MSN Home  |   Hotmail  |   Shopping  |   People & Groups
Windows Live ID  Web Search:    
go to XtraMSNGroups 
Groups Home  |  My Groups  |  Help  
 
NARCISSISTIC_PERSONALITY_DISORDER[email protected] 
  
What's New
  
  Home  
  Info For Members  
  Message Boards  
  _______�?_______  
  Message Forums  
  General  
  N Relatives  
  Divorce/Custody  
  Anything Goes  
  ______♥_______  
  Pictures  
    
  ______�?_______  
  THE NARCISSIST  
  Is Your Partner a Narcissist?  
  _______�?_______  
  Religious & Spiritual Guidance ++  
  20 Traits of Malignant Narcissism  
  _______�?________  
  N LINKS 1  
  Page 2  
  Page 3  
  Page 4  
  _______�?________  
  Who Gets Targeted  
  Our Caring Instinct  
  Women Who Love Psychopaths  
  _______�?________  
  THE PSYCHOPATH  
  NPD vs AsPD  
  Problems Mistaken for NPD/AsPD  
  Mental Disorders  
  HE SAID WHAT??  
  HE DID WHAT???  
  RED FLAGS  
  _______�? _______  
  Links for GUYS 1  
  Links for GUYS 2  
  _______�?_______  
  Obsessive Thinking  
  _______�?________  
  Questions to Dr. Vaknin  
  Dr. V's Resources  
  Resources 2  
  Dr. V's Snapshots 1  
  " Snapshots 2  
  Relationship Abuse  
  Case Studies 1  
  ______�?_________  
  Abuse Tactics  
  Domestic Violence  
  Effects of Abuse  
  _______�?________  
  Rebuttals from NPs  
  _______�?________  
  Translation Guide  
  Do they admit they're wrong?  
  Devalue & Discard  
  _______________  
  PROJECTION  
  Hoovering 101  
  _______�? ________  
  Abuse Management  
  BullyProof Yourself  
  BOUNDARIES  
  ______ ♥________  
  LEAVING  
  Leaving, Now What?  
  _______�?________  
  ï¿½?NO CONTACT  
  NC Management  
  Letting Go  
  DETACHING  
  _______�?________  
  â–ºSurvival Skills I  
  Survival Skills 2  
  _______♥________  
  Smear Campaign  
  Stalking  
  Critical Errors  
  The Glass House  
  _______♥________  
  DIVORCE/CUSTODY  
  Page 2  
  Page 3  
  Blaming the Victim  
  Divorce SnapShots  
  Avoiding N's RAGE  
  Divorce/Custody XN/P  
  _______♥________  
  Our Children  
  For Parents  
  _______♥________  
  Recovery Tips 1  
  Recovery Tips 2  
  Closure  
  Grieving an N  
  7 Recovery Stages  
  _______♥________  
  HEALING 1  
  Page 2  
  Page 3  
  Co-Dependency  
  _______♥________  
  Love and the N  
  Adult Children of Ns  
  Abusive Parents  
  _______♥________  
  About Ns  
  _______♥________  
  ELLIE'S STORY  
  Ellie's Journal  
  _______♥________  
  Recommended BOOKS  
  _______�?_______  
  Top Picks - Bancroft  
  Brown/Leedom  
  " N. Brown  
  " S. Brown  
  " Carter/Sokol  
  " Fay  
  " Hotchkiss  
  " Leedom  
  " Payson  
  " Simon  
  " Vaknin  
  _______♥________  
  ï¿½?MEMBER PAGES  
  MEMBER RECOMMENDED WEBSITES  
  _______♥________  
  Laughs 1  
  Laughs 2  
  Laughs 3  
  One Liners  
  _______♥________  
  LEARNING PLACES  
  For the Professionals  
  _______♥________  
  Tim Field's Bullies  
  Corporate N/Ps  
  Cons and Cults  
  Ns in Government  
  ______�?________  
  Resources for Ns 1  
  Resources for Ns 2  
  Can We Help Them?  
  _______�?________  
  TESTS & QUIZZES  
  CINEMA PSYCHOS  
  Just for Fun  
  ______�?________  
  If NPs Visit Us  
  Abbreviations  
  Acknowledgements  
  ___♥___ INDEX___  
  Q & As about Ns  
  Meet the Managers  
  
  
  Tools  
 
General : What is Love?
Choose another message board
View All Messages
  Prev Message  Next Message       
Reply
 Message 6 of 11 in Discussion 
From: XtraMSN Nicknamesamvak  in response to Message 1Sent: 17/11/2008 5:06 p.m.

The Pathology of Love

By: Dr. Sam Vaknin

Download Free Anthologies - Click HERE!


Malignant Self Love - Buy the Book - Click HERE!!!

Relationships with Abusive Narcissists - Buy the e-Books - Click HERE!!!


 

The unpalatable truth is that falling in love is, in some ways, indistinguishable from a severe pathology. Behavior changes are reminiscent of psychosis and, biochemically speaking, passionate love closely imitates substance abuse. Appearing in the BBC series Body Hits on December 4, 2002 Dr. John Marsden, the head of the British National Addiction Center, said that love is addictive, akin to cocaine and speed. Sex is a "booby trap", intended to bind the partners long enough to bond.

Using functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI), Andreas Bartels and Semir Zeki of University College in London showed that the same areas of the brain are active when abusing drugs and when in love. The prefrontal cortex - hyperactive in depressed patients - is inactive when besotted. How can this be reconciled with the low levels of serotonin that are the telltale sign of both depression and infatuation - is not known.

Other MRI studies, conducted in 2006-7 by Dr. Lucy Brown, a professor in the department of neurology and neuroscience at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York, and her colleagues, revealed that the caudate and the ventral tegmental, brain areas involved in cravings (e.g., for food) and the secretion of dopamine, are lit up in subjects who view photos of their loved ones. Dopamine is a neurotransmitter that affects pleasure and motivation. It causes a sensation akin to a substance-induced high.

On August 14, 2007, the New Scientist News Service gave the details of a study originally published in the Journal of Adolescent Health earlier that year. Serge Brand of the Psychiatric University Clinics in Basel, Switzerland, and his colleagues interviewed 113 teenagers (17-year old), 65 of whom reported having fallen in love recently.

The conclusion? The love-struck adolescents slept less, acted more compulsively more often, had "lots of ideas and creative energy", and were more likely to engage in risky behavior, such as reckless driving.

"'We were able to demonstrate that adolescents in early-stage intense romantic love did not differ from patients during a hypomanic stage,' say the researchers. This leads them to conclude that intense romantic love in teenagers is a 'psychopathologically prominent stage'".

But is it erotic lust or is it love that brings about these cerebral upheavals?

As distinct from love, lust is brought on by surges of sex hormones, such as testosterone and estrogen. These induce an indiscriminate scramble for physical gratification. In the brain, the hypothalamus (controls hunger, thirst, and other primordial drives) and the amygdala (the locus of arousal) become active. Attraction transpires once a more-or-less appropriate object is found (with the right body language and speed and tone of voice) and results in a panoply of sleep and eating disorders.

A recent study in the University of Chicago demonstrated that testosterone levels shoot up by one third even during a casual chat with a female stranger. The stronger the hormonal reaction, the more marked the changes in behavior, concluded the authors. This loop may be part of a larger "mating response". In animals, testosterone provokes aggression and recklessness. The hormone's readings in married men and fathers are markedly lower than in single males still "playing the field".

Still, the long-term outcomes of being in love are lustful. Dopamine, heavily secreted while falling in love, triggers the production of testosterone and sexual attraction then kicks in.

Helen Fisher of Rutger University suggests a three-phased model of falling in love. Each stage involves a distinct set of chemicals. The BBC summed it up succinctly and sensationally: "Events occurring in the brain when we are in love have similarities with mental illness".

Moreover, we are attracted to people with the same genetic makeup and smell (pheromones) of our parents. Dr Martha McClintock of the University of Chicago studied feminine attraction to sweaty T-shirts formerly worn by males. The closer the smell resembled her father's, the more attracted and aroused the woman became. Falling in love is, therefore, an exercise in proxy incest and a vindication of Freud's much-maligned Oedipus and Electra complexes.

Writing in the February 2004 issue of the journal NeuroImage, Andreas Bartels of University College London's Wellcome Department of Imaging Neuroscience described identical reactions in the brains of young mothers looking at their babies and in the brains of people looking at their lovers.

"Both romantic and maternal love are highly rewarding experiences that are linked to the perpetuation of the species, and consequently have a closely linked biological function of crucial evolutionary importance" - he told Reuters.

This incestuous backdrop of love was further demonstrated by psychologist David Perrett of the University of St Andrews in Scotland. The subjects in his experiments preferred their own faces - in other words, the composite of their two parents - when computer-morphed into the opposite sex.


This article appears in my book, "Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited"

Click HERE to buy the print edition from Barnes and Noble or HERE to buy it from Amazon or HERE to buy it from The Book Source

Click HERE to buy the print edition from the publisher and receive a BONUS PACK

Click HERE to buy various electronic books (e-books) about narcissists, psychopaths, and abuse in relationships

Click HERE to buy the ENTIRE SERIES of eight electronic books (e-books) about narcissists, psychopaths, and abuse in relationships


Body secretions play a major role in the onslaught of love. In results published in February 2007 in the Journal of Neuroscience, researchers at the University of California at Berkeley demonstrated convincingly that women who sniffed androstadienone, a signaling chemical found in male sweat, saliva, and semen, experienced higher levels of the hormone cortisol. This results in sexual arousal and improved mood. The effect lasted a whopping one hour.

Still, contrary to prevailing misconceptions, love is mostly about negative emotions. As Professor Arthur Aron from State University of New York at Stonybrook has shown, in the first few meetings, people misinterpret certain physical cues and feelings - notably fear and thrill - as (falling in) love. Thus, counterintuitively, anxious people - especially those with the "serotonin transporter" gene - are more sexually active (i.e., fall in love more often).

Obsessive thoughts regarding the Loved One and compulsive acts are also common. Perception is distorted as is cognition. "Love is blind" and the lover easily fails the reality test. Falling in love involves the enhanced secretion of b-Phenylethylamine (PEA, or the "love chemical") in the first 2 to 4 years of the relationship.

This natural drug creates an euphoric high and helps obscure the failings and shortcomings of the potential mate. Such oblivion - perceiving only the spouse's good sides while discarding her bad ones - is a pathology akin to the primitive psychological defense mechanism known as "splitting". Narcissists - patients suffering from the Narcissistic Personality Disorder - also Idealize romantic or intimate partners. A similar cognitive-emotional impairment is common in many mental health conditions.

The activity of a host of neurotransmitters - such as Dopamine, Adrenaline (Norepinephrine), and Serotonin - is heightened (or in the case of Serotonin, lowered) in both paramours. Yet, such irregularities are also associated with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) and depression.

It is telling that once attachment is formed and infatuation gives way to a more stable and less exuberant relationship, the levels of these substances return to normal. They are replaced by two hormones (endorphins) which usually play a part in social interactions (including bonding and sex): Oxytocin (the "cuddling chemical") and Vasopressin. Oxytocin facilitates bonding. It is released in the mother during breastfeeding, in the members of the couple when they spend time together - and when they sexually climax. Viagra (sildenafil) seems to facilitate its release, at least in rats.

Love, in all its phases and manifestations, is an addiction, probably to the various forms of internally secreted norepinephrine, such as the aforementioned amphetamine-like PEA. Love, in other words, is a form of substance abuse. The withdrawal of romantic love has serious mental health repercussions.

A study conducted by Dr. Kenneth Kendler, professor of psychiatry and director of the Virginia Institute for Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics, and others, and published in the September 2002 issue of Archives of General Psychiatry, revealed that breakups often lead to depression and anxiety. Other, fMRI-based studies, demonstrated how the insular cortex, in charge of experiencing pain, became active when subjects viewed photos of former loved ones.

Still, love cannot be reduced to its biochemical and electrical components. Love is not tantamount to our bodily processes - rather, it is the way we experience them. Love is how we interpret these flows and ebbs of compounds using a higher-level language. In other words, love is pure poetry.


Also Read

The Inverted Narcissist

The Myth of Mental Illness

Sex or Gender

The Narcissist's Family

The Roots of Pedophilia

The Natural Roots of Sexuality

Parenting - The Irrational Vocation

Ethical Relativism and Absolute Taboos

The Offspring of Aeolus: On the Incest Taboo


Copyright Notice

This material is copyrighted. Free, unrestricted use is allowed on a non commercial basis.
The author's name and a link to this Website must be incorporated in any reproduction of the material for any use and by any means.


Go Back to Home Page!

Frequently Asked Questions - Pathological Narcissism

Excerpts from Archives of the Narcissism List

The Narcissism List Home Page

Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited

World in Conflict and Transition

Internet: A Medium or a Message?

Write to me: [email protected]  or [email protected]

 

 

language=javascript>postamble();</SCRIPT>



Notice: Microsoft has no responsibility for the content featured in this group. Click here for more info.
 MSN - Make it Your Home�