Interesting facts about love and falling in love
Love is pure, love is painful, love is sweet and love is terrible. True love is overwhelming. Our lives depend on it and sometimes it seems that our world would stop spinning if love didn't exist. Love is something that we strive for and whose loss we mourn.
Someone lovesick once said that "if you have never been hurt, you are either very lucky or very lonely".
We understand the poetry of the heart, but throughout our lives we tend to demystify that precious feeling more and more. We learn about biological processes that cause specific reactions; we learn about the cultural influences in how we behave and how we think about love; we learn about the psychological and physical processes that make us fall for someone.
And as soon as we think that there is no longer any room for romance in a world in which everything can be explained by science, we fall in love, or simply look into the eyes of our beloved, and all that knowledge is pushed to the back of our minds. Ultimately, it is the feeling itself that matters most.
On that occasion, I want to share with you some interesting facts and theories about love that explain a lot about this all-consuming phenomenon without disregarding its romance and poetry.
1. Monogamous relationships exist throughout the entire animal kingdom.
Although we sometimes think of ourselves as a faithful species, we are not the only one in the animal kingdom. Wolves, swans, gibbons, black vultures, albatrosses and even termites are only some of the animals who mate for life.
2. It only takes four minutes for you to decide whether you like someone or not.
If you want to make a good impression on someone, you only have about four minutes to do so. It is believed that it has much more to do with someone's body language as well as the tone and speed of their voice than with what exactly they are saying.
3. When two lovers look each other in the eyes, their hearts start beating in sync.
Some extraordinary experiments have found that the hearts of couples in love begin to beat in sync after looking into each other's eyes for three minutes.
4. Falling in love has similar neurological effects to cocaine.
Falling in love is very similar to taking a dose of cocaine, since both experiences affect the brain in a similar way and trigger a sensation similar to euphoria. The experiment found that falling in love produces various chemical substances that induce euphoria and stimulate 12 areas in the brain at the same time.
5. Couples who make love declarations last longer.
It is well known that writing beautiful messages of love helps couples stay together and in fact that effect is easily explained. If you find yourself in a relationship, it is easier to give in to monotony. In order to leave that monotony and to make a relationship more passionate and long-lasting, texts, cards, sayings can help revive the love - like those from this blog with romantic quotes that has beautiful phrases to send to your partner. Those effects are reached by trying to feel the love that was felt at first sight.
6. Cuddling releases natural painkillers
Oxytocin, the so-called love hormone, is produced during hugs. The hormone forms in the brain, and it is believed that it is involved in the bonding process. Research has found that one dose of oxytocin reduces headaches significantly, and, for some, even makes the pain disappear completely after four hours. It is definitely worth it to embrace one another before turning to chemical products and pills.
7. Even looking at a photo of a loved one relieves pain.
ALthough it has been known for a while that the presence of a loved one has a lot to do with patients improving, it has been proven that the same happens with the image of a loved one. The experiment showed that when the study's participants experienced pain, the pain was reduced much more when they were shown pictures of their loved ones and distracted with word games than when they were exposed to the same word games and pictures of acquaintances.
8. People with the same level of attractiveness are more likely to end up together.
There is a lot of psychological and social research that indicates that there is a significant pattern in the way people choose people for romantic relationships. This pattern is explained by the Pairing Hypothesis, which states that people are more attracted to those with whom they share a level of attractiveness or, in other words, are equally socially desirable. Even if successful couples differ in their physical attractiveness, one of them usually makes up for this with other socially desirable qualities.
9. Couples that are too similar to each other are not likely to last.
Like the well-known saying tells us, opposites attract. And research shows that that is partially true. Couples that are too similar or too different to each other tend to not last very long. Apparently, there always has to be a basis of similarities, but there also have to be things that you learn from each other.
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