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Love is a sweet little kitten you take in from the cold for the night. She has a tag, I'm going to try to contact the owners tonight and again in the morning.
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Love is
Love is unselfish,understanding and kind.For it sees with its heart.And not with its mind.
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love is...
...When you wake up...and everything seems to be moving a thousand miles a minute... then you find your shirt pressed and your coffee ready.
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Doing little things just because...that bring a smile...or that just make life a little bit easier...
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Love is...all the support and understanding He gives me when I need it most, He is my rock
Love is...Holding me in His arms until I fall asleep before finishing His work on the computer Love is...being my best friend |
"Love from one being to another can only be that two solitudes come nearer, recognize and protect and comfort each other."
--Han Suyin |
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smitten
Love is.....leaving her to sleep in bed while getting up to take a shower--then smelling bacon when I step out of the bathroom :-)
Love is....taking a bus 2 hours away from me, meeting her there--so we can drive the last two hours home together. |
Love is.....taking the initiative.
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Love is....
...A big ole mystery. You don't find it; it finds you.
...A cool drink on a hot summer day |
What you make of it.
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Love is...
...her smile :)
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Love is...
A warm blanket and crackling fireplace on a cold winter night.
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the very whole - the very definition of love in its most pure form is complete with one word (for me, anyway).
it is: (her). |
Knowing you are home.
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Love is ?
The Ultimate Illusion!
I might be a little jaded right now but it's how I feel about it ! With a twist of bitter xo |
Okay, forgive me for being unromantic, but "love" is an emotional interpretation of the physiological effect of hormones. Three stages of love have been proposed – lust, attraction and attachment. Each stage is possibly driven by different hormones and chemicals.
(Condensed from http://www.youramazingbrain.org/lovesex/sciencelove.htm) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~ Stage 1: Lust This first stage of love is driven by the sex hormones testosterone and estrogen, in both men and women. Stage 2: Attraction In this phase, you are love-struck and can think of little else. Scientists think that three main neurotransmitters are involved in this stage: Adrenaline The initial stages of falling for someone activates your stress response, increasing your blood levels of adrenalin and cortisol. This has the effect that when you encounter your new love, you start to sweat, your heart races and your mouth goes dry. Dopamine The brains of newly love struck couples were examined. It was discovered they have high levels of the neurotransmitter dopamine. This chemical stimulates ‘desire and reward’ by triggering an intense rush of pleasure. It has the same effect on the brain as taking cocaine! Couples often show the signs of surging dopamine: increased energy, less need for sleep or food, focused attention and exquisite delight in smallest details of the relationship . Serotonin This is one of love's most important chemicals and may explain why when you’re falling in love, your new lover keeps popping into your thoughts. An experiment showed that early love (the attraction phase) actually changes the way you think. A psychiatrist tested twenty couples who'd been madly in love for less than six months to see if the brain mechanisms that cause you to constantly think about your lover were related to the brain mechanisms of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder. Blood samples from the lovers showed that serotonin levels of new lovers were equivalent to the low serotonin levels of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder patients. Love needs to be blind! Newly smitten lovers often idealize their partner, magnifying their virtues and explaining away their flaws. New couples also exalt the relationship itself. It's very common to think they have a relationship that's closer and more special than anyone else's. Psychologists think we need this rose-tinted view. It makes us want to stay together to enter the next stage of love. Stage 3: Attachment Attachment is the bond that keeps couples together long enough for them to have and raise children. Scientists think there might be two major hormones involved in attachment: Oxytocin Oxytocin is a powerful hormone released by men and women during orgasm. It probably deepens the feelings of attachment and makes couples feel much closer to one another after they have had sex. The theory goes that the more sex a couple has, the deeper their bond becomes. Oxytocin also seems to help cement the strong bond between mother and baby and is released during childbirth. It is also responsible for a mother’s breast automatically releasing milk at the mere sight or sound of her young baby. It has been shown that if you block the natural release of oxytocin in sheep and rats, they reject their own young. Conversely, injecting oxytocin into female rats who’ve never had sex, caused them to fawn over another female’s young as if they were their own. Vasopressin Its potential role in long-term relationships was discovered when scientists looked at the prairie vole. Prairie voles indulge in far more sex than is strictly necessary for the purposes of reproduction. They also – like humans - form fairly stable pair-bonds. When male prairie voles were given a drug that suppressed the effect of vasopressin, the bond with their partner deteriorated immediately (they lost their devotion and failed to protect their partner from new suitors). |
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love is coming home to my wife sleeping in our bed kitty girl mewing at me as I trudge up the stairs love is being in love with my best friend rushing home to be with her our little family and this amazing life ..
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Love is...
...when you look into someone's eyes...and see everything you need
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