- Source: Lovesickness
- Source: Love Sickness
Lovesickness refers to an affliction that can produce negative feelings when deeply in love, during the absence of a loved one or when love is unrequited.
The term "lovesickness" is rarely used in modern medicine and psychology, though new research is emerging on the impact of heartbreak on the body and mind.
History
In the medical texts of ancient Greece and Rome, lovesickness was characterized as a "depressive" disease, "typified by sadness, insomnia, despondency, dejection, physical debility, and blinking." In Hippocratic texts, "love melancholy" is expected as a result of passionate love. Lovesickness could be cured through the acquisition of the person of interest, such as in the case of Prince Antiochus.
In ancient literature, however, lovesickness manifested itself in "violent and manic" behavior. In ancient Greece, Euripides' play Medea portrays Medea's descent into "violence and mania" as a result of her lovesickness for Jason; meanwhile, in ancient Rome, Virgil's Dido has a manic reaction to the betrayal of her lover, Aeneas, and commits suicide. Dido's case is especially interesting, as the cause of her lovesickness is attributed to the meddling of the gods Juno and Venus.
In the Middle Ages, unrequited love was considered "a trauma which, for the medieval melancholic, was difficult to relieve." Treatments included light therapy, rest, exposure to nature, and a diet of lamb, lettuce, fish, eggs, and ripe fruit.
In both antiquity and the Middle Ages, lovesickness was often explained by an imbalance in the humors. An excess of black bile, the humor correlated with melancholy, was usually considered the cause.
Modern research
In 1915, Sigmund Freud asked rhetorically, "Isn't what we mean by 'falling in love' a kind of sickness and craziness, an illusion, a blindness to what the loved person is really like?"
Scientific study on the topic of lovesickness has found that those in love experience a kind of high similar to that caused by illicit drugs such as cocaine. In the brain, certain neurotransmitters — phenethylamine, dopamine, norepinephrine and oxytocin — elicit the feeling of high from "love" or "falling in love" using twelve different regions of the brain. These neurotransmitters mimic the feeling of amphetamines.
On average, a psychologist does not get referrals from general practitioners mentioning "lovesickness", although this can be prevalent through the language of what the patient feels. With the common symptoms of lovesickness being related to other mental diseases, it is often misdiagnosed or it is found that with all the illnesses one could be facing, love is the underlying problem. This is incredibly dangerous when one does not seek help or cannot cope because love has been known to be fatal (a consequence of which might be attempted suicide, thus dramatising the ancient contention that love can be fatal).
In his book The Social Nature of Mental Illness, Len Bowers postulates that although physiological differences exist in the brains of those that are deemed "mentally ill", there are several other criteria that must be met before the differences can be called a malfunction. It is possible, therefore, that many mental illnesses (such as lovesickness) will never bear strong enough evidence to clinically warrant "legitimate" affliction by clinical standards without further correspondingly parasympathetic criteria of established dysfunction(s).
Frank Tallis, a researcher of love and lovesickness, suggests in his 2005 article that lovesickness occurs when one is "truly, madly, deeply" in love and should be taken more seriously by medical professionals.
Tallis includes a list of common symptoms of lovesickness in the following:
Mania - an abnormally elevated mood or inflated self-esteem
Depression, hopelessness, or helplessness
Nausea
Tearfulness
Insomnia, which may lead to fatigue
Lack of concentration
Loss of appetite or overeating
Stress
Obsessive-compulsive disorder - preoccupation and hoarding valueless but superstitiously resonant items
Dizziness and confusion
Body tremors, intrusive thoughts, or frequent flashbacks
Mood swings
According to Tallis, many symptoms of lovesickness can be categorized under the DSM-IV and the ICD-10. Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is a symptom of lovesickness because it includes a preoccupation. A further study conducted by Italian psychiatrist Donatella Marazitti found that people who were in the early romantic phase of a love relationship had their serotonin levels drop to levels found in patients with OCD. This level is significantly lower than that of an average or healthy person.
In the arts
William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet portrays the true madness of "love" and the grief that the two young, infatuated lovers feel. When Romeo finds his love dead (or so he believes), with the thought of living without his "true love", the grief and depression overcomes him and he takes his own life. After waking and seeing his dead body, Juliet is overcome with despair and takes her own life.
Gothic metal songs thematize lovesickness from Medieval literary influences. "This emotional and physical distress is a key element of fin'amor that echoes into Gothic metal", according to The Oxford Handbook of Music and Medievalism. "In particular, lovesickness was associated with desires and passions that remained unfulfilled, resulting in symptoms such as sleeplessness, sighing, and loss of appetite, all of which were considered manifestations of the mind's efforts to restrain its passions."
The lyrics to American R&B singer Bilal's song "Something to Hold on To" (from the album Love for Sale) are described as a plea to romantic devotion hastily written in a moment of lovesickness.
Bob Dylan's song "Love Sick," from his 1997 album Time Out of Mind, portrays the conflicting feelings (betrayal and intense love) that come with lovesickness:
I’m sick of love…I wish I’d never met youI’m sick of love…I’m trying to forget you
Just don't know what to doI'd give anything to be with you
See also
Affectional bond
Broken heart
Hi-wa itck, a Mojave Indian syndrome triggered by separation of a loved one
Limerence
Lovestruck
Obsessive love disorder
Triangular theory of love
References
Further reading
Tallis, Frank (2005). Love Sick: Love as a Mental Illness.
Vaughn, Tricia (2013). "Love sickness is real, and the high it provides looks a lot like cocaine usage".
Bowers, Len (2000). The social nature of mental illness. London: Routledge. ISBN 0415227771.
King, Helen (2008). "The Secret Wound: Love, Melancholy and Early Modern Romance (review)". Bulletin of the History of Medicine. 82 (2): 445–446. doi:10.1353/bhm.0.0009. S2CID 71371213.
Love Sickness or lovesickness, may refer to:
Lovesickness, an affliction striking those deeply in love
Music
"LoveSickness" (song), a 2023 song by Don Tolliver off the album Love Sick (album)
"Love Sickness" (song), a 1965 song by Chuck Barris
"Love Sickness" (song), a 2001 song by Robert Cray off the album Shoulda Been Home
"Love Sickness" (song) (Chinese: 思念是一種病), a 2006 song by Chang Chen-yue that was nominated for the 19th Golden Melody Awards
"Lovesickness" (song) (Japanese: 愛の病, romanized: Ai no Yamai, a 2000 song by Aiko off the album Sakura no Ki no Shita
"Lovesickness" (song), a 2018 song; see Music of Kids on the Slope
"Liebeskummer" (song) (German: Lovesickness), a 1994 song by Die Flippers off the album Träume einer Nacht
"Maladie d'amour" (song) (French: Love Sickness), a French West Indies folk song
"Mal de Amores" (song) (Spanish: Love Sickness), a 2007 song by DJ Nelson off the album Flow la Discoteka 2
"Mal de Amores" (song) (Spanish: Lovesickness), a 1999 song by Enanitos Verdes off the album Nectar (Enanitos Verdes album)
"Love Sickness" (single), a 1992 single by Band of Oz
"A Love Sickness" (song), a 2006 song; see Death Note original soundtracks
Stage and screen
Maldeamores (film) (Spanish: Lovesickness), a 2007 Puerto-Rican film
Love Sickness (film), a 2000 Thai film by Thunska Pansittivorakul
Хвороба кохання (film) (Ukrainian: Love Sickness), a 2013 Ukrainian film by Olena Demyanenko
Le mal d'amour (play) (French: Love Sickness), a 1955 stageplay by Marcel Achard
"Love Sickness" (episode) Japanese: 恋の病の段), a 1993 TV episode of Nintama Rantarō (season 1)
"Lovesickness" (episode), a 1999 TV episode of The Real World: Hawaii
Literature
"Love Sickness" (story), a 1987 story by Geoff Ryman that won the BSFA Award
Lovesickness: Junji Ito Story Collection, a 1996 manga comic by Junji Ito
"Lovesickness" (chapter), a serialized manga chapter of the Japanese comic book Chibi Vampire; see List of Chibi Vampire chapters
"Lovesickness" (chapter), a serialized manga chapter of the Japanese comic book The Wallflower; see List of The Wallflower chapters
"Lovesickness" (chapter) (Japanese: 恋情, romanized: Renjō), a serialized manga chapter of the Japanese comic book Magi: The Labyrinth of Magic; see List of Magi: The Labyrinth of Magic chapters
"Lovesickness" (chapter) (Japanese: 恋わずらい, romanized: Koiwazurai), a 2021 serialized manga chapter of the Japanese comic book Farewell, My Dear Cramer
Other uses
love sickness, a fictional disease from One Piece; see List of fictional diseases
"Lovesickness" (painting), a 1912 painting by Francisco Pradilla Ortiz
See also
"Song of Love Sickness" (song) (Chinese: 相思曲), a 2012 song by Yuan Shanshan
All pages with titles containing Love Sickness
All pages with titles containing Lovesickness
Love Sick (disambiguation)
Maladie d'amour (disambiguation) (French: Lovesickness)
Mal de amores (disambiguation)(Spanish: Lovesick)
Sickness (disambiguation)
Love (disambiguation)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Song Weilong (pemeran)
- Maldeamores
- Lovesickness
- Love Sick (album)
- The Lovesick Maiden
- Lovesickness: Junji Ito Story Collection
- Limerence
- Love Sickness
- Love Sick
- List of Tomorrow X Together live performances
- Lovesick (2014 film)
- Lovesick (TV series)