json_metadata | "{"app":"Musing","appTags":["love"],"appCategory":"love","appTitle":"How we define love?","appBody":"<p>Love is a chemical reaction. For at least the first phase, love is a chemical reaction. A substance in our brain called phenylethylamine increases. This substance forces us to secrete dopamine whose effects are similar to the \"amphetamines\" that produce the state of natural euphoria when we are with our partner. The fact that you are attracted to a person is going to be a consequence of some biochemical factors that have to do with smells and visual attraction. When I speak of smells I am not referring to artificial smells, but to the natural smell that people have. Let us remember that we are mammals and as such, we share some particular characteristics with animals. Falling in love can deepen when you manage to find in the other characteristics that resemble yours or that attract you; that is to say, maybe you consciously don't like tall people, but there is something natural, invisible, that can make this type of people attract you. What we do after that first phase is a consequence of that state of euphoria in which we find ourselves. For example, thinking about the other person, laughing and crying for nothing, losing the appetite, idealization of the other person, feeling that the other person is the center. All these reactions are a consequence of the process of falling in love that is taking place in you. </p>","appDepth":2,"appParentPermlink":"p3jtpa4l5","appParentAuthor":"saiful39","musingAppId":"aU2p3C3a8N","musingAppVersion":"1.1","musingPostType":"answer"}" |
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