In the words of Pat Benatar, “love is a battlefield”...and sometimes it can be painful! When you’re going through a breakup, it can be easy to blame yourself for having a hard time getting over your ex or continuing to feel down long after the relationship has ended. But the problem isn’t you – it’s your hormones.
From the time you have a crush, through the honeymoon phase and beyond, your hormones play a role in giving you those warm, fuzzy feelings of love. But when a relationship comes to an end, those feel-good hormones not only go away, they are overtaken by new hormones — ones that can make your already low mood worse.
First: What Are Your Hormones Like When You’re Coupled Up?
In healthy relationships, the brain gets a big boost of dopamine and oxytocin. These are neurotransmitters and hormones that help you feel connected and in love: dopamine makes you feel euphoric, while oxytocin, sometimes called “the love hormone,” creates strong bonds. In women, testosterone levels tend to rise during the first 1-2 years of a relationship, while in men they fall. And in long term relationships, hormones that make you feel secure and safe with your partner ramp up.
Breakups Are a Bummer – for You and Your Hormones
During a breakup, your body starts changing at a chemical level. “When a relationship comes to an end, the separation and the heartbreak causes a shift in the release of stress hormones cortisol and adrenaline/noradrenaline,” explains Eva Yacobi,Naturopathic Doctor and Functional Medicine Practitioner.
Not only do levels of happy hormones dopamine and oxytocin drop — as does serotonin, a “feel-good” neurotransmitter that acts like a hormone — but your body also must deal with the mental, emotional, and physical effects of increased stress hormones. Thanks to these changes, everything from your immune system to your blood pressure takes a hit.
“Irritability, moodiness, increased cravings specifically for sweets and carbohydrates, inability to fall asleep or stay asleep, brain fog, feeling wired but tired, it can become harder to make decisions and so much more,” says Yacobi, explaining the potential symptoms of these hormone changes. Your breakup can show up in your skin, too, in the form of breakouts or flares of existing skin conditions like eczema.