So, You’re In Love?

 

 
Ok, some will give me Hell about this article on this day but this day is precisely why I posted it. 
 
Hold your calls of, “Curmudgeon, Scrooge and Grinch,” until the end as it has kind of a surprise finish!

 

 

February 13, 2007
Wall Street Journal
HEALTH JOURNAL
By TARA PARKERPOPE
 
Is It Love or Mental Illness?
They’re Closer Than You Think
February 13, 2007; Page D1
 
At some point in life, most of us will face a major mental-health crisis. It is called love.
 
Science is beginning to pay more attention to the chemical storm that romantic love can trigger in our brains. Recent studies of brain scans show that being in love causes changes in the brain that are strikingly similar to serious health problems like drug addiction and obsessive-compulsive disorder.
 
This doesn’t mean love is bad for you. There is a growing body of research that shows how love and lasting relationships are an important determinant in long-term health. And the breakdown of a marriage or relationship can exact an enormous toll on a person’s well-being. But knowing that love can make you crazy — at least in the short term — gives us clues about how to improve relationships and rekindle the romantic love that first brought a couple together.
 
"The brain system involved in romantic love is powerful," says Helen Fisher, an anthropologist at New Jersey’s Rutgers University who has led much of the research into love’s impact on the brain. "Everything that is going on in the brain, everything that happens with romantic love has a chemical basis."
 

HEALTH FORUM
Do you feel like the quality and health of your
relationship affects your overall health? Would you
like to recapture some of the feelings you
experienced in the early part of your relationship?
Join a discussion1 about love and mental health
with Tara Parker-Pope and other readers.

 
Dr. Fisher has studied love by looking at people’s brains using magnetic resonance imaging machines. A recent study also looked at 15 subjects who were deeply in love but were nursing broken hearts. While in the scanner, they viewed "neutral" pictures of someone they knew but for whom they didn’t have intense romantic feelings. Then they were shown a picture of their beloved.
 
Compared with the neutral photos, a lover’s picture triggers the dopamine system in the brain — the same system associated with pleasure and addiction. But the brain images of those scorned in love also give us clues as to why the breakdown of a relationship can trigger serious heal

th problems. The subjects dealing with failed relationships showed activity in the dopamine system — suggesting they maintained intense feelings for their loved one. But they also showed activity in brain regions associated with risk taking, controlling anger and obsessive compulsive problems. Notably, the scans showed activity in one part of the brain linked with physical pain.
 
Studies in Italy looking at blood levels of the brain chemical serotonin have suggested that love and mental illness have much in common. They compared serotonin levels of people recently in love; patients with obsessive compulsive disorder; and a "control" group that was neither. The researchers found that the lovestruck participants showed a drop in serotonin levels similar to those with obsessive-compulsive problems.
 
Using brain scans to study emotional changes is still a new science. But the images signal the potential toll of relationship problems. "It’s not a good combination," notes Dr. Fisher. "You’re feeling intense romantic love, you’re willing to take big risks, you’re in physical pain, obsessively thinking about a person and you’re struggling to control your rage. You’re not operating with your full range of cognitive abilities. It’s possible that part of the rational mind shuts down."
 
The dramatic changes evident on the brain scans may help explain bizarre behavior that is often associated with love. It can also help explain why marital problems are such a serious health worry. Studies show that people in troubled relationships are more likely to suffer from anxiety, depression and high blood pressure.
 
For most people, the intensity of romantic love fades with time and is replaced by powerful feelings of attachment. But understanding the brain patterns of the newly in love can teach us how to rekindle romance and boost the health of long-term relationships.
 
Studies show that trying something new with a spouse can go a long way toward reigniting love. In one study, couples were assigned a weekly activity they both found new and exciting — such as sailing or taking an art class. Another group did pleasant but familiar activities, such as dinner with friends. Based on answers to relationship tests, the couples doing new things showed far more improvement in the quality of their marriage after 10 weeks than couples who did the same things every week. The lesson is that sharing new experiences with your spouse appears to trigger changes in the brain that mimic the early days of being in love.
 
"We know that novelty and new experiences engage the dopamine system, and when it’s associated with your partner it creates a link with the partner," says Arthur Aron, a social psychologist at New York’s Stony Brook University who conducted the study. "It creates a dramatic increase in the sense of passion and romance.”
 

Write to: Tara Parker-Pope at healthjournal@wsj.com2
URL for this article:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB117131067930406235.html
Hyperlinks in this Article:
(1) http://forums.wsj.com/viewtopic.php?t=282
(2) mailto:healthjournal@wsj.com
Copyright 2007 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved

 

 

 
See, how bout those last three paragraphs, ye of little faith!
 
I liked the article because (I think) it gives a very good understanding of what "Love" is and if nothing else, demystifies it. I believe by demystifying it I gain understanding and that gives me the opportunity to build a closer, long-lasting relationship.
 
I confess, I consider myself an "unusual" (you’ll see) romantic (being a Taurus and ½ Italian, ½ Irish) and I always desire to be a “good lover.” However, being a good lover means to me, not only physically but emotionally.
 
It is incumbent on me to educate myself about just what is going on when I’m in a “love” state. The education gives me power over that state. Not power, in the sense I want to control or avoid love, but power in the sense I want to avoid making my lover responsible for what’s going on in me, for what I’m feeling.
 
In my past, I can recall thinking it was something the woman did to “make me” desire her, be drawn to her, fall for her. But that’s not what happened. What really happened was, I had a dream, an expectation, a picture of “my” woman, and the first one that came along that remotely resembled that, I hung my dream around her neck saying to myself, "she’s it!”
 
I used words like, “I’ve never felt this with anyone else.” “She is so different.” “She makes me feel x, y, z.” “I feel whole or complete with her.”
 
All words and concepts I have learned have nothing to do with love.
 
I was simply looking for someone to “make me feel" better about myself or my life. I “needed” that woman to accomplish that, to help heal me.
 
And when she “failed” me, (and how could she not?) by doing or feeling something human like, what I interpreted as, “hurting” me; I would blame her and make her responsible for my feelings, striking back with "justified" hurtful words.
 
How could I be in love if I have a sickly narcotic “need” of someone? That’s when I came to understand that I must heal myself and my past before I could really love a woman. Unfortunately, it took the end of a seventeen year marriage and a couple of “Love” relationships before I could see that. It was then that I was willing to waive the white flag of surrender and say, “Please God, my way isn’t working. Please show me another.”
 
It’s not our lover who “makes us feel.” No one “Makes” us feel anything. We do it to ourselves! Yet we blame them when they “make us feel” sad and we reward them when they “make us feel” happy! It is a trap of our own making!
 
I am the only one inside my head, thinking with my brain. All thoughts I have are not caused by someone else. I already have the thoughts in residence in my brain. Those thoughts lie dormant, like a computer virus, waiting for someone to click on that file to awaken my pre-existing thoughts of my lack of self-worth, or whatever else, so I can blame them, attack them for “making me feel” those ugly thoughts, again.

Those of us who are stuck in a cycle of anger or hurt over the actions of our present or past lovers do not yet see we are the cause of our own pain. Yes, they may have done x or y to us but it is within all of us to decide how we will remember that. We give the meaning and power to all we experience. Our hate or pain keeps us captive in the cycle.
 

Isn’t the strongest and most powerful statement of my love when I say to my lover –

 

 

“I am responsible for all I feel. You do not cause my feelings and I will not blame you for them, for they existed before you. I want you in my life but I do not need you.”

 
Yes, I suppose that flies in the face of the popular views of romance and Valentine’s Day, where we welcome the concepts of White Knights and Princesses however, if it is healthy love, true happiness, and permanent joy we are after, then one must give up the narcotic of blame and embrace personal responsibility. Responsibility for our own feelings.

 
As long as we place the blame (or credit) outside ourselves, there will be no happiness.
 
<div style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt”>There is no one responsible for how I feel, other than me.

Not my lover …

not my mother …
 
just …
 
me!  
 
And so, it is within that spirit that I wish you a happy Valentine’s Day!

 
And that’s one man’s opinion!
 
God bless,
 
Nunzio
 

 
 
 14,069
 
 
 

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February 14, 2007

I just like to differentiate love from romance, we’d be poorer without them both. Peace

February 14, 2007

Damn well written. Point taken. Bon Jovi said “Love is a Social Disease”. Mental disease, maybe. I often wonder why I need it at all, but being in transition – I am far from anyone to give anyone else advice. And why so many Italian study references? Doen’t anyone get it that Italy is the land of impossibly perfect women and guys who started smoking when they were four? What kind of baseline for a study is that?

February 14, 2007

happy day to you nunzio. good thoughts. yours and the study that supports love is insanity!

oh, gee. now i’m even *more* miserable. *frowns* i miss my shrink. (g)

February 14, 2007

In one of my college Psych courses I read about a study that showed that the same neuro-transmitters that fire when a person drinks hot cocoa area lso the same ones that fire when a person reports feeling “in love”. But in the final analysis, love lasts longer than cocoa. Happy Valentine’s Day you non-Scrooge-like, un-curmudgeonly, lover of women!

February 15, 2007

Totally on board in Phx. Thanks for posting this. Always good stuff from you. Happy Valentine’s Day, Nunzio. 🙂

February 15, 2007

I totally love that entry 🙂

February 15, 2007

Wonderfully written! I don’t agree with a word of your assertion but that’s what makes this world interesting after all…

February 15, 2007

oh god, I’m on left-brain overload. Your reasoning was very well-written. But I suppose I like living in fantasy-land. When it goes bad, it’s a disease. When it goes well, it’s epically wonderful. Love is an often overused word – like the word “awesome” – its true meaning has been diminished and rendered insubstantial. Love could mean anything, and as C.S. Lewis wrote, to paraphrase, there are so many different kinds of love. I agree with the first noter. There is a difference between love and romance; lust and desire. But I suppose it’s all subjective. The great thing about love – it can mean whatever you want it to mean to you. And I agree with you that it’s up to us to decide how other’s actions cause us to feel, no one else.

February 15, 2007

Nice reading this.I may copy this if you don’t mind and man your last entry Phew! LOL

February 15, 2007

hot AND smart – you are the total package = )

February 15, 2007

I’ve read this and they say the same thing about madness and creativity! Depends on your definition of mad, or mentally ill, creative or in love. I can’t disagree, however. Especially me.

February 15, 2007

Thanks for sharing your opinion!!!! I for one usually enjoy it.

February 16, 2007

“that part of your rational mind shuts down” so perhaps that explains the phrase “love is blind”?

February 17, 2007

I’ve often thought about the “no one can make us feel anything” theory … how do you put that into practice?

Thank you for writing this entry. God bless you, too.

ryn: *sighs* i don’t know what else to do with myself… i mean, do you know how hard it is to find a married lover? and if i stop all this lover shit altogether, i’d be sooooo bored… (g)

ryn: LOL!!!! uh, thanks for the craigslist link, but i don’t do personals. i have to *see* first. if i don’t know what the guy looks like FIRST, i don’t waste my time. (g)

ryn: you know… my shrink suggested meditation and yoga. i bought books on them both and couldn’t get past the first pages — too slow-paced; very boring. :0( (g)

ryn: nope, i *know* i couldn’t do meditation nor yoga. too slow. you know what *really* worked for me to clear my mind? muay thai (thai kickboxing). but i can’t find a school where i live, and i refuse to take half-ass NON martial arts cardio-kickboxing they teach in gyms. maybe i need a treadmill, like what dogs use??? (g)

ryn: LOL!! i don’t live near any of those places (work, yes, live, no). there is no muay thai school in my town. there’s one in the next town over, but i’m not tryin’ to drive that far. trust me, i’ve done my research on martial arts schools, and while there are tons of tae kwon do and kajukembo, there are no muay thai — it’s very hard to find a reputable muay thai school in a town of consisting mostly of white people *winks*. when i lived in san fran, there were 3 schools, all run by thai instructors. i would only take muay thai from a thai instructor, by the way. that’s how finicky i am about my martial arts schools. i’m not making any excuses — the truth is that i’m really not looking to change. you know what i mean? i bitch and whine A LOT (especially since my diary is the only place i *can* — cuz i can’t cry to my H about my lover, can i?), but seriously, i do think i thrive somewhat off the drama in my life… not too much, but just enough to keep me, hmmm, “feeling.” if that makes sense… (g)

ryn: i carry my emotional baggage like a fashion accessory!!! :0P (g)

February 22, 2007

ryn- no kidding about buttcracks i hope shes an adult and that was my major bitch really was they were all children and i have no desire to see any childs butt crack! but thatone in that pic.. yeah its nice! verrry nice LOL

February 24, 2007

mua … the sound a kiss makes

February 27, 2007

How is the Nunz? I am much better than my entry indicated. *kisses* –R

Someone pass me the Zoloft!

March 5, 2007

interesting.. but being in control of myself is something I already learned. :p

July 27, 2007

I really think the word love is misused a lot. Romantic love is a chemical thing, more like an obsession or infatuation, the “I can’t stop thinking about him/her” thing. That is the “mental illness” stage. When that relationship grows from the chemical stage to the stage of true love from the heart, where you only want the best for the other and feel true compassion and depth of emotion for the other—That’s REAL love!

March 6, 2008

This explains a lot… Good article, good insights. And RYN: 😉