We live in an age of surface-level connection. We have hundreds of "friends" and very few witnesses to our lives. To love deeply is to dig past the surface level of "How was your day?" and into the soil of "How are you really feeling?" It is choosing the difficult work of repair over the easy thrill of replacement.

And then, there is the phrase:

Deep love is what remains when the butterflies die of old age. It is not the frantic pulse of infatuation, but the steady rhythm of a heart that has decided to stay. Deeply is changing a bandage after a surgery. It is listening to the same story for the tenth time because they need to tell it. It is sitting in silence that isn't awkward, but sacred.