romance vs self-destruction

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alpacinou

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Interested in Language
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Persian
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Iran
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Iran
Hello.

I want to suggest a person falls in love as a way of destroying himself. Have I used "self-destruction" correctly and naturally? Is this okay?

His is more self-destruction than it is romance. He falls in love to feed his masochistic impulses. For reasons that defy logic, Jack finds self-destruction to be bordering on the edge poetic and romantic.
 
Hello.

I want to suggest a person falls in love as a way of destroying himself. Have I used "self-destruction" correctly and naturally? Is this okay?
[STRIKE]
His
[/STRIKE] It is more of self-destruction than [STRIKE]it is [/STRIKE]romance. [STRIKE]He[/STRIKE] Jack falls in love to feed his masochistic impulses. For reasons that defy logic, [STRIKE]Jack[/STRIKE] he finds his self-destruction to be bordering on the edge of the poetic and romantic.
.
 
Thanks man.

Let's also see what native speakers think.
 
What do you mean by the initial "his"?
 
Please don't refer to users here using such terms as "man". Reserve them for your friends.

Alright.

So, what do you think about the paragraph in post #1?
 
I want to suggest a person falls in love as a way of destroying himself. Have I used "self-destruction" correctly and naturally? Is this okay?

His missing word is more self-destruction than [STRIKE]it is[/STRIKE] romance. He falls in love to feed his masochistic impulses. For reasons that defy logic, Jack finds self-destruction to be bordering on [STRIKE]the edge[/STRIKE] [STRIKE]poetic[/STRIKE] poetry and [STRIKE]romantic[/STRIKE] romance.

See above for my suggested corrections.
 
See above for my suggested corrections.

Thanks a lot. I really appreciate it. What should I put instead of the missing word? Romance?

Also, my own preference is to use "poetic". How can I do that correctly?

What do you think about the sentence generally? Is it a good sentence in the context of a romance book, for example?
 
. . . His urges are more self-destructive than[STRIKE] it is[/STRIKE] romantic. He falls in love to feed his masochistic impulses. For motives that defy logic, Jack finds self-destruction [STRIKE]to be bordering on the edge[/STRIKE] poetic [STRIKE]and romantic[/STRIKE].
In the first sentence, his urges were not romantic. In the third, they were. So I got rid of the second one.
 
It is true that bordering on the edge is tautologous. Edge and border mean the same thing. I don't understand how a relationship can be described as self-destructive and masochistic.
 
Self-destructive behavior and masochistic behavior could be the same thing, couldn't they?
 
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