Where Did The Magic Go? The Science Behind Falling In Love

Love is like a drug. Love is blind. Love gives you butterflies. These are well-known clichés, however, according to science, they are accurate statements about love. In the first stages of a relationship, we are very much in love and nuts about each other but, after a while, the magic goes away. You ask why? Scientists unravel the science behind love.

More: Why Broken Relationships Are Actually Good for You

Have you ever been in love? They say you should consider yourself happy if you have fallen in love more than once in your lifetime. It’s a startling experience, which literally can give you chills and shivers.

In the early stages of love, a few brain chemicals play a crucial role.

Dopamine, which triggers euphoria and feelings of bliss, testosterone, that gives us sex drive and the ‘hormone of attachment’, oxytocin.

More: How To Make Your Partner Fall In Love With You Again

When head over heels in love, you are walking on sunshine and you want everybody to see it. But you do not see your lover’s imperfections and flaws. Apparently, the critical area of the brain is less active when you’re in love.

After a lot of research, neuroscientists have concluded that love is indeed like being high on cocaine.

It’s hard to keep the love flame burning for too long as crazy in love is a temporary state. The brain can’t handle that much intensity so our love high slowly fades, turning into a more gentle romance, that researchers call companionate love. You may encounter it in the first three years of relationship.

Three years are a turning point, a make-or-break moment.

Falling in love is easy, being in a committed relationship, not so much. When the ardent romance is gone, many of us become less attentive. We just stop paying attention to the way we look and skip those romantic dinners. Moreover, this is the time we start overlooking the positive in the relationship and highlight the negative.

More: 6 Things You Need to Accept To Find True Love

Happy couples say I’m sorry a lot, studies show.

So if you make it to three years, know that your long-term relationship will need a lot of work to survive. Both of you must invest time and consideration, full support, gratitude and a whole lot of more positive things in order to stay together forever.

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