Although we think of love as an emotion, it is really more like a drive. Emotions come and go, whereas drives, like love, tend to persist. All emotions are associated with distinct facial expressions, whereas love is not. Love (like all of the basic drives I have discussed in this blog) is difficult to control. Furthermore, the most recent scientific research indicates that all drives, including love, are associated with activation of the brain pathway called the mesolimbic dopamine pathway.
Attraction: the first stage of love
Love, like other drives, is associated with wanting to get something. That something we are talking about here is a partner. The first stage of love, then, involves seeking out a partner. Scientists have called this the attraction phase. It is important for each person to understand how the attraction phase works within himself/herself. There are both conscious and unconscious parts to attraction.
The attraction phase involves the senses, primarily sight and smell. There may be chemicals that activate the brain through smell that we are not consciously aware of. Similarly, we may like the way someone looks and not be sure why. Our conscious mind and unconscious mind may be looking for different things in a partner. The unconscious mind plays a big role in our partner selection process.
It is important to realize that we can be taken over and captivated by attraction. Some of the symptoms of attraction or falling in love are “butterflies in the stomach,” clammy hands and racing heart. These symptoms are direct evidence of the physical nature of the love drive.
There is pleasure associated with getting the objects of our drives. In the brain, this pleasure involves many important chemicals like dopamine and the endorphins. Contact with the lover is also pleasurable because it releases oxytocin. This chemical produces reward by calming us down. (It doesn’t matter that it is the lover’s fault that we need calming.) Oxytocin is a powerful, natural anti-anxiety chemical.
The attraction phase usually lasts no more than 18 months. The reason for this is that it is too consuming. People have to be able to function, and when our energies are over focused on a lover, we aren’t as productive in other areas. Furthermore, the attraction phase has only one purpose. That is to get us hooked. When the pleasure chemicals and anxiety relieving chemicals are released in the brain, a compulsion is formed. That compulsion is to be with the lover. So the love that starts out as pleasure in the company of the lover becomes a compulsion. When the compulsion phase sets in, we feel compelled to stay with our lover no matter what. That is when we know “bonding” has taken place.
So the stages of love basically involve attraction, followed by great pleasure, followed by bonding. I would add a fourth stage, caretaking. Normal people feel an urge to take care of others toward whom they feel bonded.
Sociopaths and love
Ability to love, then, involves attraction, pleasure, bonding and caretaking. How is the sociopath’s experience of love different from what I have described? First, I never met a sociopath who did not do exactly what he/she wanted. I have to conclude from this that the attraction phase operates relatively normally in the sociopath. In fact, many sociopaths hang around only as long as the attraction phase lasts. There is evidence that emotional arousal is abnormal in sociopaths. So I would also assume they experience the pleasures of attraction without the “butterflies.”
It is blatantly obvious that sociopaths do not bond in the usual sense. Their love drive is thus stuck in the attraction gear and they can go no further than attraction. But don’t stop there! As the sociopath experienced the pleasures of his/her latest object of attraction, his/her drive for conquest was also activated.
The sociopath simultaneously experiences pleasure in attraction and pleasure in conquest or power. In other words, although the sociopath cannot form a love bond, he/she can acquire a possession which he/she strongly believes belongs to him/her.
If I enjoy something and I work very hard to get that thing, it is mine! I feel entitled to something I enjoy and work for. That thing also should keep giving me pleasure and satisfaction in order to stay wanted. If a possession is no longer pleasant and appealing to me, I throw it in the garbage. Now, if someone breaks in and tries to steal my possessions, I am angry and feel violated. Does any of this sound familiar?
Unlike the caretaking of the true love bond, the caretaking behavior of sociopaths is only self serving. I take care of my stuff because I have to. If I want people to envy me, I make the outside of my house look good and wax my car. Then people driving by see the great looking house with the new car in the driveway and think I really have it made. My stuff gives me status. If I don’t take care of my stuff, my status goes down.
So again we see that although sociopaths have a rudimentary love drive, in the end their drives are all about power and status. Don’t be fooled by the occasional care taking behavior, it is not motivated by empathy or a true love bond.
bigdude: i can’t answer. he is so seductive that i am certain he’d have me twisted and hooked within five minutes. he’s a MASTER s/p/n.
i called a friend and they said that, ‘of course it is wonderful to want to be there for someone in need (MY THINKING), BUT (big but!) it is masochistic to feel guilt not being there for someone who did nothing but undermine you, torment you, cheat on you, mind-twist you, lie to you and thieve against you.”
i feel better but still wonder what he’s truly looking to know, see, have after all this time away from me. last i heard from him, he ”didn’t even LIKE” me; hated me ”swag”; blamed me for his cheating (and for his hating his wife!). now, i’m the only one he can talk to? what is it REALLY about?
Dear Lostingrief. Good for you not returning the call, but why feel guilty. You owe him nothing, now, he broke the relationship in a hurtful way and thought nothing of you then – why should you bail him out. If he has messed up his life, then it is his responsibility to sort it out. I dont know whether he will stop calling, but if he gets no reaction from you, he will probably get the message. Lets put it this way – if you were to call him back, he wont leave you alone. You just have to be really strong and hard hearted if needs be to protect yourself.
beverly: yes! hard-hearted!!! that’s it!!!
i have never been hard-hearted in my entire existence. it is so incredibly foreign to me. but i’m starting to understand why it is an important survival mechanism!
i will try hard to be hard-hearted in this situation. he deserves nothing more!
Those people with caring and nurturing natures are ideal prey for those people with personality disorder. We have to learn to protect our tender hearts and not to offer ourselves and our gifts to those who do not deserve and who would seek to damage us.
yea, i hear ya’, but they sure are STEALTH.
Dear LIG,
GOOD FOR YOU NOT CALLING HIM! You can believe he is not deserving of anything from you, even a phone call. He is trying to hook you back into his web, just like a spider.
Yes, life may be the pits for him. SO WHAT? If things are bad for him “really bad” WHOSE FAULT IS IT? Yours? NO. Whose responsibility is it? Yours? NO.
If you had chit on someone the way he chit on you, would you have the BALLS to call them and “ask a favor?” NO! Then why should YOU feel guilty? GUILT is what you feel when you have done something bad. You have NOT DONE ANYTHING BAD.
I went to the casino and blew my paycheck and I can’t make my car payment now. I really NEED you to make it for me. If you don’t feel guilty for not doing it, you are a bad person. If I get in trouble because of the way I have behaved and you don’t fix it, you are a bad person. IS ANY OF THAT TRUE? Of course not. Well, why is it true for him? Why should you be obligated to fix his screw ups? You are NOT! That doens’t mean you are hard hearted, it means you are REASONABLE and RATIONAL. You don’t owe him a thing.
(Hi Oxy). Dear Lostingrief. If you are going to develop your boundaries, you may as well get some practice in! He is just chancing it, to see if you weaken, the old sob story often works on women. Oxy is right, he just wants to hook you back into his game.
lostingrief: My EX called me from GA desperately asking my help with his financial disaster. We were engaged at the time (so I believed) and naturally, I would do anything for us as a couple.
Well, his desperate situation was (as told by him) was that his EX wife conned a newly licensed attorney to bring him into court for missing 2 months of child support payments. He changed companies and was working in a company that’s HQ was in Texas and told me that Texas didn’t automatically attach child support payments to go directly to his EX wife … that he didn’t realize this … and now he’s in a jam with his Ex-wife, the attorney, the court.
What did I do? Frantically, I wired him the amount of $15,000 for all payments owned for future and the 2 months back child support payments.
Do to his arrest … he couldn’t contact his boss since he was only given 1 phone call. He lost his job.
When he got out of jail and was back in the house I owned in Georgia … of course I asked if he was financially available to pay the mortgage now that he didn’t have his job. He told me, he was OK with finances for a few months, not to worry about the mortgage payments … that he was looking for another job, and everything should be OK for the next few months.
Months went by after this fiasco … he was in and out of court with his EX wife …
He then told me that he was getting nervous about not having a job yet … and if I could help in out with $$$ just in case he ran out … he needed to ensure the mortgage was paid …
Sure enough, I wired another $5,000 down to him.
He thanked me and said, he sent the mortgage bank several months of mortgage payments so that he didn’t have to worry about the mortgage and he would concentrate on getting another job.
So of course, my mind was put at ease …
Months later, he called frantically asking if I didn’t love him anymore and why did I have him locked out of the house. I was sitting in work during this phone call and immediately said, what are you talking about, I didn’t lock you out … what are you talking about …?
He said he went to start the car, the battery was dead … he then had the neighbor take him to the auto store to purchase a new battery … when he got home, half the furniture was on the front lawn, with our stuff and the sheriff’s pad locked the doors … took our pets … and he was now calling me asking me what was going on.
Of course, I’m floored over this … I told him that I didn’t do this to him, it must be some mistake … I got off the phone with my EX and immediately called my attorney … told him what was just told to me … he contacted the appropriate people in the courts, sheriff’s office etc.
When I got home, my attorney told me that my house was foreclosed.
Panic struck me from my head to my toes … I was spinning with fear, confusion … trying to find out what we could in one state, talking with my fiance in the state it happened in … finding out that he was trying to check into a hotel, get the pets back, talk with the sheriff’s/courts etc.
We were back and forth all night long doing the best we can do … the situation was so surreal since paperwork was never submitted to me in the state I live and I held the mortgage. My mortgage company never notified me, the sherrif’s office never notified me … no one pertaining to my mortgage, the courts … no one notified me.
To make a long story short, I believed everything was being handled with the attorney I retained in Georgia … this attorney told me he’d handle everything with my fiance and for me to focus on my lawsuit I was handling at the time against my bosses.
That was July 2002 … in November of 2006, I uncovered paper work my EX left behind in my house.
The money I sent him for his back child support payments of $15,000 was never paid to his EX wife … he was never arrested that year by his EX, he was however, in court with her the previous fall …
He bought 2 horses (1 for him, 1 for his other fiance that lived with him in my house, slept in my bed, used my walk-in closet), put a down payment for a brand new Ford Explorer for her, bought 2 saddles, a Rinker boat, whine and dined he and his other fiancee on my dime, took trips on my credit card, bilked them to their limits … and I had no clue this was going on either … since the credit cards went to the Georgia address … not to my home address where I live …
Should I go on … about their EMERGENCY phone calls … all frantic and baby baby baby it’s you and me and you’re the only one I can rely on … blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Hang up … erase your answering machines … and stay on this site with us sweety, it’s a con …
Besides, who cares what his problems are … it is non of your concern.
Peace.
Damn Wini, yours makes my ex-soc look like a rank amateur.
Lostingrief, you will be fine. You owe him nothing. You have to protect yourself first.
Lost in Grief,
You and GeminiFairy must be on the same wavelength today because her ex also called her asking her for favors. They always call when they want something, don’t they. They don’t care how much hell they put you through. And they think just the sound of their voice will get you under their spell again so you will give them what they want. Don’t let him do that to you. See him for what he is–a cheating, two-timing using liar. Walk away.