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In Love with “Love”?

Obsessing about love has many attributes of a behavioral addiction.

By: Dalanna Burris, MS, LCDC and Cameron Johnson

Dragos Dragomirescu/Shutterstock
Source: Dragos Dragomirescu/Shutterstock

The star-crossed lovers from Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet are frequently seen as examples of the height of passion and romance. However, people tend to forget the tragedy at the heart of the story: Each believed that they couldn’t go on living without the other.

As with Romeo and Juliet, there are many maladaptive forms of attachment and attraction, but one that often gets overlooked is "love addiction." While there isn't a defined disorder by this term, relationships can have an obsessive nature that has little to do with sexual relations.

Love that includes craving romantic exhilaration such that the partner believes “romantic relations are magically potent; that they are relationships that can surmount all emotional obstacles.” These cravings may lead to obsessive thinking, negative consequences, and dysfunction.

A preoccupation with focusing on “finding the one” helps the individual untether from unpleasant areas of their life. Gradually, the brain begins to produce more mood enhancing neurochemicals in response to their contrived fantasies, and the individual becomes dependent on them as a coping mechanism. Love "addicts" can be fixated on one person or the idea of falling in love with “the one.”

When it comes to the mundane elements of healthy relationships, they may exhibit catastrophic thinking and struggle to balance doing things to satisfy their partner and their own self-interests. Consequently, "love addicts" can be susceptible to co-occurring substance use disorders or abuse since they are preoccupied with maintaining the euphoria of the relationship.

"Love addictions" have a variety of etiologies, sometimes stemming from traumatic experiences, genetic predispositions to forming addictions, and other psychological disorders or a combination of these and other environmental influences.

Bartholomew and Horowitz’s 1991 classifications of attachment styles, which focuses on the “Self vs. Other” dynamic, offers insight into how they relate to "love addiction." When a person develops a positive concept of themselves but a negative concept of the other, they adopt a dismissive attachment style. Alternatively, when a person has a negative concept of themselves and a positive concept of the other, they form a preoccupied attachment style characterized by exaggerated emphasis on interpersonal relationships. Finally, the fearful attachment style comes about when the person has a negative concept of both themselves and the other, which results in social avoidance.

The same study found that people with fearful attachment styles tended to have intimacy problems and lacked assertiveness in interpersonal relationships, which prevented them from challenging their world model. People with a dismissive attachment style were reported to be colder and less expressive despite having high self-confidence, while those with pre-occupied attachments tended to be more expressive, more involved in romantic relationships, and more reliant on others "as a secure base.”

The undertones of each of attachment style play a role in the different flavors of "love addiction." This is not to say that these predisposing factors condemn someone to becoming obsessed with love. Awareness of their issues, an increased sense of self-worth, and treatment from a mental health professional can serve as protective factors.

Treatment

The goal of treatment for "love addiction" is not sobriety. It’s to change historical patterns of behavior to healthier, emotionally beneficial connections and become “sober” from past problematic behaviors.

We address the problems that result from "love addiction" with some of the same modalities that have proven effective for substance use disorders and behavioral disorders such as gambling disorder and compulsive shopping:

  • Cognitive behavioral therapy helps identify the initial thoughts toward love, relationships, intimacy, vulnerability and boundaries that create the feelings which ultimately drive behaviors often associated with compulsions, obsessions, and attachments.
  • Group therapy provides a safe space to reduce shame, promote healthy encouragement, and break through the denial and rationalization that often enables patterns of unhealthy, problematic behavior.
  • 12-step groups, such as Sex and Love Addicts Anonymous (SLAA), provide a community of support for individuals who are making the decision to stop living a life controlled by a pattern of maladaptive sex and love behavior.
  • Even alternative therapies such as equine therapy can help treat "love addiction" by enhancing positive behaviors and emotional growth.

The treating clinician will conduct a complete sex and love history to help identify problematic patterns of behavior but also formulate goals for romantic sobriety.

The individual with a "love addiction" will initially need to separate themselves from their negative behavior (e.g., removing dating profiles, ending dysfunctional relationships) and then work with their therapist to uncover and challenge irrational thoughts that precipitated past problematic behaviors. Formal, effective therapy takes time, but it can be helpful.

With so much isolation, separation, and fear occupying 2020, many people are feeling desperate for meaningful interaction. Yet we should avoid becoming reliant on others to fill voids in our lives and distract us from reality. If anything, this is the perfect time to rediscover ourselves, practice self-care, and examine how we derive our self-worth. Ultimately, one of the best ways to open yourself to supportive, loving relationships is to first love yourself.

About the Authors

Dalanna Burris, MS, LCDC is an addictions counselor at The Menninger Clinic. She has expertise in substance use treatment, problematic sexual behavior, and gaming addiction, and she serves on the Comprehensive Psychiatric Assessment Service.

Cameron Johnson is a research assistant at The Menninger Clinic. Cameron collects and manages treatment outcomes survey data, which Menninger uses to help track the symptoms of patients. Cameron earned a bachelor's degree in Psychology from Rice University in Houston.

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