“Love is friendship on fire.” — Susan SontagFour words. That’s all it took for writer and philosopher Susan Sontag to completely flip the script on how we talk about romance. Instead of selling us the typical Hollywood narrative of toxic obsession, constant drama, and exhausting grand gestures, she grounds love in something much quieter and more sustainable: a solid friendship.But she doesn’t leave it cold.By adding “on fire,” she reminds us that real love is a deep connection that caught a spark—becoming alive, electric, and fiercely passionate.
The foundation: Are you actually friends?
If love is friendship on fire, then the friendship has to come first. Think about what a good friend does. They listen without just waiting for their turn to speak. They don’t judge you when you’re struggling, and they know how to sit with you in total silence.They respect your boundaries and make honesty feel safe, not like a trap.When your romance grows out of that kind of soil, it inherits all that built-in trust. It forces a quick relationship gut check:– Can you two actually laugh together when things go wrong?– Can you disagree without worrying the relationship will implode?– Can you be completely moody, exhausted, or unglamorous and still feel secure?If the answer is yes, you’re building something built to last, rather than just relying on fleeting physical chemistry to keep the lights on.
The fire: Why it’s not just platonic
Now, the “on fire” part is where the magic happens. Without that spark, a relationship can easily slide into a roommate situation—safe, comfortable, but completely flat.The fire is the chemistry. It’s the late-night inside jokes, the sudden rush of missing them when they walk into another room, and the electric physical intimacy that separates a best friend from a romantic partner. Sontag isn’t talking about a destructive wildfire that burns your life to the ground. This kind of fire warms the room; it lights up the dark and gives depth to an already solid bond. It turns a casual “we get along great” into “I feel deeply seen, desired, and chosen.“
The long-term blueprint
In the real world, this is a perfect blueprint for making love last. It’s a reminder to feed both sides of the campfire. A lot of people make the mistake of only chasing the fire. They want the constant adrenaline, the obsession, and the butterfly-in-the-stomach intensity, hoping that initial rush will carry them forever. Spoiler alert: it won’t. On the flip side, some couples settle for just the friendship part, mistaking pure comfort for true fulfillment.The healthiest relationships figure out a rhythm between the two. The friendship keeps you grounded when life gets messy, and the fire keeps you awake and excited to be there.
Real love is human, not heroic
What’s best about Sontag’s take is how it strips away the exhausting pressure to be perfect. It doesn’t require grand gestures or a perpetual state of bliss. It only asks for presence, warmth, and the daily decision to stay close.In a society that always sells love as either a perfect fairytale or an all-consuming obsession, this feels like a relief. It reminds us that love can be both safe and exciting. It’s finding the person that knows every single one of your weird quirks, calms your deepest anxieties, and still makes your heart skip a beat when they reach for your hand.


