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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
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1990
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93
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jan_mar
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02159943.000
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<text>
<title>
(Feb. 15, 1993) The Right Chemistry
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Feb. 15, 1993 The Chemistry of Love
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
COVER STORIES, Page 49
The Right Chemistry
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Evolutionary roots, brain imprints, biological secretions. That's
the story of love.
</p>
<p>By ANASTASIA TOUFEXIS--With reporting by Hannah Bloch/New York
and Sally B. Donnelly/Los Angeles
</p>
<p> O.K., let's cut out all this nonsense about romantic
love. Let's bring some scientific precision to the party. Let's
put love under a microscope.
</p>
<p> When rigorous people with Ph.D.s after their names do
that, what they see is not some silly, senseless thing. No,
their probe reveals that love rests firmly on the foundations
of evolution, biology and chemistry. What seems on the surface
to be irrational, intoxicated behavior is in fact part of
nature's master strategy--a vital force that has helped humans
survive, thrive and multiply through thousands of years. Says
Michael Mills, a psychology professor at Loyola Marymount
University in Los Angeles: "Love is our ancestors whispering in
our ears."
</p>
<p> It was on the plains of Africa about 4 million years ago,
in the early days of the human species, that the notion of
romantic love probably first began to blossom--or at least
that the first cascades of neuro chemicals began flowing from
the brain to the bloodstream to produce goofy grins and sweaty
palms as men and women gazed deeply into each other's eyes. When
mankind graduated from scuttling around on all fours to walking
on two legs, this change made the whole person visible to fellow
human beings for the first time. Sexual organs were in full
display, as were other characteristics, from the color of eyes
to the span of shoulders. As never before, each individual had
a unique allure.
</p>
<p> When the sparks flew, new ways of making love enabled sex
to become a romantic encounter, not just a reproductive act.
Although mounting mates from the rear was, and still is, the
method favored among most animals, humans began to enjoy
face-to-face couplings; both looks and personal attraction
became a much greater part of the equation.
</p>
<p> Romance served the evolutionary purpose of pulling males
and females into long-term partnership, which was essential to
child rearing. On open grasslands, one parent would have a hard--and dangerous--time handling a child while foraging for
food. "If a woman was carrying the equivalent of a 20-lb.
bowling ball in one arm and a pile of sticks in the other, it
was ecologically critical to pair up with a mate to rear the
young," explains anthropologist Helen Fisher, author of Anatomy
of Love.
</p>
<p> While Western culture holds fast to the idea that true
love flames forever (the movie Bram Stoker's Dracula has the
Count carrying the torch beyond the grave), nature apparently
meant passions to sputter out in something like four years.
Primitive pairs stayed together just "long enough to rear one
child through infancy," says Fisher. Then each would find a new
partner and start all over again.
</p>
<p> What Fisher calls the "four-year itch" shows up
unmistakably in today's divorce statistics. In most of the 62
cultures she has studied, divorce rates peak around the fourth
year of marriage. Additional youngsters help keep pairs together
longer. If, say, a couple have another child three years after
the first, as often occurs, then their union can be expected to
last about four more years. That makes them ripe for the more
familiar phenomenon portrayed in the Marilyn Monroe classic The
Seven-Year Itch.
</p>
<p> If, in nature's design, romantic love is not eternal,
neither is it exclusive. Less than 5% of mammals form rigorously
faithful pairs. From the earliest days, contends Fisher, the
human pattern has been "monogamy with clandestine adultery."
Occasional flings upped the chances that new combinations of
genes would be passed on to the next generation. Men who sought
new partners had more children. Contrary to common assumptions,
women were just as likely to stray. "As long as prehistoric
females were secretive about their extramarital affairs," argues
Fisher, "they could garner extra resources, life insurance,
better genes and more varied DNA for their biological futures.
Hence those who sneaked into the bushes with secret lovers lived
on--unconsciously passing on through the centuries whatever
it is in the female spirit that motivates modern women to
philander."
</p>
<p> Love is a romantic designation for a most ordinary
biological--or, shall we say, chemical?--process. A lot of
nonsense is talked and written about it.
</p>
<p>-- Greta Garbo to Melvyn Douglas in Ninotchka
</p>
<p> Lovers often claim that they feel as if they are being
swept away. They're not mistaken; they are literally flooded by
chemicals, research suggests. A meeting of eyes, a touch of
hands or a whiff of scent sets off a flood that starts in the
brain and races along the nerves and through the blood. The
results are familiar: flushed skin, sweaty palms, heavy
breathing. If love looks suspiciously like stress, the reason
is simple: the chemical pathways are identical.
</p>
<p> Above all, there is the sheer euphoria of falling in love--a not-so-surprising reaction, considering that many of the
substances swamping the newly smitten are chemical cousins of
amphetamines. They include dopamine, norepinephrine and
especially phenylethylamine (PEA). Cole Porter knew what he was
talking about when he wrote "I get a kick out of you." "Love is
a natural high," observes Anthony Walsh, author of The Science
of Love: Understanding Love and Its Effects on Mind and Body.
"PEA gives you that silly smile that you flash at strangers.
When we meet someone who is attractive to us, the whistle blows
at the PEA factory."
</p>
<p> But phenylethylamine highs don't last forever, a fact that
lends support to arguments that passionate romantic love is
short-lived. As with any amphetamine, the body builds up a
tolerance to PEA; thus it takes more and more of the substance
to produce love's special kick. After two to three years, the
body simply can't crank up the needed amount of PEA. And chewing
on chocolate doesn't help, despite popular belief. The candy is
high in PEA, but it fails to boost the body's supply.
</p>
<p> Fizzling chemicals spell the end of delirious passion; for
many people that marks the end of the liaison as well. It is
particularly true for those whom Dr. Michael Liebowitz of the
New York State Psychiatric Institute terms "attraction junkies."
They crave the intoxication of falling in love so much that they
move frantically from affair to affair just as soon as the first
rush of infatuation fades.
</p>
<p> Still, many romances clearly endure beyond the first
years. What accounts for that? Another set of chemicals, of
course. The continued presence of a partner gradually steps up
production in the brain of endorphins. Unlike the fizzy
amphetamines, these are soothing substances. Natural
pain-killers, they give lovers a sense of security, peace and
calm. "That is one reason why it feels so horrible when we're
abandoned or a lover dies," notes Fisher. "We don't have our
daily hit of narcotics."
</p>
<p> Researchers see a contrast between the heated infatuation
induced by PEA, along with other amphetamine-like chemicals, and
the more intimate attachment fostered and prolonged by
endorphins. "Early love is when you love the way the other
person makes you feel," explains psychiatrist Mark Goulston of
the University of California, Los Angeles. "Mature love is when
you love the person as he or she is." It is the difference
between passionate and compassionate love, observes Walsh, a
psychobiologist at Boise State University in Idaho. "It's Bon
Jovi vs. Beethoven."
</p>
<p> Oxytocin is another chemical that has recently been
implicated in love. Produced by the brain, it sensitizes nerves
and stimulates muscle contraction. In women it helps uterine
contractions during childbirth as well as production of breast
milk, and seems to inspire mothers to nuzzle their infants.
Scientists speculate that oxytocin might encourage similar
cuddling between adult women and men. The versatile chemical may
also enhance orgasms. In one study of men, oxytocin increased
to three to five times its normal level during climax, and it
may soar even higher in women.
</p>
<p> One mystery is the prevalence of homosexual love. Although
it would seem to have no evolutionary purpose, since no
children are produced, there is no denying that gays and
lesbians can be as romantic as anyone else. Some researchers
speculate that homosexuality results from a biochemical anomaly
that occurs during fetal development. But that doesn't make
romance among gays any less real. "That they direct this love
toward their own sex," says Walsh, "does not diminish the value
of that love one iota."
</p>
<p> A certain smile, a certain face
</p>
<p>-- Johnny Mathis
</p>
<p> Chemicals may help explain (at least to scientists) the
feelings of passion and compassion, but why do people tend to
fall in love with one partner rather than a myriad of others?
Once again, it's partly a function of evolution and biology.
"Men are looking for maximal fertility in a mate," says Loyola
Marymount's Mills. "That is in large part why females in the
prime childbearing ages of 17 to 28 are so desirable." Men can
size up youth and vitality in a glance, and studies indeed show
that men fall in love quite rapidly. Women tumble more slowly,
to a large degree because their requirements are more complex;
they need more time to check the guy out. "Age is not vital,"
notes Mills, "but the ability to provide security, father
children, share resources and hold a high status in society are
all key factors."
</p>
<p> Still, that does not explain why the way Mary walks and
laughs makes Bill dizzy with desire while Marcia's gait and
giggle leave him cold. "Nature has wired us for one special
person," suggests Walsh, romantically. He rejects the idea that
a woman or a man can be in love with two people at the same
time. Each person carries in his or her mind a unique subliminal
guide to the ideal partner, a "love map," to borrow a term
coined by sexologist John Money of Johns Hopkins University.
</p>
<p> Drawn from the people and experiences of childhood, the
map is a record of whatever we found enticing and exciting--or disturbing and disgusting. Small feet, curly hair. The way
our mothers patted our head or how our fathers told a joke. A
fireman's uniform, a doctor's stethoscope. All the information
gathered while growing up is imprinted in the brain's circuitry
by adolescence. Partners never meet each and every requirement,
but a sufficient number of matches can light up the wires and
signal, "It's love." Not every partner will be like the last
one, since lovers may have different combinations of the
characteristics favored by the map.
</p>
<p> O.K., that's the scientific point of view. Satisfied?
Probably not. To most people--with or without Ph.D.s--love
will always be more than the sum of its natural parts. It's a
commingling of body and soul, reality and imagination, poetry
and phenylethylamine. In our deepest hearts, most of us harbor
the hope that love will never fully yield up its secrets, that
it will always elude our grasp.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>