A leading expert in the topic of love, divides the experience of love into three partly overlapping stages: lust, attraction, attachment...
Lust exposes people to others; romantic attraction encourages people to focus their energy on mating; Attachment involves tolerating the spouse (or indeed the child) long enough to rear a child into infancy. 1) Lust is the initial passionate sexual desire that promotes mating, and involves the increased release of chemicals such as testosterone and estrogen. These effects rarely last more than a few weeks or months.
2) Attraction is the more individualized and romantic desire for a specific candidate for mating, which develops out of lust as commitment to an individual mate forms.
Recent studies in neuroscience have indicated that as people fall in love, the brain consistently releases a certain set of chemicals, including pheromones, dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin, which act in a manner similar to amphetamines, stimulating the brain's pleasure center and leading to side effects such as increased heart rate, loss of appetite and sleep, and an intense feeling of excitement. Research has indicated that this stage generally lasts from one and a half to three years.
3) Since the lust and attraction stages are both considered temporary, a third stage is needed to account for long-term relationships. Attachment is the bonding that promotes relationships lasting for many years and even decades. Attachment is generally based on commitments such as marriage and children, or on mutual friendship based on things like shared interests. It has been linked to higher levels of the chemicals oxytocin and vasopressin to a greater degree than short-term relationships have.Enzo Emanuele and coworkers reported the protein molecule known as the nerve growth factor (NGF) has high levels when people first fall in love, but these return to previous levels after one year
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ReplyDeletethanks mama...
ReplyDeleteIf love can be really correlated to chemistry, then why not replace spouse with tablets?
ReplyDeleteThis article sounds more like comparing apples and oranges. How about talking more philosophically in the next post?
@sanji: There is no comparision done in this article.. this says how your emotions go hand in hand with the biochemical aspects in our body...
ReplyDeleteBy the way.. this is not my personal view, this is a fact. :)
sure.. I am trying to think, searching some matter to write something philosophical....thanks for reading my blog :)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wK6d7vrN17U&feature=related
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