What’s Wrong with Calling Love an Addiction?

This post was originally published on this site

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

SOMETIMES IT HURTS LIKE ONE – 

Mar. 22, 2022 – It’s typical to find your mind preoccupied with a love interest during the “honeymoon phase,” when you’re first falling for someone, explains Omar Ruiz, licensed therapist and founder of TalkThinkThrive. 

But if pervasive thoughts about a particular person, or the idea of love in general, start to negatively affect your job, schoolwork, sleep, or any other areas of your life, that may pose some cause for concern.  Missing a partner is very common. But if you feel unbearable distress when they’re not around, Ruiz says that may signal what some call love addiction — an unhealthy fixation, in other words. 

You may even find yourself avoiding circumstances that would separate you from your love interest, says Gail Saltz, MD, a psychiatrist and clinical associate professor of psychiatry at The NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital. 

For example, you might: 
skip work
ditch school
cancel plans with friends
avoid following through on family commitments

more@Healthline

The post What’s Wrong with Calling Love an Addiction? appeared first on Addiction/Recovery eBulletin.