To the naked eye, love might be a feeling we conjure up to fulfill some emotional need that satisfies our psyche. As we look further into ourselves, we ask the questions that most people think is human nature. Why do we love? Society plays an important role in the definition of love. Throughout the years, the definition changes, like society. The notion that “love will find a way” is undeniably true. The love we feel for our mothers, fathers, significant others, children, and friends is a love that emerges from the same parts of our brain. They are made up of the same molecules that will influence some of the hardest and biggest, life-changing decisions we will ever spawn. The mystery behind love isn’t such a mystery at all, through the power of science; we are now able to imagine why we love. “Love is composed of a single soul inhabiting two bodies” as philosopher Aristotle once said. To a sixteen year-old girl, love is what we crave most in the world, besides perfect skin, perfect teeth, an overwhelming amount of friends, and to be homecoming queen. A young girl will believe and do almost anything to make that wish come true. A handsome senior boy enters our lives and whisks us away with his witty charm and athletic aptitude. Attending every one of …show more content…
The same study showed mothers who gave birth by cesarean sections were less responsive to their own babies cry. This does not mean the mothers loved their child any less, they were just missing the hormonal reactions that come with childbirth and breastfeeding. This gives an explanation to why my little brother is a pain in the butt, by not being born in a natural birth, we did not get the loving connection with his mother and has been missing that all of his life. Though he was breastfeed, he always preferred his father over his