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Why We Love, at last

I am reading an interesting new book by Dr. Helen Fisher, an anthropologist at Rutgers University, titled, “Why We Love: the Nature and Chemistry of Romantic Love.” In the book, she links love to high levels in the brain of a drug called dopamine.

At the end of the third chapter, Dr. Fisher provides an answer to a question that I was first asked in 1958. I was 15, with enough dopamine loose in my head to make my ears glow. Being in chemistry-crazed love was a brand new thing for me, and the cause of it all asked me, “Do you need me because you want me, or do you want me because you need me?”

I remember that I needed her bad, as a matter of fact. We were driving north on Barrow between the stadium and South 7th when she asked this. Dr. Fisher states in her book that it is common for young people being overrun by dopamine to remember such minutiae years later.

At the same time, I didn’t know up from down. “Dope” must be short for dopamine. It was not a good position from which to impress the teen goddess, but I tried to understand the question and decide which was the answer that would cause her to scoot over the last one-eighth inch between us on the seat – no bucket seats in those days – and press her body tightly against mine.

I truly don’t remember what I answered. I believe I liked the “need because I want” option, because want implied brain function and need implied function, period.

Forty-eight years later, Dr. Fisher informs me that “I want you because I need you” is the correct answer. Romantic love, she discovers, is not emotion, but motivation, created by mysterious but observable chemical activity in the brain. Her work over the years shows that a human being’s “basic drives,” such as thirst, hunger, cold, etc., are what are called “primary motivating systems” in the brain. Her new work indicated that romantic love is among these, a primary motivating system.

I didn’t know what kind of grip I was in, that afternoon on Barrow, but I agree completely that it was primary. “Romantic love is a need, a craving,” Dr. Fisher writes. “We need food. We need water. We need warmth. And the lover feels he/she needs the beloved. Plato had it right over two thousand years ago. The God of Love ‘lives in a state of need.’ “

I am glad to know these things at last. The book is very readable, and it will provide you a lot of things you could have told your parents that were true, when you tried to sneak in so late.

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  • I am a journalist, educator, writing consultant and author, living in La Mesa, CA. I am a native of Texas, which shows in most of my work. I believe that anything is possible. When I was 35, I realized that the ideal life would be to have the imagination of a six-year-old, and the wisdom of a 65-year-old. I can still get to the imagination (as you can, simply by cutting away all the data you’ve learned from first grade on) and I now possess the wisdom of a 65-year-old. Being 65 can be unsettling – too late to plant trees and enjoy the shade – but the wisdom that comes with it is terrific compensation. I learned in 50th grade that, no matter how bad things get, there is always compensation. Now I am in the 60th grade, and I am learning things that I didn’t know in 59th. This September, I’ll start 61st grade, and learn things I don’t know now. To find what grade you’re in, start with the year you started 12th grade, and count up. My newest book is “Warbirds – How They Played the Game.” My new company is The Write Outsource, quality media writing on deadline, at www.writeoutsource.com. I am working on a book about the media, and I am about to revise my cookbook about home cooking on a tight budget, such as so many of us face at this time.
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