Om Namah Shivaya

Om Namah Shivaya

I'll be grateful if you...

Feb 3, 2012

"Why We Love + Cheat" explains Dr. Helen Fisher researching the topic for more than 3 decades

TALKING POINT: 'LOVE – The most powerful brain system' says Dr. Helen Fisher

In this TEDTalk by Dr. Helen Fisher, I find the anatomy of Love discussed thread bare with an interesting result that we are built in such a way that we can love many people at any point of time. It’s a great talk and I would recommend you to watch the video, where in her own beautiful style with Stories, poetry, humour and lot of intelligence and hard research thrown in, she proves and I quote,

“I don't think, honestly, we're an animal that was built to be happy; we are an animal that was built to reproduce”

Helen Fisher's courageous investigations of romantic love -- its evolution, its biochemical foundations and its vital importance to human society -- are informing and transforming the way we understand ourselves. Fisher describes love as a universal human drive (stronger than the sex drive; stronger than thirst or hunger; stronger perhaps than the will to live), and her many areas of inquiry shed light on timeless human mysteries, like why we choose one partner over another.

Anthropologist Helen Fisher studies gender differences and the evolution of human emotions. She's best known as an expert on romantic love, and her beautifully penned books -- including Anatomy of Love and Why We Love -- lay bare the mysteries of our most treasured emotion.


Some of her thoughts from the TEDTalk
"What 'tis to love?" Shakespeare said. I think our ancestors -- I think human beings have been wondering about this question since they sat around their campfires or lay and watched the stars a million years ago. I started out by trying to figure out what romantic love was by looking at the last 45 years of research on -- just the psychological research -- and as it turns out, there's a very specific group of things that happen when you fall in love” says Helen Fisher
The first thing that happens is what I call -- a person begins to take on what I call, "special meaning." As a truck driver once said to me, he said, "The world had a new center, and that center was Mary Anne."
But anyway, not only does this person take on special meaning, you focus your attention on them. You aggrandize them. But you have intense energy. You feel intense elation when things are going well; mood swings into horrible despair when things are going poorly. Real dependence on this person.
But the main characteristics of romantic love are craving: an intense craving to be with a particular person, not just sexually, but emotionally.
The other main characteristic is motivation. The motor in your brain begins to crank, and you want this person.
And last but not least, it is an obsession.
I began to realize that romantic love is not an emotion. But actually, it's a drive. It comes from the motor of the mind, the wanting part of the mind, the craving part of the mind.
And in fact, I think it's more powerful than the sex drive. You know, if you ask somebody to go to bed with you, and they say, "No, thank you," you certainly don't kill yourself or slip into a clinical depression. But certainly, around the world, people who are rejected in love will kill for it. People live for love. They kill for love. They die for love. They have songs, poems, novels, sculptures, paintings, myths, legends. In over 175 societies, people have left their evidence of this powerful brain system. I have come to think it's one of the most powerful brain systems on earth for both great joy and great sorrow.
And I've also come to think that it's one of three basically different brain systems that evolved from mating and reproduction. One is the sex drive: the craving for sexual gratification. The second of these three brain systems is romantic love: that elation, obsession of early love. And the third brain system is attachment: that sense of calm and security you can feel for a long-term partner.
But these three brain systems: lust, romantic love and attachment, aren't always connected to each other. You can feel deep attachment to a long-term partner while you feel intense romantic love for somebody else, while you feel the sex drive for people unrelated to these other partners. In short, we're capable of loving more than one person at a time.
So I don't think, honestly, we're an animal that was built to be happy; we are an animal that was built to reproduce. I think the happiness we find, we make. And I think, however, we can make good relationships with each other.
I'm just simply saying that a world without love is a deadly place.
There's magic to love!
______________________
Video, Text and Image curtsy TEDTalk, Click here to read more
ॐ नमः शिवाय 
Om Namah Shivaya
PREV                                     HOME                                       NEXT
How many lives you can live – Sarah kay

10 comments:

  1. Thanks for the link to a great TEDtalk. What we forget in our desire to be "god's greatest creation" is that at the end of the day we are nothing but animals struggling to impose a moral code on ourselves. The reason that we are able to coexist and cooperate and grow together as a species is because, for some mystic (or godly) reason, that imposition of the moral code wins most of the time. Yet the fact is that often it does not. Even for those who live idealistic lives, lust, love, and affection are nothing more than chemical and electrical computations designed to ensure our survival. My thoughts only, not an invalidation of anyone else's thinking.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I normally don't allow myself to get carried away by comparisons between Emotions and Bio Chemical changes. Also, morality is as dynamic as anything in the world. Finally, morality is what the majority feels is correct. The age old maxim of keeping the heart away from mind and vice versa, to me, still makes sense.

    ReplyDelete
  3. What can I say...till today I considered it to be only human behavior...but never wondered that anyone can elaborate it so beautifully...great post... :)

    ReplyDelete
  4. Oh my lord, that is a fantastic review! Usually on the net I read short, sweet, consise (hahaha poetry), but this is an excellent review!

    With poetry too! You're words....

    Ah love eh!

    "...I think the happiness we find, we make. And I think, however, we can make good relationships with each other.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Oh my lord, that is a fantastic review! Usually on the net I read short, sweet, consise (hahaha poetry), but this is an excellent review!

    With poetry too! You're words....

    Ah love eh!

    "...I think the happiness we find, we make. And I think, however, we can make good relationships with each other.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Really liked it.

    I feel detachment is a form of love as well :).
    Detachment from your own ppl and attachment towards your maker.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Very well dissected feeling called LOVE here!

    ReplyDelete
  8. I believe its human reconditioning which makes people to do so.By themselves we really don't even know that at the very moment we are cheating on in-fact ourselves.Out emotions get reconditioned at the moment and we just go with the flow.
    Nevertheless,this is a point which will be always debatable.

    ReplyDelete
  9. A bit heavy on mind but absolutely worth contemplating!
    '..experimenting with spirituality' is the gist of the story...no? Thank you Shashi, we have similar interests!!
    amitaag.blogspot.com

    ReplyDelete
  10. Good read and wonderful video. Thanks for sharing..

    ReplyDelete

I appreciate your visit and it will be a great pleasure to know what you think of this post...

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...