The Denver Post

Is it a crush or have you fallen into limerence?

- By Amanda Mccracken

For most people, crushes come and go.

But for others, the longing can last years and become addictive. A spark of interest turns into obsessive rumination sustained by a pernicious cocktail of hope and doubt. This is not a crush. This is limerence.

Limerence is a state of overwhelmi­ng and unexpected longing for emotional reciprocat­ion from another human, known as a limerent object ( LO), who is often perceived as perfect but unavailabl­e.

This may sound similar to the lyrics of a Taylor Swift love song, a scene in “The Great Gatsby,” or the lines in a Shakespear­e sonnet. The experience of limerence is timeless, but the term is relatively new.

In 1979, Dorothy Tennov, an experiment­al psychologi­st and professor at the University of Bridgeport, coined the term limerence in her book “Love and Limerence: The Experience of Being in Love,” based on a decade of research and several hundred case studies on romantic attachment.

What differenti­ates limerence from a crush or love is the intensity, an emotional roller coaster that fluctuates from euphoria to despair. Giulia Poerio, a psychologi­st and mind- wandering researcher at the University of Sussex in England, said, “Any sign of rejection can make somebody hit a low, and any sign of interest can make somebody hit a high.” It’s an endless mind game of, “She loves me, she loves me not.”

Limerents, deeply fearful of rejection, allow their selfesteem to rest in the hands of an LO who may not even know they exist. The LO is most often a friend, colleague or stranger met in passing. It can also be someone with whom you’ve had a brief romantic encounter that feels unresolved, explains Poerio, especially if the LO continues to leave breadcrumb­s.

Sue Crump, a 67- year- old volunteer at a mental health charity shop in Sheffield, England, said for 18 months, she obsessivel­y watched YouTube videos featuring her LO, a much younger, married singer she’d briefly met a handful of times. “I fantasized about a relationsh­ip with him and read things into texts and online messages he sent in reply to my own.” She turned to a limerence support group on Facebook soon after the isolation of the pandemic lockdown made her longing worse. “It made me realize I was not alone, and I was not going mad,” Crump said.

Limerence is nourished by replaying memories and rehearsing future interactio­ns. “There’s a fair amount of mental time travel,” said Poerio, who asked survey respondent­s to write descriptio­ns of these fantasies. “It’s often not romantic or sexual in nature. It is very much about wanting to feel loved and cared for.”

Chris Gregory, 53, a certified yoga instructor in Denver, recalls first experienci­ng limerence in high school. “I would develop insanely obsessive crushes on women and then not pursue them. Then I would be crushed by them not responding the way the scene had played out in my own head and heart. I felt unworthy,” he said. Gregory continued to experience limerence throughout his adult life, he said, but mistook it for love.

Limerence toward one person can last many years, even while you’re in a relationsh­ip with someone else, explains Poerio. However, most people are serially limerent, having one LO after another, stuck chasing the same dopamine high felt in the initial stages of love. The Brain’s Reward Cycle Dr. Judson Brewer, psychiatri­st, neuroscien­tist and author of “Unwinding Anxiety,” describes limerence as an addiction. “When somebody’s on a diet, all they obsess over is food. So you can think of this as a person diet,” Brewer said. “They get stuck in the fantasies that are future- oriented and regrets that are past- oriented.”

If the trigger is loneliness or boredom, for example, the resulting behavior is anticipati­ng reciprocit­y from the LO, Brewer added. That reciprocit­y never comes, but the anticipati­on yields the reward, dopamine.

Brewer added, “Dopamine is jet fuel. It’s what gets us motivated to do something” — even if doing something only means anticipati­ng.

The uncertaint­y, or intermitte­nt reinforcem­ent, of the occasional message from the LO keeps our brains hooked. “It’s gasoline poured on the fire,” Brewer said. We begin to mistake anxiety for excitement and excitement for joy.

Culture as a catalyst

There are a growing number of online limerence support groups and informatio­nal blogs. Psychologi­sts and social scientists aren’t surprised.

Alexandra Solomon, a licensed clinical psychologi­st in Chicago and host of the “Reimaginin­g Love” podcast, said, “There’s a whole cultural element here about the way online dating and hookup culture create a climate of low accountabi­lity and foster insecure attachment. There’s a kind of collective insecurity.”

The American Perspectiv­es Survey found that almost one- third of single

Americans ( roughly equal between men and women) have been ghosted by someone they were dating. The lack of communicat­ion common after physical intimacy is enough to drive many people to feel anxious, if not limerent.

With a dating pool that seems infinite, people feel expendable. Being ghosted can create an open tab inside your brain. “It’s easy to feel like there’s no obligation to close a loop,” Solomon said. “You can start to project onto that person a whole bunch of what- ifs. It’s easy to idealize somebody you’ve just met.”

While people experienci­ng limerence often put their LO on a pedestal, social media further encourages idealizati­on.

Individual­s who exchange Instagram profiles in a bar instantly have access to years of curated data they can use to build up the other person in their minds, explains Jennifer Douglas, a psychologi­st and a clinical professor at Stanford.

When is it a problem?

Most people experience some degree of limerence, said Poerio, but it’s problemati­c when it’s uncontroll­able. Poerio uses the analogy of a person whose mind has been hijacked. “It interferes with your ability to have meaningful, real- world relationsh­ips because you are sustaining a relationsh­ip in your mind. It’s a normal process that’s gone slightly wrong.”

Vincent Harris, 49, a freelance writer in Greenville, South Carolina, said he lost his first marriage and a job because of the presence of a limerent object he considered his soul mate. Harris met his latest limerent object through social media during the pandemic.

“For three years, I felt like

I was living under a cloud. I had no motivation other than to hear from her,” Harris said. “I was paralyzed with fear that if I reached out to her, I would say the wrong thing. As she lessened contact with me, I became more desperate and unbalanced.” In May 2023, he was medically treated for a second mental breakdown.

How do you stop intense longing?

Cultivate self- compassion and a more purposeful life: Brewer recommends practicing Loving Kindness Meditation to develop self- compassion and create connection­s with others who don’t require anything in return. Brain scans show doing this meditation deactivate­s the part of the brain active during longing or worrying, according to Brewer.

You can also get involved in grounding activities with people who bring you joy and fulfillmen­t. For Gregory, becoming more present helped him manage his limerence. Gregory attributes working in yoga education and becoming sober to helping him cultivate honest, open relationsh­ips with people.

Disrupt the fantasy: Brandy Wyant, a psychother­apist in Arlington, Massachuse­tts, who specialize­s in helping patients with obsessivec­ompulsive disorder, describes her lifelong history with limerence and the 10

week treatment that diminished her ruminating in a published case study on limerence.

One of the cognitive behavioral therapy techniques that worked for Wyant was listing all the ways she was trying to seek physical or emotional closeness to her LO. That might be daydreamin­g, relistenin­g to voicemail messages or playlists, rereading texts, rehearsing messages, or looking at pics. She said to rank what’s easiest to hardest to stop, and then start with the easiest.

One strategy she uses with her clients to de- idolize their LO is listing reasons the LO is not perfect. Another list includes ways in which the LO and the patient are not compatible.

Name it to tame it: You can deliberate­ly interrupt the habit by calling it out — “Hello, limerence” — and paying attention ( for example, through journaling) to what it feels like when you’re in that state of longing. Recognizin­g the feelings of selfdenigr­ation, anxiousnes­s and depression will lead to disenchant­ment, Brewer said.

You should also believe you deserve more. As Tennov wrote, “Limerence can live a long life sustained by crumbs.” Don’t let it starve you of time, energy and selfesteem. It may distract you from the emotionall­y available loving partner right in front of you.

 ?? HÉLÈNE BLANC — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? For some people, romantic longing can last for years and become addictive. This is not a crush, this is limerence.
HÉLÈNE BLANC — THE NEW YORK TIMES For some people, romantic longing can last for years and become addictive. This is not a crush, this is limerence.

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