The feeling of love increases the levels of dopamine, adrenaline and norepinephrine. Dopamine is responsible for the pitter patter of the heart, restlessness and overall preoccupation that go along with experiencing love. MRI scans have also revealed that love lightens up the pleasure center of the brain. This is the same area responsible for drug addiction and Obsessive-compulsive disorder.
Love lowers serotonin levels, which is common in people with obsessive compulsive disorders. This may explain why we concentrate on little other than our partner during the early stages of a relationship," said Renshaw. However, she also declares that the physical response to love is not a very good thing.
"The phrase 'love is blind' is a valid notion, because we tend to idealize our partner and see only things that we want to see in the early stages of the relationship. Outsiders have a much more objective and rational perspective on the partnership than the two people involved do," said Renshaw.
The three phases of love includes, lust, attraction and attachment. While lust is hormone driven, attraction causes the blood to flow to the pleasure driven area of our brain, leading to a fixation with the person involved. The attraction fades by the attachment phase, when the body develops tolerance for the pleasure stimulants.
Various hormones like Endorphins, vasopressin and oxytocin flood the body at this phase creating an overall sense of well-being and security. This is required for a long lasting relationship.
Source: Agency
Next 10 Articles:
- Share Your Sexual Appetite!
- Your man thinks of SEX 13 times a day!
- When does she crave for more sex?
- First meeting your prospective in-laws…
- The closed-mindedness of the so-called ‘urban male...
- The FLIRT: Does he exist in you?
- SIZE, not foreplay that matters
- Let go off your Darkest Desires!!!
- Is your partner not interested in sex?
- Had sex, now what?