actually asking YOU any of these questions or making any kind of statement about you personally. Rather, these are the kinds of thoughts and problems that go through my own head on a daily basis. It's painful to be honest. For almost any given thought, feeling or decision, I can drum up a path of reasoning that makes me feel that my outcomes are based on self, and just as many reasons that my outcomes are altruistic.
For example, if I donate money to charity, am I doing it because the charity is really important and I'm helping out? Or is because helping out makes me feel like I'm valuable? Can it truly be both or am I just justifying the answers to suit my own needs? If I force my daughter to clean her room, am I teaching her a valuable lesson about being responsible and acceptable in society, or am I trying to control her and force her to adopt my needs and values over her own?
Ugh. It is indeed a deep rabbit hole.
Right now, love for my wife is based on so many things, some of them based on self, and some of them based on her. Certainly, I need things (as does she and most people in general) such as companionship, friendship, affection, intimacy, protection, stability and so on. Those are undeniable needs, and clearly self-based. But I also acknowledge that she needs and deserves those very same things in life and from our marriage. Having known her better than pretty much anybody else for the past 22+ years, I can tell you that she epitomizes the very model of someone I believe has earned and deserves those very things, based on who she is and her ability and accountability in giving those same things to me, our family and others. She is an amazing person and I am lucky to simply even know her, let alone be part of her life and worthy of her love. Despite my own brokenness and my sins against her, I still firmly believe that I am the best person to love her, to provide what she needs from a life partner, and I work hard every day to try make sure that I am the best person I can be, because she deserves no less. (And it is the right thing to do for my family and me as well.)
As you said, love is a decision. I will add that it is also an action, a job, a responsibility, once that decision is made. While a relationship cannot be one-sided, love can be. I can love her to the best of my ability even if she is unwilling or unable to accept that love from me at this time. I can love her whether we R or D. She has chosen to love me, even though I clearly do not deserve such a gift. But I want to become the person that deserves that love, the person I should have been all along, the person I was too damn broken to be before, and I won't stop until I achieve that. (Which is a lifelong effort.)
(Sorry for the book. I write too damn much.)