July 28, 2025

It’s Not You, It’s Your Brain: Why We Ignore Red Flags in Love

Why we ignore red flags in love - illustration of a human head silhouette with a heart‑shaped cutout containing small hearts, symbolizing how the brain rewires itself in early love.

Why we ignore red flags in love – Falling in love feels like magic,  the kind that makes you excuse things you swore you’d never tolerate. One day you’re spotting red flags; the next, you’re saying, “No, really, they’re different.”

Science says that’s not bad judgment. It’s biology.

When you fall in love, your brain rewires itself. The ventral tegmental area and caudate nucleus, the same reward circuits triggered by addictive substances,  light up every time you think about them. Dopamine floods your system. A “good morning” text becomes a high.

And here’s the twist: love literally makes you blind. Early romance quiets the brain regions responsible for judgment and negative emotions. Biologically, we gaslight ourselves. The red flags don’t disappear, your brain edits the story so they feel less threatening, essentially, as neuroscientist Helen Fisher puts it, “bond first, question later.”

Why we ignore red flags in love - clay illustration of a brain connected by a cable to a red heart, symbolizing the neurological connection between love, reward circuits, and softened judgment.
When passion feels like destiny, it’s often just chemistry.

But biology is only part of it. Psychology decides how you ride this high. Then, there’s attachment, psychologists Hazan & Shaver argue that how we ride this high depends on the love we learned early in life. If you grew up with stable love, you can enjoy it. If you learned that love is chaos, this stage can feel like survival. Those red flags? They might not even register as danger. They might register as familiar.

And then there’s culture. We were raised on stories that confuse obsession for passion. Suffering for devotion. Movies told us chaos means chemistry. Families praised endurance as loyalty. So when your brain edits out the danger, it’s not just chemicals,  it’s centuries of storytelling making pain feel romantic.

This is why early love feels intoxicating. It’s biology hooking you in, psychology replaying old scripts, and culture giving you a script where red flags are plot twists instead of warnings.

Love, as it turns out, is everything we are,  our chemistry, our history, and the stories we were brave enough to believe.

 

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