mystikmind2000: Is it too negative to think that if you had those nice experiences with a partner/wife then that partner dispose of you saying the relationship is not worth fighting for - then the memories are proved to have no value? You know, because if it was valuable, its worth fighting for? (i got a scorched earth policy for all good memories in between 2007 to 2015)
It doesn't work like that from where I'm standing. If what you experienced with said partner enriched your life and brought you joy/happiness while it lasted, then the memories can't be of no value; scratching off everything only because it's over is what takes away the value. Why let the other party's decision retroactively define the value of the experience and the memories that come with it for you? Would you prefer to never have had the experience, and the good things that came with it? Hasn't that experience, and the good that came with it, contributed at all into shaping you into the person you are now? You may be sad, angry or bitter now that it's over, but that doesn't change the fact that the experience brought good things into your life while it lasted; one can still be happy about that part, and smile.
One can even smile about a lot less. Consider the case you meet the person you both feel you'd be happy together, but in the end that person regrettably decides against giving it a shot. Would that make you sad? Yes, it would, but at the same time you can still be happy, hence smile, that you even met this person as the acquaintance alone and getting to know them enriched your life in ways you'd have never experienced if you hadn't met them.
One can have reasons to smile about even less than that. If one meets somebody and develops feelings of affection for that person, even if the feelings are not reciprocated, one can still smile and be happy they were given the chance to experience those feelings. They may not be able to smile right away, but over time, when the sadness of unrequited love and the feelings themselves subside, it's possible to see how even this experience holds something positive for them; if they choose to see it, they can smile, perhaps even channel it into other things and aspects of life.
It's all about the perspective we choose. JMO, of course.
On a side note, taking it from your point of view - if you think it's worth fighting for, then I don't think you really believe that the memories proved to have no value, at least not what concerns you.