^^ I agree. We are fed a lot of stereotypes and ideas about romantic love in our society. I think a lot of it has to do with when marriage/partnership with another wasn't primarily about love, it was more functional. Women had no rights and needed a man to be with to function in society and be taken care of. So part of the male/female relationship there was the man providing for the woman, and also of the man owning the woman, more or less. In modern times most of us are looking for love more than anything, but a lot of us operate with one another with these ideas/relics from a different world, and they can cause a lot of resentments and questionable behaviors.
I think real, lasting romantic love, that enriches your life and doesn't detract from it, is possible (and yes it certainly does exist), but it requires both people to be able to continue to grow and master their neuroses and hangups, so that they're able to maintain respect for each other and understanding that they're each separate individuals. I think that there are a great many more people that long-term relationships will not work for you with, than there are where it will work. Over the course of years, little things build and build unless they're taken care of. You really have to be very selfless in love, otherwise it's doomed to fail or transform into something destructive.
I was with someone/married for 12 years until 3 years ago. It transformed over that time into something really negative and sad and destructive. Now I have been with a different person for a year and a half, and I believe our love will only continue to grow with time, because it's effortless with her. Not a single negative thing so far, I've never gotten mad at her, she's never even come close to raising her voice at me, and we respect each other as people. I can't say for sure it will be for life, because I can't see the future, and it's a pretty young relationship still, but so far it's been an entirely positive thing in my life. And I know that what I am feeling is love, and that it's as real as any other feeling.