Using fMRI (functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging) technology, researchers have discovered that when a love junkie looks at a photo of their new partner or recalls a romantic memory, their brain lights up in the same regions as a cocaine addict’s brain when they see a line of powder.
We’ve all heard the term “love junkie.” It conjures an image of someone who hops from one intense relationship to the next, chasing the dizzying high of a new connection. But what if being a love junkie wasn't just a personality quirk or a sign of poor boundaries? What if it was a literal, neurological condition—a pattern of addiction visible inside the white and gray matter of your brain? love junkie scan
Enter the Love Junkie Scan .
Recovery means accepting that love is not a firework. Love is a fireplace. It doesn't burn you; it warms the room for decades. But you have to let your brain heal before you can sit by that fire without trying to jump into the flames. What if it was a literal, neurological condition—a