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How I tried to make my brain fall out of love

  

Category:  Health, Science & Technology

Via:  perrie-halpern  •  6 years ago  •  17 comments

How I tried to make my brain fall out of love
In 2016, while trying to get over a decade-long on-and-off relationship, Dessa, a writer and musician from Minneapolis, decided to try something drastic. Read more about Dessa's experiment in her first collection of essays, "My Own Devices: True Stories From the Road on Music, Science and Senseless Love," which published on Sept. 18.

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Perrie Halpern R.A.
Professor Principal
1  seeder  Perrie Halpern R.A.    6 years ago

 
 
 
Larry Hampton
Professor Participates
1.1  Larry Hampton  replied to  Perrie Halpern R.A. @1    6 years ago

...but does it work with chocolate?

 
 
 
Perrie Halpern R.A.
Professor Principal
2  seeder  Perrie Halpern R.A.    6 years ago

Do you agree with her opinion or not?

 
 
 
dave-2693993
Junior Quiet
3  dave-2693993    6 years ago

Should it be considered like an addiction? An addiction to a person?

But yes, I think it can be turned off like a light switch. The situation might cause the switch to flip over a period of time, in an instant or maybe never.

Then wouldn't it make sense that if one can manipulate the things controlling that switch, then one can learn to control that addiction?

There are good and bad possibilities about that.

 
 

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