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Sabtu, 07 Februari 2009

The Power of Love

Love is the best antidepressant—but many of our ideas about it are wrong. The less love you have, the more depressed you are likely to feel.>>>By: Ellen McGrath>>>


Love is as critical for your mind and body as oxygen. It's not negotiable. The more connected you are, thehealthier you will be both physically and emotionally. The less connected you are, the more you are at risk.It is also true that the less love you have, the more depression you are likely to experience in your life. Love is probably the best antidepressant there is because one of the most common sources of depression is feeling unloved. Most depressed people don't love themselves and they do not feel loved by others. They also are very self-focused, making them less attractive to others and depriving them of opportunities to learn the skills of love.
There is a mythology in our culture that love just happens. As a result, the depressed often sit around passively waiting for someone to love them. But love doesn't work that way. To get love and keep love you have to go out and be active and learn a variety of specific skills.Most of us get our ideas of love from popular culture. We come to believe that love is something that sweeps us off our feet. But the pop-culture ideal of love consists of unrealistic images created for entertainment, which is one reason so many of us are set up to be depressed. It's part of our national vulnerability, like eating junk food, constantly stimulated by images of instant gratification. We think it is love when it's simply distraction and infatuation.One consequence is that when we hit real love we become upset and disappointed because there are many things that do not fit the cultural ideal. Some of us get demanding and controlling, wanting someone else to do what we think our ideal of romance should be, without realizing our ideal is misplaced.
It is not only possible but necessary to change one's approach to love to ward off depression. Follow these action strategies to get more of what you want out of life—to love and be loved.Recognize the difference between limerance and love.
Limerance is the psychological state of deep infatuation. It feels good but rarely lasts. Limerance is that first stage of mad attraction whereby all the hormones are flowing and things feel so right. Limerance lasts, on average, six months. It can progress to love. Love mostly starts out as limerance, but limerance doesn't always evolve into love.Know that love is a learned skill, not something that comes from hormones or emotion particularly. Erich Fromm called it "an act of will." If you don't learn the skills of love you virtually guarantee that you will be depressed, not only because you will not be connected enough but because you will have many failure experiences.
Learn good communication skills. They are a means by which you develop trust and intensify connection. The more you can communicate the less depressed you will be because you will feel known and understood.There are always core differences between two people, no matter how good or close you are, and if the relationship is going right those differences surface. The issue then is to identify the differences and negotiate them so that they don't distance you or kill the relationship.You do that by understanding where the other person is coming from, who that person is, and by being able to represent yourself. When the differences are known you must be able to negotiate and compromise on them until you find a common ground that works for both

Love

Love (religious views)
Whether religious love can be expressed in similar terms to interpersonal love is a matter for philosophical debate. Religious 'love' might be considered a euphemistic term, more closely describing feelings of deference or acquiescence. Christians use the term love to express the devotion the follower has to God. This love can be expressed by prayer, service, good deeds, and personal sacrifice. Reciprocally, God loves all of creation, but especially the true Christian. But, with "religious" love there comes many interpretations.Contents[hide]
1 Specific religious views
1.1 Bahá'
1.4 Hindu
Specific religious views
Bahá'í"
Love is the mystery of divine revelations! Love is the effulgent manifestation! Love is the spiritual fulfilment! Love is the light of the Kingdom! Love is the breath of the Holy Spirit inspired into the human spirit! Love is the cause of the manifestation of the Truth (God) in the phenomenal world!. Love is the necessary tie proceeding from the realities of things through divine creation!"—`Abdu'l-Bahá, Tablets of `Abdu'l-Bahá v3[1]Bahá'u'lláh, founder of the Bahá'í Faith, taught that God created humans due to his love for them, and thus humans should in turn love God. `Abdu'l-Bahá, Bahá'u'lláh's son, wrote that love is the greatest power in the world of existence and the true source of eternal happiness. The Bahá'í teachings state that all genuine love is divine, and that love proceeds from God and from humans. God's love is taught to be part of his own essence, and his love for his creatures gives them their material existence, divine grace and eternal life.[2]The Bahá'í teachings state that human love is directed towards both God and other humans; that the love of God attracts the individual toward God, by purifying the human heart and preparing it for the revelation of divine grace. Thus through the love of God, humans become transformed and become self-sacrificing. It is also stated that true love for other humans occurs when people see the beauty of God in other people's souls. The Bahá'í teachings state that Bahá'ís should love all humans regardless of religion, race or community, and also should love their enemies.[2][edit]

Buddhist
In Buddhism, Kāma is sensuous, sexual love. Some believe it to be an obstacle on the path to enlightenment, perceiving it as selfish, but some sects of Buddhism, such as Tantra, believe that sex can be used as a tool to achieve enlightenment.Karunā is compassion and mercy, which reduces the suffering of others. It is complementary to wisdom, and is necessary for enlightenment.Advesa and maitrī are benevolent love. This love is unconditional and requires considerable self-acceptance. This is quite different from the ordinary love, which is usually about attachment and sex, which rarely occur without self-interest. Instead, in Buddhism it refers to detachment and unselfish interest in others' welfare.The Bodhisattva ideal in Tibetan Buddhism involves the complete renunciation of oneself in order to take on the burden of a suffering world. The strongest motivation one has in order to take the path of the Bodhisattva is the idea of salvation within unselfish love for others.[edit]

Christian
1 Corinthians 13:4–7 (NIV)In Works of Love (1847), Soren Kierkegaard, a philosopher, claimed that Christianity is unique because love is a requirement.The New Testament, which was written in Greek, only used two Greek words for love: agapē and philia. However, there are several Greek words for love.Agapē. In the New Testament, agapē is charitable, selfless, altruistic, and unconditional. It is parental love seen as creating goodness in the world, it is the way God is seen to love humanity, and it is seen as the kind of love that Christians aspire to have for others.Philia. Also used in the New Testament, philia is a human response to something that is found to be delightful. Also known as "brotherly love".Eros (sexual love) is never used in the New Testament but is more prominent in the Old Testament.Storge (needy child-to-parent love) only appears in the compound word philostorgos (Rom 12:10).Saint Paul glorifies agapē in the quote above from 1 Corinthians 13, and as the most important virtue of all: "Love never fails. But where there are prophecies, they will cease; where there are tongues, they will be stilled; where there is knowledge, it will pass away." (13:8 NIV).Christians believe that because of God's agapē for humanity he sacrificed his son for them. John the Apostle wrote, "For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved." (John 3:16–17 KJV)Most Christians believe that the greatest commandment is "thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy strength: this is the first commandment"; in addition to the second, "thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself", these are what Jesus Christ called the two greatest commandments (see Mark 12:28–34, Luke 10:25–28, Matthew 22:37–39, Matthew 7:12; cf. Deuteronomy 6:5, Deuteronomy 11:13, Deuteronomy 11:22, Leviticus 19:18, Leviticus 19:34). See also Ministry of Jesus#General Ethics.In the Gospel of John, Jesus said: "A new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another. By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another." (NIV, John 13:34–35; cf. John 15:17). Jesus also taught "Love your enemies." (Matthew 5:44, Luke 6:27).Most Christians also believe that God is the source and essence of love, "Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love." (1 John 4:8 NIV)[edit]

Hindu
In Hinduism kāma is pleasurable, sexual love, personified by the god Kama. For many Hindu schools it is the third end in life.In contrast to kāma, prema or prem refers to elevated love.Karuna is compassion and mercy, which reduces the suffering of others.[edit]

Jewish
Deuteronomy 6:5In Hebrew Ahava is the most Commonly used term for both interpersonal love and love of God. Other related but dissimilar terms are chen] (grace) and chesed, which basically combines the meaning of "affection" and "compassion" and is sometimes rendered in English as "loving-kindness".Judaism employs a wide definition of love, both between people and between man and the Deity. As for the former, the Torah states: "Love your neighbour like yourself" (Leviticus 19:18). As for the latter, one is commanded to love God "with all your heart, with all your soul and with all your might" (Deuteronomy 6:5), taken by the Mishnah (a central text of the Jewish oral law) to refer to good deeds, willingness to sacrifice one's life rather than commit certain serious transgressions, willingness to sacrifice all one's possessions and being grateful to the Lord despite adversity (tractate Berachoth 9:5, tractate Sanhedrin 74a). Rabbinic literature differs how this love can be developed, e.g. by contemplating Divine deeds or witnessing the marvels of nature (Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilchot Yesoday HaTorah, Chapter 2).As for love between marital partners, this is deemed an essential ingredient to life: "See life with the wife you love" (Ecclesiastes 9:9). The Biblical book Song of Songs is a considered a romantically-phrased metaphor of love between God and his people, but in its plain reading reads like a love song.The 20th-century rabbi Eliyahu Eliezer Dessler is frequently quoted as defining love from the Jewish point-of-view as "giving without expecting to take" (from his Michtav me-Eliyahu, vol. I). Romantic love per se has few echoes in Jewish literature, although the medieval rabbi Judah Halevi wrote romantic poetry in Arabic in his younger years (he appears to have regretted this later).[edit]

Mythology
Different cultures have deified love, typically in both male and female form. Even though in monotheistic religions, the God is considered to represent love, there are often angels or similar beings that represent love as well. Here is a list of the gods and goddesses of love in different mythologies.Áine — goddess of fertility and passionate love in Irish mythologyAmor or Cupid — god of passionate love in Roman mythologyAntheia — goddess in Crete mythology of love, flowers, gardens, and marshesAonghus or Aengus— god of beauty, youth, and sensual love in Irish mythologyAphrodite — goddess of beauty and passionate love in Greek mythologyAstarte — goddess of love in Canaanite mythogyEros — god of passionate love in Greek mythologyFreyja — goddess of love, fertility and war in Norse mythologyInanna — goddess of love and war in Sumerian mythologyIshtar — goddess of love and war in Babylonian mythologyKama — god of sensual love in Hindu mythologyMihr — spirit of love in Persian mythologyRati — goddess of passionate love in Hindu mythologyVenus — goddess of beauty and passionate love in Roman mythologyXochipilli — god in Aztec mythologyThis philosophy/religion originated in New Zealand from David John de Cleene, the founder of The Positive Energy Company, a not for profit organisation whose purpose is to unite mankind as one using positive energy and Love..

Physiology of Love

A Philosophical Physiology ofLove
“The heart has its reasons that reason cannot know.” Many a philosopher and poet have pondered one of our most motivating emotions—love—offering little towards the understanding of this most compelling of experiences. While psychology has been deeply involved in the effects of love on humans, it is only recently that the biochemists and physiologists have taken on the inner-workings one of the most perplexing and life-altering experiences that humans have.Einstein once said, “Marriage is the unsuccessful attempt to make something lasting out of an accident.” The newest research would tend to concur with Einstein: Love is indeed unintentional and involuntary—it just “happens.” This in no way suggests that love, or marriage, is a mistake. What it does imply is that love cannot be directed or controlled, is sometimes aimed towards those who cannot return it, and has the capacity to bring great joy or unbearable misery to one’s life. Romanticize love rather than understand its physiological roots, it’s meaning, and its purpose, and you risk losing your mind to it.

The heart—the “feeling” mind—is in every respect as influential in human decision-making as is logic and reason, if not more so. There are anatomical, physiological, and social reasons why this is so. Giving in to one’s heart is not necessarily a liability in creating a happy life, though modern American society would have one believe it is a sign of weakness or stupidity (except in advertising, where it is used to manipulate and persuade us). As much as the logical, reasoning, abstracting, left-hemisphered rational mind is worshipped and groomed in higher education, we all live most of our lives through our feeling, sensing, emotionally-responsive mind. The emotional mind is where our identities lie, where intuition and pre-logical impressions give rise to new insights, where appreciation for beauty and pleasure lie, and where we relate to other living things. The feeling mind is most of who we are.
The most common fallacy of this day is: “I think, therefore everything I am is what I think.” Astonishingly, most people are usually aware of what they think (the internal verbalizations), rather than what they feel. The most difficult task a therapist has is getting a patient to describe his or her own feelings. Many patients literally don’t know what they feel—are cut off from their emotions; others simply find describing them a daunting task. We use language to attempt to transcribe our emotions to another, but much is lost in the translation even for the most expressive of us. (Language is, after all, a translation of what happens in the brain, not the actual event). Worse, most people believe that they can make themselves feel a certain way, can think themselves into a different mood. Not so. A person cannot direct, but only influence his/her emotional life. No one can will him- or herself to love the right mate, to want the right thing, or to be happy after a sad event. We humans frequently castigate ourselves for our failure to will emotional change, when in reality emotion cannot be commanded and does not bend to will.
Anatomy LessonEvolutionary processes are responsible for how the human brain is constructed and functions. Evolution does not happen linearly, progressing along a predictable path. It is a haphazard branching process in which recent developments build atop older structures having more fundamental functions, with each newer structure becoming ever more complex, adding functions, altering the workings of previous structures.

The human brain is a triune organ; three main evolutionary levels of anatomy comprise it:The reptilian brain (brainstem): primitive functions reside here, such as the startle reflex, fear, sex, territorialism, and ritualistic display. It is essential to all automatic functions: heartbeat, breathing, thermostat, swallowing, and visual tracking. The reptilian brain is the oldest of the brain’s structures and is deep within the center of the brain, a bulb of neurons atop the spinal cord.

The mammalian brain (limbic system): anger, love, joy, sadness, shame, pride, happiness, mirth, separation anxiety, etc. are processed here. This is where the identity—personhood—resides. The mammalian brain evolved after the reptilian brain, neatly enveloping the bulb of the brainstem. All mammals, and some birds, possess this second stage of brain structure.The neocortex (reasoning brain): abstraction (art, representation, planning, strategy, symbols, language), free will, communication, and complex skills are processed here. The neocortex is the most recent structure, and is the outermost layer of the brain. Higher mammals and humans have a well-developed neocortex.
The chemistry of primal and recent brain systems is different, evidenced by selective destruction of certain brain cells with specific toxins that leave other structures untouched. Because of this biochemical variance, these “three brains” sometimes have competing interests, creating disharmony and unease.

It is easy for humans to think of themselves as the pinnacle of evolution. However, we are in no way the apex of evolution; we are simply the most recent. We have not been here very long. By far, Komodo dragons and beetles are splendidly successful, and eons older than humans. Nature has yet to show us that our particular kind of intelligence has a decided evolutionary advantage. As evolution continues, nature tries new things, makes many mistakes, and succeeds at only a handful. Nature overproduces. It is grandiose and wasteful in its attempt to ensure survival of just the few who will prevail into new generations. It is quite possible our triune brains may fail us. It is equally possible that new structures will evolve that make complex brains more adaptive than they are now.

What does this have to do with love? Everything. As a mammalian trait, affectionate attachments have survival advantages—not only for mating purposes, but as a security factor in communal living so common with most mammals (including us). We are social animals, and that means very much more than just getting help when we need it, or reproducing. It means truly bonding with others in a way that seems magical.

We share in common with most mammals, a capacity for knowing and loving another that transcends reason, logic, or free will. Our faculty for internally connecting with another of our own kind, or even with a member of a different species, derives from the structure and physiology of our mammalian “feeling” brains. The emotional bond of affectionate attachment is so overwhelming and consuming as to be nearly miraculous. It is as close to mind reading and psychic connection as we—in common experience—can get. The capacity to love, rather than our cognitive skills, may be the very thing that ensures our survival as a species.
Limbic ResonanceOur capacity to emotionally bond with another is mediated through a phenomenon known to physiologists and behaviorists as “limbic resonance.” Limbic resonance is the tuning in to another’s internal state; it is the most reliable way a mammal can know the emotional state of another without the necessity of translation (facial expressions, language). Limbic resonance occurs in all mammals, but is absent in reptiles, fish, and most birds. It occurs through eye contact, and the sensations multiply through mutual recognition and the continual back and forth feedback. Two nervous systems for an instant become in sync. Limbic resonance is the foundation of the “love at first sight” phenomenon, combined with other factors such as programmed attractors described below. Limbic resonance is responsible for that tickle in the pit of your stomach when you look into the eyes of someone you adore. When you feel that tickle, so does the other, and the feeling propagates and augments the growing attraction, building the affectionate attachment.
Because feelings can “leap from mind to mind” so to speak, the absence of such feedback is disturbing—as in meeting someone you instantly dislike, and can’t put your finger on why. Many have lost their ability to fully emotionally resonate with another—becoming insensitive, even cold towards others in favor of reason and logic. People know when they are liked, when others feel comfortable around them. Likewise, a negative internal response from another may be reflected back to them in ways we cannot fully understand, and the feelings of discomfort, of dislike, amplify. It is difficult to befriend or even like someone who cannot resonate with you.
The limbic activity of others around us allows us to achieve almost immediate congruence—it can be felt in a movie theater, or as a surge of emotion as panic propagates through a crowd. The ability to read another’s emotional state is older than our own species, yet we distrust it, devalue the sheer joy of being alone with another for the pure experience of his or her inner state, and further isolate ourselves. This is society’s legacy of alienation and loneliness, and we suffer immeasurably for it.

The inner state of others must matter to us. It is essential to our survival and to our individual health more than most of us are aware. Limbic RegulationThe human is a social animal. Human sociability extends far beyond the need for reproduction, for security in numbers, or for commerce. Modern physiology research has discovered that the human body is not a self-regulating, closed-loop organism. Human physiology depends on limbic resonance from others to achieve physiological balance. Homeostasis derives from physiological synchronicity with another. Heart and breathing rate, hormone levels, immune response, sleep rhythms, blood pH, and neurochemistry are influenced by the presence of another or several others, and you in turn, regulate others. Human physiology does not direct all of its own functions; it is interdependent. It must be steadied by the physical presence of another. This is necessary for both physical and emotional health. In many ways, humans cannot be stable on their own—they require another to survive. Health and happiness mean finding people who regulate you well, and staying near them. It is the basis of communal living, and makes ostracism from any social contact the cruelest of punishments. (Luckily, cross-species attachments are equally as valid as human-to-human ones, hence the well-documented benefits of keeping pets.)

Limbic RevisionIn a relationship, one mind revises the other’s; one heart changes the other’s. We are capable of remaking the emotional life of the one we love; and he or she remodels us. Who we are and who we become depends in part on who we love. Yet, we change emotionally over a lifetime, sometimes growing closer and even more compatible; sometimes becoming a stranger to those we were once so attuned with. It is quite possible, that because of this mutual limbic revision and a 50% chance of emotional drift, that marriage is physiologically a 50-50 prospect. Statistically, about 50% of marriages or long relationships tend to fall apart at about the twenty-year mark. Those who divorce find that staying with the “alienated” partner, is more lonely and stressful than being with no one. It is quite possible that “till death do we part” is too much to expect. True life-mates are rare. If you find one, hold that person near for as long as you can.Surviving Incompatibility and LossContact with loved ones raises natural opiate and seratonin levels. Likewise, artificial increases of seratonin and opiates greatly reduce the pain of losing someone or severing a relationship. Those who need frequent surges of natural opiates will require more contact with loved ones than those who are less opiate-sensitive. This is yet another factor in determining how compatible two people may be—do you have the same needs for a rush of brain chemistry?

Mismatched chemistries can become a contest of wills, wherein one requires cuddles while the other craves solitude. The emotionally needy partner will feel neglected and rejected; the more independent partner will feel suffocated and controlled. Such discord can change the brain chemistry of each partner to such an extent as to destroy any feelings of love and dissolve an affectionate attachment. One or both partners will be said to be “in a mood,” a state of enhanced readiness to experience a particular emotion. Someone who stays in a bad mood for a long time has been repeatedly stimulated to experience a single emotion, and he or she rides that swirling vortex for weeks on end. The neocortex, with its ability to hypothesize, stimulates the limbic brain to respond. The limbic brain, unable to distinguish between fantasy and reality, responds even when no real threat exists. In fact, brain scans reveal that perception and imagination stimulate the exact same brain areas. This means that your perceptions of your partners intentions and behavior can rule how you respond to your partner, regardless of your partner’s true intentions.

Memory and EmotionEmotions do indeed color the recall of experience. If the emotion is strong enough, it can inhibit opposing feelings so completely as to make the memories of those opposing emotions completely inaccessible. A person can effectively change history in his own head. Rage can make a man strike the woman he forgets he loves. Likewise, strong emotions serve to amplify responses to nearly benign experiences: past abuses can greatly amplify a response to an angry expression; a mildly sad experience can cascade into a nightmare of depression. Experience rewires the brain: what it has experienced dictates what it can experience; how much feeling was associated with past experiences influences and perhaps amplifies subsequent similar experiences, or even intimations of similar experiences.

Attractors and Love AttachmentsLimbic resonance, limbic revision, and limbic recognition are not the only factors influencing our love choices. Your lifetime bonding experiences teach you how love works, creates your attractors (those tiny behaviors or qualities in others that you associated with love in your earliest years), which in turn influences who you love. Given the pre-logical character of the limbic system, love choices sometimes make little sense. The neocortex isn’t the brain making the decision or guiding the heart.

Being “in love” with someone encompasses three characteristics: the belief that this one person fits in a way no one else can or will; the need for skin-to-skin closeness; the urge to disregard all else. It is a kind of madness, and it is temporary. Truly loving another necessitates knowing the other through sustained and prolonged intimacy; sharing a life, a mutuality of limbic resonance and regulation.

Staying in a relationship that deviates from one’s “ideal model” (the person who possesses the appropriate attractors, resonates with us, and regulates us well) is living in a disturbed isolation. It is the most miserable kind of loneliness. Yet, most people will stay in a terrible relationship with someone their limbic brain recognizes, rather than be in a boringly pleasant relationship with a kinder partner.

Unhealthy AttachmentsPeople who require limbic revision (rather than simply respond over time), usually have pathological attractors. Negative incidents and behaviors become associated with love. These people may pick fights or nag their mates for the reward of “making up,” create unease through jealousy, or do other negative things to keep the “zest” in the relationship. These people drain others, and leach the life out of those they love. They are so needy as to have nothing whatsoever to give, but can only take through creating discord and animosity. They are eternally unhappy, but not for any particular reason. Healthier potential mates may steer clear of someone they sense is perpetually unhappy. These people can benefit most from the bond between therapist and patient. Two people who require limbic revision are the last two people who can help each other.

Love’s FutureWhat we do inside relationships is the most important aspect of life. Modern American life embraces activities and attitudes that not only discourage limbic resonance and love, but seek to destroy it.The Internet is exemplary of the escalating syndrome of self-imposed isolation while engaged in seeking out contact with others that cannot possibly benefit us physiologically if such contact remains electronic. The Internet is often touted as a global community, but we do not resonate with others. When we are online, we are alone. This paradox occurs to few; the consequences of such isolation has yet to be studied and assessed.
The damaging affects of parental absence during infancy through “toddlerhood” are well documented. Yet, society devalues, even shames parents who choose to parent full-time, rather than work outside the home. The incessant drone of advertisements encourages getting love through things rather than through other humans. Material gain and social status become all-consuming, and relationships are considered disposable to materialistic ideals. Only those with the courage to reject America’s values—social status, titles, expensive vacations, Madison Avenue physiques, designer possessions everywhere—will have a decent life in creating time for loving others, and being loved in return.

References:Becker, Ernest. Escape from Evil, Free Press, 1975.Dennett, Daniel. Consciousness Explained, Little, Brown and Company, 1991.Jaynes, Julian. The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind, Houghton Mifflin Company, 1976.Lewis, Thomas M.D., Amini, Fari, M.D., and Lannon, Richard, M.D. A General Theory of Love, Random House, 2000.Morris, Desmond. Intimate Behaviour, Random House, 1971Rand, Ayn. Philosophy: Who Needs It, Bobs-Merrill, 1982.Russell, Bertrand. Philosophical Essays, Simon and Schuster, 1967Schneider, Allen M., and Tarshis, Barry. An Introduction to Physiological Psychology, Random House, 1975Select Next CreationAlien PetAlien from ShadowverseAppaloosaBelly DancerBlack HoleCandelabra DancerDonkeyEnigma GalaxyGalaxyIce HorseNubian High PriestessTabby KittenThoroughbred RacehorseTrifid NebulaEditorsJane DON'TLoveSelf-EsteemThe Vortex

Psikologi

Psikologi Cinta >>>Rangga>>>

Bercerita tentang psikologi cinta, merupakan hal yang menarik bagi setiap insan। Dua kata yang berasal dari sumber makna yang berbeda, dimana kedua kata itu diidentik dengan simbolik asal kata psikologi dan cinta। Dari akronim kata psikologi dan cinta, mengandung makna dan paham yang sangat luas। Psikologi bisa diartikan sebagai “ilmu tentang jiwa” kalau kita lihat dari perspektif Psikologi menurut Plato dan Aristoteles adalah ilmu pengetahuan yang mempelajari tentang hakikat jiwa serta prosesnya sampai akhir, sedangkan Menurut Wilhem Wundt (tokoh eksperimental) bahwa psikologi merupakan ilmu pengetahuan yang mempelajari pengalaman-pengalaman yang timbul dalam diri manusia , seperti penggunaan pancaindera, pikiran, perasaan, feeling dan kehendaknya।
Berbicara masalah cinta berarti membahas tentang hati, dan emosional। Pada hakikatnya cinta adalah kompleksitas dari manusia। Manusia yang terbangun oleh elmen-elemen cinta, sehingga proses teciptanya manusia tidak lepas dari proses siklus cinta. Cinta adalah satu kesatuan yang kompleksitas dalam diri manusia. Dengan beberapa elemen pembentuknya terdiri dari aspek jasmiyah, yakni bagian dari organ fisik –biologis.kemudian terdiri dari aspek nafsiyah, yakni keseluruhan yang khas milik manusia, yang terdiri dari dimensi al-qalbu, al-‘qal, dan al-nafs. Dan yang ketiga bagian dari aspek ruhaniyah, yakni keseluruhan potensi luhur psikis manusia yang memancar dari al-ruh, dan al-fitrah. Dari beberapa aspek yang terdapat dalam kompleksitas pribadi indifidu manusia telah menguatkan bahwa hakikat cinta, terbangun dari perangkat fisikal,biologis, idea dan intuitif. Akan tetapi ketika berbicara masalah cinta dalam skala universal maka kita tidak bisa menafikkan objek lain, karena tumbuh-tumbuhan dan binatangpun, terkontaminasi oleh proses siklus cinta। Akan tetapi saya hanya akan mempersempit penjawatahan ini dalam konteks individu manusia saja। Kembali lagi dalam perspektif tentang cinta menurut saya bahwa cinta adalah kompleksitas dalam pribadi manusia yang terbangun oleh hakikat jasmaniyah, rohaniyah, maupun idea. Adanya jasmani bagian daripada substansial yang dinilai oleh pacaindra diwilayah eksternal masing-masing individu. Sedangkan pada wilayah rohaniyah gejolak esensial yang direspon oleh periliku jasmaniyah sehingga bentuk tindakan jasmaniyah, terekam dan tersave oleh rohaniyah.sedangkan pada wilayah idea adalah bagian dari mesin pengontrol dan mediator serta filter dari jasmaniyah ke rohaniyah dalam menentukan titik esensial cinta.

Singkronisasi psikologi dengan cinta, yakni psikologi menyentuh perilaku dan tindakan jiwa. Dan cinta nenyentuh pada wilayah hati dan rasa. Dalam melihat dan memahami persepsi tersebut psikologi lebih mengarah pada wilayah perilaku sedangkan cinta bermain pada tataran rasa dan kasih sayang. olehnya itu kita bisa menarik suatu paham bahwa, Psiklogi cinta adalah perilaku dan tindakan akan nilai rasa cinta terhadap setiap individu. Psikologi cinta berimplikasi pada gerak-gerik fenomenal dalam segala bentuk aktivitas manuasia. Bentuk-betuk aktivitas yang berhubungan dengan cinta akan mempengaruhi tingkah laku setiap individu yang berperan di dalamya. Untuk memehami sejauh mana jangkauan psikologi cinta terhadap aspek kehidupan duniawi akan diutarakan oleh penulis pada artikel berikutnya.