Limerence is an altered mental state. That means its origin lies in our brains, and in the neurochemistry that regulates our perceptions and emotions. Although direct research on limerence is very limited, we know a lot about the neuroscience of emotions and addiction, which offers a very good grounding for understanding the neuroscience of person addiction.
Understanding limerence as a neuroscientific phenomenon begins with trying to connect the key features of limerence to the neural systems that are likely to be involved.
Limerence feels remarkable. It is euphoric at first: it is exhilarating, it is energising, and it causes dramatic mood swings – from wild elation to panicked devastation. Once you’re in deep, your limerent object is the most powerful stimulus in your environment. Everything about them takes on exaggerated significance, everything in the world is processed in relation to them. They occupy the centre of your attention, your thoughts and your dreams. The euphoria of being with them can feel blissful, as though you have found a soulmate who gifts you a transcendent sense of fulfilment just by existing. Heady stuff.
As limerence progresses, this mental state begins to shift into something darker, transitioning to intrusive thoughts you can’t control, difficulty in regulating your mood, and a woeful inability to concentrate on other things. Now your mental state is dominated by craving, compulsive urges to be with them (or at least ruminate about them), and emotional pain when you are forced to withdraw.

Well, that there is quite a list of experiences to explain with neuroscience, so we’d better try and organise things a bit. Perhaps the best way is to follow the trajectory of a typical limerence experience and see if we can figure out what’s going on in our brains at each stage.
Arousal
LOs are stimulating, to put it mildly.
When getting to know a new LO, limerents soon find themselves in a state of overarousal. Their heart beats faster, they get sweaty palmed, their pupils dilate, they are highly attentive and focused, and generally in a state best described as hyper. This is physiological arousal, which usually includes sexual arousal, but is a more profound and complete whole-body response characterised by excitement, nervous energy, and thrills.
The key neurochemistry at this stage is focused around noradrenaline signalling. In both the brain and the autonomic nervous system, noradrenaline triggers arousal and excitement and readiness for action. It can be pretty exhilarating.
Arousal also contributes to the sense of importance that LO takes on. You know the emotional stakes are high when the prospect of meeting LO, seeing the objects they own, or being in the places associated with them, gives you the jitters. Your body is winding you up into a heightened state of awareness because this really matters.
The fact that overarousal is often counterproductive to our attempts to impress them is just one of nature’s little jokes.

Reward
The next major neural system that contributes to limerence is reward. Having a good interaction with LO isn’t like the pleasure of having a tasty cake or winning a prize, it’s an order of magnitude greater. Limerent reward is euphoric.
Reward is driven by dopamine. This neural system evolved to allow us to discriminate between the good and bad things in the environment, and remember the good things so that we will seek them out again. But it’s complex.
Pleasure itself can be detached from the desire for pleasure – wanting something is distinct from liking it. The actual sensation of euphoria has proven hard to pin down, scientifically, but seems to be triggered by endorphins and endocannabinoids. Dopamine regulates these “bliss” signals, but its primary role is in recognising and seeking rewards.
Nevertheless, the “dopamine high” is a popular concept and a useful description of what it’s like when you get the bliss tingles from making LO laugh, or having them hug you, or seek your help, or tell you how much you mean to them.
They are intoxicating.
Bonding
The third major process that we need to understand is bonding. This is the more chilled sense of peace, comfort, and “rightness” that we can often feel in the presence of an LO that we have emotionally connected with.
That sense of contentedness and affection is hormonal. Specifically, oxytocin and vasopressin regulate the bonding process that leads, ultimately, to love. It can be an important factor in limerence for many people who rate emotional nourishment above thrills of arousal, when it comes to cementing an infatuation.
Now, I’m going to have a short interlude here to be a pedant, because I can’t help myself. It’s a burden I bear.

This is too neat and tidy for real biology, which is a mess of complications. In fact, all these neural systems feed each other. Bonding is rewarding. Euphoria heightens arousal. They all alter each other in an interplay of mutual reinforcement, and all the neurochemicals I’ve mentioned play many other roles in the brain too.
OK. Got the ridiculous need for accuracy out of my system. Back to the story.
Compulsion
The last piece of the puzzle when it comes to the neurochemistry of limerence is the critical transition into person addiction. The basis of this shift lies in the point I made earlier about the difference between wanting and liking. Dopamine is initially a signal for recognising reward (by giving a bliss hit), but then transitions into being a drive to seek reward.
Motivated behaviour begins with the desire for reward. Dopamine is now acting as a prompt to get you to take action and go and seek out some nice reward. And what is the greatest source of reward in your environment – you know, the one that has been amplified into a mania by hyperactive euphoria, arousal and bonding?
LO.
There’s no way your dopamine circuits are unlearning that lesson in a hurry, so you end up encumbered with a compulsive drive to seek LO that won’t switch off. Nothing satisfies the urge, except the fleeting relief of rumination about them, or contact with them. Even worse, the whole world is full of reminders of them, and every time they pop into your mind, your dopamine circuits light up and give you a prod to go and seek some of that LO goodness that you used to find so electrifying.
Carried along by the emotional torrent of euphoria, exhilaration and connectedness, we unwittingly train ourselves into a compulsive mental state of perpetual motivation to seek LO. And a compulsive urge that is painful to resist is a pretty good working definition of a behavioural addiction.
From the perspective of neuroscience, limerence can be understood. There really are some people who activate our neural circuits in just the right way to send us into a reward-reinforcement cycle that is easy to slip into but fearsome to escape.
Turns out, brains can be dumb.
I’m glad this topic came up, as I would love to hear more from other people about the physiological aspects of limerence they’ve experienced over the course of their lifetimes, particularly those linked to arousal. When I was a teenager, around potential LOs, there was definitely that racing heart thing. “Is she standing next to me in line?” “Did she say hi to me today?” “Oh gosh, should I go to the school nurse? I’m having a heart attack.”
I don’t recall sweating, but I have had friends (usually male) complain of sweating excessively. Also, of being “able to smell themselves”, which I think is a result of sweating. I thought nothing of these remarks at the time other than the fact boys are disgusting in general, and some people have a sick sense of humour, etc. Didn’t really link the phenomena to possible arousal.
Panic attacks around potential LOs? Check. Wanted to physically flee the room they were in and not know why – they weren’t even interacting with me at the time!
Nerves/butterflies in stomach/mind gone blank when accidentally encountering LO or potential LOs. Check. (More fight or flight?)
Insomnia and oversleeping? Check. (Oversleeping because having a dream about LO is pleasurable in its own right and I was holding out for another dream). Insomnia is more about withdrawal I think, or rumination. (Stay awake to obsess over why “relationship” is apparently not working).
Overeating/undereating? Check. May be about wanting to look attractive for LO. But may also be an attempt to control mood swings induced by limerence. “LO doesn’t love me anymore. Cool. Time to eat cake! Oh, she does love me? Shouldn’t have eaten that cake. I look like a baby elephant in these pants.”
Intriguingly, around my main LO, I can’t recall ever having a racing heart, although I had this symptoms around a few potential LOs. Also, can’t recall sweaty palms and dilated pupils. Though maybe I wasn’t paying enough attention to the obvious? Plenty of people have acted “hyper” around me over the years and I honestly chalked it up to their weird personalities and not to limerence or arousal. Never even occurred to me they might like me…
I think my main LE was very, very cerebral for me – it all played out inside my head and there were very few overt physical symptoms, though I’ve had strong symptoms for other people. Was I overconfident that LO liked me back? Maybe.
Did get sick feeling in my tummy when calling her and waiting for her to pick up. Always the fear she wouldn’t pick up and that eventually became a self-fulfilling prophecy. She was slowly pulling away from me. Our phone calls grew shorter and shorter. I always knew the end was coming. I wanted to be the first to let go. I wanted to reject her before she rejected me – hey, I’ve got my pride to protect! Haha! Then obsession hit and I was trapped in an invisible labyrinth.
Sammy- I was really glad to see this one too. It’s like going to the doctor and hearing a list of symptoms and explanations that perfectly diagnoses the problem ; it’s a relief to know that limerence is a something.
I can get tongue tied sometimes, but that’s not as typical for me. More often, when I’m in that heightened state I will cover my mouth with my hand and fidgit with my feet. But the hyper-awareness fits me to a T. I can actually feel the potential or actual glimmer as an electric current that’s outgoing or incoming. When I was younger I would actually feel myself getting sparkly, and I thought I could turn it on and off. I would describe it as different than flirting. I can’t remember exactly how DrL described it, but it felt like being on a different wavelength somehow. At this point in my life I do think I could recognize it and turn it off, as it were. It’s definitely lost its appeal.
For me, the most difficult thing to deal with, and the slowest to leave, are the intrusive thoughts. They are like the stock information scrolling under the main plot of my life all the time. Thankfully, they are much less distracting now, but I’d really love for them to be gone altogether. My past LE’s are powerless now; I’m looking forward to the relief of this one being gone too.
I think the magic formula may be time plus distance plus intentional living…. with awareness and caution moving forward.
@Jane. “But the hyper-awareness fits me to a T. I can actually feel the potential or actual glimmer as an electric current that’s outgoing or incoming. When I was younger I would actually feel myself getting sparkly, and I thought I could turn it on and off. I would describe it as different than flirting. I can’t remember exactly how DrL described it, but it felt like being on a different wavelength somehow.”
Yup, I can definitely relate to this description. You’re always vaguely conscious of where they are in the room relative to you, even if not looking at them. You feel an increase of nervous energy, etc. I think most of my feelings are in my belly at times. I become very, very still, like I’m afraid one false move will scare LO away. I become clumsy. Once or twice I have almost fallen over in presence of LOs/potential LOs. Onlookers must think I’m a hopeless idiot! Haha!
I know what you mean about electricity. At first I thought, “Oh, that’s what sexual tension feels like.
When characters joke about sexual tension on TV, this must be what they mean.” But the “tension” didn’t go away and I realised something else was up – LO had somehow invaded my mind like a parasite and wouldn’t get out. I didn’t need them around to feel weird. I felt weird all the time!
I realise, in high school, I might have spent three years trying to get some girl’s attention without even realising that was what I was doing and treasuring her (frequently bland/possibly bored) responses. This limerence business is awful! Definitely the opposite of purposeful living. But fantasy has always had huge appeal to me. Maybe it all started when I was a child and trying to “block out” the voice of my controlling mother…
It’s funny because up until now I never thought the symptoms of a limerent experience were out of the ordinary. It was only after having I guess you would call it a “severe reaction” to my latest LO did I begin to question my behavior.
First in anticipating seeing him in any situation or any event I became so nervous I would started shaking, my heart would started racing, and I would become totally flushed. Fortunately most of the time I was alone and able to bring myself under control before venturing out into public. Second I could not sleep – on average I was getting maybe 3 to 4 hours a night. Third he occupied my thoughts constantly, and I was always planning ways to possibly run into him. Fourth I lost 30 lbs with hardly any effort at all. I guess that is a good symptom.
In many ways I acted like a true addict, if I couldn’t see him and I needed a fix daydreaming would suffice. About 4 months in daydreaming wasn’t enough, boy did I suffer. 9 months, 5 of which have been NC, I think I have recovered though if I see him again who knows what will happen. In retrospect I have to laugh because it was all so crazy. I can honestly say I’m glad it’s over, and I have my life back.
Thanks for sharing, lifelonglimerent. As Jane has already pointed out, obvious symptoms can be a relief because they “prove” limerence is a real thing (biology) and not just something we cook up in our imaginations.
Yes, I’ve noticed dramatic weight loss in one or two friends, and also the flushing, etc. When I have a friend with limerent symptoms, I always try to give that friend extra consideration. I doubt any of these friends are limerent for me in particular (thank God!). However, I still want to put them at their ease. I feel protective towards them – they just seem so shaky and vulnerable! (If they don’t faint from nerves, they’ll faint from hunger).
I’d hazard a guess that non-limerents have no idea how debilitating these symptoms are in social situations such as parties. Limerence impairs normal functioning to such an extent sometimes that I think it should be classed as a temporary disability. Loss of appetite and insomnia can both go on for years and people don’t automatically identify the root cause.
Sammy,
I don’t know if you’ve experienced this, but it took me MONTHS of seeing my LO at work and talking with him almost every day to really get a good look at him. Sounds crazy, but he was this white blur of hotness before that. And when I really did see him, I said to myself: Is that what he looks like? I mean, he looked fine, but I had imagined him as James Dean! Friends have asked me what attracted me to him if it wasn’t his appearance, but what attracts me to an LO has very little to do with appearance. (I think initial attraction for most people is largely tied in to the other person’s appearance, so they didn’t get it.)
@Marcia. That is very interesting. I’ve certainly felt “dazzled” around potential LOs and LOs – some were good-looking and others just ordinary-looking. Initially, I thought the “dazzled” feeling must be because they’re gorgeous. But no, in hindsight, I think the “dazzle” effect comes from emotions in our limbic systems and chemicals flooding our brains.
“A white blur of hotness” is a great way to describe it. This people become (to us) much more than the sum total of their body parts. The attractiveness goes way beyond looks. Looking at them is like looking at the sun – it’s something you do at your own risk! Haha!
What initially attracts me to LOs? Well, it varies person to person. One paid me a really nice compliment (she said she liked a short story I’d written) and things spiralled out of control from there (I started dreaming about her all the time). Another was a really good listener and had a sympathetic look in her eyes when I talked to her. It was the expression in her eyes that drew me in, not the beauty of the eyes and/or face. I ended up believing in my head she was beautiful, even though she told me outright other guys (and girls) didn’t find her attractive.
For me, for limerence to happen, an exchange with some emotional content has to take place. Good looks alone will result in crushes (short-lived infatuations) but good looks don’t constitute a “glimmer” in themselves. The good-looking human must act slightly interested.
Sammy,
“Looking at them is like looking at the sun – it’s something you do at your own risk!”
Yes, exactly. My best friend repeatedly asked me what about my LO had attracted me. I couldn’t answer her. I just wanted to be around him because, well, it felt so good. Other people seem to date several people until they find someone they like, and feelings take a while to grow. Whereas a limerent has zeroed in on the LO and everyone else pales in comparison.
“Good looks alone will result in crushes (short-lived infatuations) but good looks don’t constitute a “glimmer” in themselves. ”
Yes, I had some lightweight crushes on other people during my last LE but they didn’t hang in my mind they like the LO. Actually, I started spending time with other men during the LE to get my mind off of the LO, was not available. I know that’s not fair to the other men, but the situations were all very casual.
@Marcia. You’ve raised many good points here that highlight the difference in the way limerents and non-limerents think.
Funny story: I had an English teacher in grade nine when we were studying Shakespeare and she cracked up laughing over Romeo’s description of Juliet’s looks. She thought Romeo’s gazing-up-at-balcony speech/comparing Juliet to the moon was over-the-top, ridiculous, etc. I guess Mrs J never experienced limerence!!
Also had a music teacher at school who thought Tchaikovsky’s music for Romeo and Juliet over-the-top, sickly sweet, etc. I guess she too was non-limerent. Although she was a strange lady to begin with. She claimed she “disliked all boys except her husband”!
I don’t think non-limerents will ever understand the emotional charge generated by a LE. This man you like at work – you could interview a thousand women and they might all tell you he’s “nothing special”. But your limerent brain has decided that he’s a unicorn (a magical being) even though your rational brain knows unicorns don’t exist.
Incidentally, I dated quite a bit in my twenties and was very offended by the “dating lots of people at once” practice, which is incredibly common. I thought it indicated the dater involved wasn’t serious about any of the prospects. However, that may have been my limerent brain talking. I see the logic of it now I’m older.
Sammy,
“Funny story: I had an English teacher in grade nine when we were studying Shakespeare and she cracked up laughing over Romeo’s description of Juliet’s looks.”
I avoid people like your teacher. They’re too practical, and since 90% of life is practicality, I don’t think we need more! Or maybe it was a defense mechanism on her part — deep down she knew she’d never inspired such passion in someone! HA
“This man you like at work …”
I don’t work there anymore. I had to get away from him. Well him and the job. Both were dead-ends, but I can tell you NC does not work. I will never see him or talk to him again, but I won’t lie: I would pay money to hear from him.
“Incidentally, I dated quite a bit in my twenties and was very offended by the “dating lots of people at once” practice … I see the logic of it now I’m older.”
I also see the logic of it as I’ve gotten older. I’m not talking about sleeping with multiple people. Just dating. You go on one first date here, another first date with someone else, a second date with a third guy, and then if you make it to dates 3 or 4 with someone (presumably someone you really like), you narrow it down to one person. I think it is good practice. In theory, it is supposed to prevent someone from getting fixated on one person, which us limerents are known to do.
@Jane. In her book, Dorothy Tennov talks about how limerents kind of get stuck on the words of LO, as if LO’s words (and behaviour) are open to permanent review. “What did he/she mean by that, etc?” I guess it’s all part of rumination. I wonder have you experienced something like this? For example, has your LO said a particular sentence and you keep going over that sentence in your mind and find ten different meanings for that one sentence? Have you almost had arguments with LO in your head over something LO said?
Other limerents, please feel free to chime in. Anyone else had the “permanent review” thing happen?
Oh, absolutely!! The thing about an EA is that it’s ALL words. And ours was full of uncountable words. But I do have a few that have extra sticking power. I had a professor once who said that we should never say that “it’s only words” because words are so incredibly powerful- they have the ability to shape whole governments and cultures: certainly emotions and beliefs. I am so careful about rumination. I read (here? somewhere else?) that your brain doesn’t know the difference between eating chocolate and thinking about eating chocolate.. and that seems to be true for me in the rumination. Like Jaideux, there are some things that my LO said that hit that “I know that’s true, and I’m so happy that you can see it” button in me. There are some things in me that I felt hadn’t been seen in a long, long time, and that he saw them felt like a confirmation and a relief. But that was the great danger for me. It was the sticky part. What’s the quote- never put the key to your happiness in someone else’s pocket? That’s what I was doing. And the things that I was doing to get the acknowledgement and feelings of being seen and understood, the deception and emotional theft, corroded the things I was getting anyway. These days I am trying to find that sense of homeness from myself and my beliefs. Ironically, it has freed my SO and I up to offer that to each other (as it’s now not a demand but a natural part of our relationship).
In my relationship with this LO, we never had anything negative said between us. One time we had an argument, but it wasn’t anything that went too deep. In my other LE’s in my life, I was never close enough to them to have anything hurtful said- it was all fantasy in my head, and in that fantasy there was never anything rude said. Ha.
I kind of went off on a tangent, Sammy, and didn’t fully answer your question. The one thing I do tend to go over in my head again and again is the closing conversation that I know we will never have. I think about writing a goodbye letter that I would destroy, but it seems pointless, and if the circumstance came up that would allow us to have the conversation ever came up, it would mean so many other things had gone wrong that I’m sure it would be the bottom of the list for me. I can get stuck in wanting him to fully understand everything from my point of view, just the closure that I believe is an illusion but seems so amazing if it could happen. That’s the loop for me, and I”m hopeful it will go away in time.
@Jane. Oh yes. The closing conversation (that never happens)! Even when writing completely ordinary letters to my LO, I did a ridiculous number of drafts – as if one spelling mistake or grammar error was going to make her think less of me or “alter the course of our shared destiny”. Madness!
And I understand how emotional affairs come about, though I never consciously thought of mine in those terms, only as some kind of glorified friendship. The desire to be understood is soooo strong and the feeling that “only this person truly gets me, no one else”.
“Never put the key to your happiness in someone else’s pocket.”
Jane, that quote is so cool – I’ll have to remember that one.
My LO didn’t say mean things exactly. But she had no problems pointing out when my behaviour or taste in books, music, etc, was immature compared to her standards or the standards of her group of friends. And she was right – I was immature for my age and she was very grown-up for her age (Perhaps wrongly, I assumed we were the same level of maturity). I think the 50/50 mix of compliments and criticisms ultimately played into the uncertainty. I kept a tally of positive and negative remarks in my head.
But your professor is right – words can certainly haunt us for years after they’re uttered and even affect the choices we make in life.
OMG, I’ve done so much reviewing, I’ve made myself ill, although I’m finally beginning to get better. Not only do some conversations still replay unbidden in my head just about every day–especially our very last in-person misunderstanding a year ago–I actually have a .pdf file with ALL OUR TEXTS. Over 10,000 exchanges. Talk about permanent review. Every once in a while I’ll go back and read a particular section and think, “Oh, THAT’s what she meant!” realizing I had it so wrong at the time. It’s easy to see now that I often saw what I wanted to see. And that is giving me a clearer head about it all. I hope someday I’ll go in to view that file and…forget the password and…I’ll be sad. But only a little and not for long.
@Landry
There is a “Young Adult” book called ‘Getting over Garrett Delaney’ which is surprisingly enjoyable. Your pdf file reminds me of the protagonists project and it’s eventuality. It’s a good light read and definitely speaks to limerence with a happy ending.
Thank you! I’ll check that out. The YA genre certainly speaks to my limerent self!
@Sammy,
Yep, guilty. I still remember the most meaningful complements and appreciative observations former LO’s gave, and also rehearse what clever and nonchalant thing I will say shall our paths cross again, etc. I have to force myself to stop it because these flights of fancy can seem SO REAL and immediate that I find my heartbeat accelerating as I ponder them.
I think these things are imbedded in my psyche for life, and since they made me so happy at the time, I see no reason to discount their complementary content, they are memories that belong to me and me alone and as long as I don’t live exclusively in this room full of treasured memories, I may as well let them be.
@Jaidexu. Your attitude to the situation sounds really healthy – you’re taking the positive and still keeping things in perspective.
One of my LOs said some lovely things about me, but also made some harsh-but-true criticisms. She was like one of those stern schoolteachers, who push their best students harder because they know said students can do better. If you’re one of those bright but lazy students, though, it’s like: “Why is Miss picking on me again? I didn’t do nothin’!”
Honestly, if my LO didn’t make those criticisms, I wouldn’t have listened to them and learnt from them. So maybe I should thank my LO for that – she made me a better person by being critical. Though, of course, I hated her at the time and felt deeply humiliated. Remembering the things she said about me wasn’t always an undiluted pleasure, since she had a habit of pointing out my flaws in a very no-nonsense fashion! Haha!
Sorry. That should be “Jaideux”. Clumsy typing!
@Sammy
I kind of like ‘Jaidexu.’
It sounds so sci-fi!
THIS!! I’ve been NC for a couple months now and was really making strides in the ‘recovery’ process, then BOOM a week of what I’ll call limerent attacks.
The good part is that I know what the trigger was. I saw LO by chance when dropping SO off at work. LO was walking into the building, our eyes met and he waved at me. (I used to work there too, long story.)
Cue the familiar rush of euphoric electricity, followed by a visit from our old buddy rumination. I’d hoped it would be easier, but my limerent brain keeps screaming, “MORE! Another hit, just one more *grins evilly*”
So, that’s where I’m at. Building my resolve back up to start NC again. Wish me luck!
@DoubleLime. Well, at least you can be sure it’s limerence you’re dealing with, as your biology here is reacting in a typical limerent fashion. I.e. you receive something from LO that could be interpreted as positive reciprocation (eye contact, a wave) and the relevant circuits in your brain flood with ecstasy.
A non-limerent person would see the wave, interpret it as mere friendliness, maybe feel happy that an old chum acknowledged them, and go about their business without a second thought. However, there would be no feelings of euphoria involved and hence no incentive for rumination afterwards.
I know you’re in an unfortunate situation now, but this is an almost perfect illustration of something I’m sure only happens to limerent people. We get “high” off of other people (LOs and potential LOs), as weird as that sounds. It’s great you’re self-aware because now you can observe your own thoughts and emotional reactions and know what those reactions mean in biochemical terms.
Hey Sammy, thanks for the reply! Yes, being able to recognize the limerence for what it is and find out that it’s an actual thing that other people deal with too is what makes me so glad to have found this blog.
I just read DRL’s article, and it makes me sad to think that all these wonderful (and awful) reactions are probably taking place without the realisation of most LOs. That is to say, all the big emotions, desperate yearning, etc, take place inside the limerent and may not be visible on the surface. One of my LOs liked me because I impressed her with my “quiet strength”. (Little did she know! Hahaha!)
Some really sensitive LOs might pick up on poorly-disguised biological reactions, but they’re usually the ones who say “I can’t put my finger on it, or explain why, but so-and-so (the limerent person) makes me feel uncomfortable”.
Re-read the article, I should say. 🙂
Hi, very very interesting. At least I know understand what’s happening in my brain, and I am convicted that it’s worth resisting (even though right now, 10.pm, I am still wondering if I should try to reach my LO or not)
One question please: I heard somewhere than increasing the level of serotonine can help to regulate the dopamine, is that true please?
On a side note, thank you so much for our help. I have been through lots of different painfull states of mind in my life, but, appart of losing somebody close, I have not experienced anything as tough as limerence, IMO.
Hi Johnny,
Good question about serotonin. To be honest, I’ve avoided talking much about it, because the roles of serotonin in the brain are not easy to interpret. It’s definitely central to mood regulation, and so if low mood is a trigger for limerence then increasing serotonin could be useful. But, serotonin is also involved in reward and motivation, and so it isn’t simply the opposite of dopamine. There’s also some evidence that serotonin regulates impulsivity, but again, it’s confusing. Impulsiveness is associated with increased serotonin levels, but inhibition of serotonin release increases impulsive behaviour.
SSRIs stablise mood, and so could help to mitigate limerent emotional instability, but SSRIs (despite their name) do a lot more than simply elevating serotonin so it’s hard to pin down how they might affect any individual (and you should obviously not mess around with antidepressants without medical supervision).
In summary, serotonin function is maddeningly complex.
Hi Doc,
Thanks for the clarification.
To be honest, I haven’t considered taking SSRIs or any other medication. I am just trying to implement some food that are supposed to boost the serotonin level in my everyday diet , such as: Pineapples, eggs, wallnuts, banana, etc… Don’t know if that’s reliable, but sometimes i am experiencing some free moments , during which I am able to care less about my LO and to think about something else (nearly a back to normal), but that’s only for a couple of hours, after which I am feelling myself getting back down into the limbos of limerence. If that’s not due to the potential extra serotonin supplied by my food, what is it due to, in your opinion?
Cheers,
Johnny