Obsessive Love Disorder: Definition, Signs, And Treatments

Learning when and how love can turn obsessive is the first step to addressing the issue.

Reviewed by Dr Nancy B Irwin, PsyD
By Harini Natarajan, Certified Emotional Intelligence Practitioner

When your love turns into addiction, it is called obsessive love disorder. It isn’t a good sign for a relationship as it paves the way for insecurity and hurt. In addition, an obsessive person can shrink the personal space of their partner. In this article, we explain obsessive love disorder in detail. Continue reading to know more.

What Is Obsessive Love Disorder?

Obsessive love disorder (OLD) is an overwhelming desire to be loved or control a loved one. People with this condition override companionship and trust. It is similar to an addiction that slowly takes over one’s life and goes from butterflies in the tummy to extreme jealousy and controlling behavior. A person experiencing OLD seeks excessive contact and affirmations from the person they are obsessed with; yet, it is never enough for the person with OLD as they are a bottomless pit of need. It affects a person’s work, family life, and physical and mental state.

Difference Between Healthy And Obsessive Love

Obsessive love involves persistent thoughts and the need to spend every moment with the love concern. A healthy love relationship evolves with time without any desperate intensity and fervor of infatuation. It includes friendship, trust, commitment, and respect for the other person’s time, space, and individuality.

However, OLD often nurtures possessiveness and devastating suffocation. A person with OLD wants to be the utmost priority in the other’s life – the feeling of infatuation becomes extreme and unhealthy. A healthy love relationship is based on understanding your partner’s personality and ways of life. Doubting their faithfulness and obsessing over every move is a symptom of OLD.

Want to know if you or your partner is suffering from obsessive love disorder? Look out for the signs mentioned below.

Signs Of Obsessive Love Disorder

  • Overwhelming Attraction: Being in total awe of your love interest to a level of obsession is a sign of OLD. Comparing everyone to them and wanting to be in their company exclusively is unhealthy. It becomes difficult to maintain other relations and friendships because one is so overwhelmed with their partner.
  • Controlling Nature: The need to control the other person’s daily routine, needs, actions, or course of life is a symptom of obsession. Deciding what the other person will do, where they go, whom they meet, and how they behave with people are all attempts to control someone.
  • Obsessive Thoughts: These thoughts range from building hypothetical, dream-like situations in your mind, making plans of a life together, or sexual fantasies. Continuously thinking about your object of love being with you in every situation can be harmful even to your own goals. You are unknowingly making them the priority of all your life decisions.
  • Urge To “Protect”: Believing that you constantly need to protect your partner from the world can sound sweet, but they are quite capable of taking care of themselves. Wanting to be their “knight in shining armor” all the time sends the message that you think they are incapable of handling their issues. It gets obsessive when you believe that you absolutely cannot live without your partner and that the whole world is out to harm them, and only you can save/protect them.
  • Jealousy And Possessiveness: Getting jealous about all your partner’s personal or professional relationships is a sure sign of OLD. It also proves that you do not trust them or have faith in your relationship. You feel they must be cheating, or someone will take them away from you at any moment. Constantly wanting them by your side and expecting them to spend every free moment with you are signs of extreme possessiveness.
  • Quick Rebounds: Falling in obsessive love quickly with new people and acquaintances indicates the compulsive need to be constantly loved and acknowledged. You may feel that you are worthless or life is not worth living if you are single.
  • Disrespecting Boundaries: The feeling that you are allowed to cross all boundaries with your partner, such as dropping in at their office or family events unannounced, imposing your choices, dragging them to places they do not want to go, hacking their computer, or snooping in their phone logs, and of course stalking, are all signs of an OLD.
  • Low Self-Esteem And Anxiety: If a person gets severely anxious not knowing the whereabouts of their love concern or not receiving an instant text reply during a working day is a classic sign of OLD. The obsessive behavior stems from low self-esteem, where a person thinks so little of themselves that they feel vulnerable to betrayal and are constantly seeking evidence to support their worst fears. Constant obsessive behavior can cause mental anxiety, depression, frustration, and even make them suicidal in some cases.
  • Constant communication: If your guy or girl is communicating throughout the day, dropping in to see you as a surprise regardless of the place or time, they are probably obsessed with you and somehow trying to get control of every moment of your life.
  • Need For Reassurance: The need to hear those magic words routinely and the reassurance of what they mean to you is a sign that they are not comfortable in the relationship. They do not have faith in you or have low self-esteem that requires constant nurturing. It crosses the limits of sweet nothings when not uttering the three words can fuel a bad argument.
  • Stalking: In case of a broken relationship, stalking the ex through spying, trolling their social media accounts, making prank calls, or messaging without response are all signs of OLD.

Other common symptoms of OLD include:

  • Inability to take rejection
  • Threat to cause self-harm
  • Difficulty in keeping jobs, maintaining family ties, and following hobbies
  • Attachment disorder
  • Being in love with an imaginary person, or imagining a real person returns their feelings when they do not.
  • Borderline OCD or personality disorder

The following section explains what leads to obsessive love and the treatments available. Take a look.

What Causes Obsessive Love Disorder

  • Disturbed Childhood: Disturbed childhood and adolescence can be breeding grounds for abandonment, physical and mental abuse, neglect, or comparisons. They cause an inferiority complex in the child, making them feel unworthy and emotionally void. A love interest later in life fills that void, which can turn into an obsession the person does not want to lose at any cost.
  • Low Confidence: People with low self-esteem think little of themselves and are not worth receiving healthy love, and that they cannot handle rejection. Therefore, when they enter into a relationship, they constantly feel betrayed because others are better than them, either in social class or level of attractiveness. If their object of love is not a part of their lives anymore, they convince themselves that overtly showing them that they are loved so much will bring them back and will automatically solve all their problems. They feel their happiness only lies in that one person.
  • Disruptive Families: A person who has grown up in an unloving and dysfunctional family will either not know what healthy love is or will crave love to the point of obsession.
  • Ego: Ego can also be a major cause of obsessive love. An egoist and narcissist has a superiority complex about themselves and feel they have to be the center of attention at all times. They become obsessive and mentally or physically abusive in an attempt to show their power and control.

What Does Treatment For Obsessive Love Disorder Looks Like?

Based on the severity of the disorder, the doctor may prescribe psychotherapy or medication.

  • Medication: Medication or drugs help stabilize behavior, mood, thoughts, and perception, reducing OLD symptoms. They work on neurotransmitters and improve mental well-being. However, this treatment has various side effects like fatigue, dry mouth, loss of appetite, and weight gain.

Note: Medication is the only recommended option if the patient is exhibiting extreme violence or suicidal tendencies.

  • Psychotherapy: This is a safer method of treating obsessive and compulsive behavior. A typical therapy to treat such conditions involves:
  • Cutting all contact with the person one is obsessed with.
  • Keeping the patient occupied with hobbies and other activities that provide a distraction from intrusive thoughts.
  • Teaching them ways to be mindful of their obsessive actions.
  • Increasing their self-confidence through new hobbies and interests.
  • Counseling sessions to help them open up about their fears and anxieties.
  • Teaching them methods and strategies to cope with anxiety and obsessive tendencies.
  • Practicing meditation to calm the mind.
  • Learning how to love the self.

How Can Obsessive Love Disorder Affect Your Life?

OLD can disrupt not just one’s love life but also affect their other relations or professional life. Unattended OLD only grows with time and can cause major havoc to one’s personality, interests, work, and physical and mental health. It causes the inability to see anything good in any relationship. Such behavior is likely to make people move away from you, and in turn, can lead to loneliness, depression, and lower self-esteem. Thus, it is important to recognize, accept, and treat the problem early to lead a healthy life, whether romantic or otherwise.

Obsessive Love Disorder is unhealthy for everyone directly or indirectly involved in a relationship. Fortunately, it is not a permanent condition. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment can help minimize or eliminate its adverse effects. This article will help you understand all about OLD in great detail. If you notice any of the signs mentioned above in your partner, you should take them to a clinical professional. If left untreated, this psychological illness could become a physical and mental threat to the affected person and the people around them.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is obsessive love a mental illness?

No. Obsessive love disorder isn’t included in the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders as a mental illness. However, it may be a symptom of other underlying mental health conditions.

Is obsessive love disorder a symptom of bipolar?

It may be. Obsessive love disorder can accompany mental health illnesses like bipolar disorder, borderline personality disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, schizophrenia, and others.

Key Takeaways

  • While love is a comforting, secure emotion, it might become unhealthy and abusive when a person gets obsessive about their partner of interest.
  • It highlights a sense of insecurity and possessiveness bringing in a tremendous amount of pressure and unrealistic expectations for the other partner.
  • While it may be a temporary phase, putting things into perspective early on, or seeking professional help can help pave the way for a healthy stable relationship.

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As Head Of Content Operations, Harini sets the tone and editorial direction for StyleCraze to deliver engaging, interesting, and authentic... more

Dr Nancy B Irwin

(PsyD)
Originally from Atlanta, Dr. Nancy Irwin graduated from UWG in 1977 with a Bachelor of Music in Opera Performance. She... more

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