Love Junkie Scan Guide

The goal of recognizing the "Love Junkie Scan" is not to make you afraid of love. It is to make you aware of your own neurochemistry so that you can finally choose connection over addiction.

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

By Dr. Nora Simmons, Relationship & Behavioral Health The goal of recognizing the "Love Junkie Scan"

Most love junkies had emotionally inconsistent caregivers as children. A parent who was loving one minute and rageful the next trained the child’s brain to associate anxiety with love. The scan shows that the amygdala (fear center) is fused to the reward center. You literally cannot tell the difference between terror and excitement. But what if being a love junkie wasn't

Enter the Love Junkie Scan .

While not a formal clinical diagnosis in the DSM-5 , the term "Love Junkie Scan" has gained traction in neuropsychology circles and recovery communities to describe the observable brain activity of individuals addicted to romantic intensity. This article peels back the curtain on what this metaphorical "scan" reveals, how to know if you need one, and the roadmap to rewiring your neural pathways for genuine, sustainable love. A "Love Junkie Scan" is not a single MRI image. Rather, it is a conceptual framework used by therapists to explain the overlap between romantic obsession and substance abuse disorder.

The goal of recognizing the "Love Junkie Scan" is not to make you afraid of love. It is to make you aware of your own neurochemistry so that you can finally choose connection over addiction.

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?

By Dr. Nora Simmons, Relationship & Behavioral Health

Most love junkies had emotionally inconsistent caregivers as children. A parent who was loving one minute and rageful the next trained the child’s brain to associate anxiety with love. The scan shows that the amygdala (fear center) is fused to the reward center. You literally cannot tell the difference between terror and excitement.

Enter the Love Junkie Scan .

While not a formal clinical diagnosis in the DSM-5 , the term "Love Junkie Scan" has gained traction in neuropsychology circles and recovery communities to describe the observable brain activity of individuals addicted to romantic intensity. This article peels back the curtain on what this metaphorical "scan" reveals, how to know if you need one, and the roadmap to rewiring your neural pathways for genuine, sustainable love. A "Love Junkie Scan" is not a single MRI image. Rather, it is a conceptual framework used by therapists to explain the overlap between romantic obsession and substance abuse disorder.