Catherine Townsend's Blog, page 2
April 6, 2013
Do Silicon Alley men have ‘Weird Science Syndrome?’


Women have Prince Charming Syndrome, while men suffer from Weird Science Syndrome – the desire to ‘engineer’ the perfect woman.
Read more: Daily Mail/MailOnline
April 3, 2013
Plastic surgery: What does ‘I haven’t had any work done’ really mean?
Dolly Parton once famously said ‘there’s a reason the Hollywood Hills are in the same part of the country as Silicon Valley’. But in an era where laser hair removal is considered a part of everyday grooming, ‘I haven’t had plastic surgery’, seems to translate to ‘I’ve never sliced into my face’. For most people Botox, fillers and laser treatments don’t count.
Read more: Daily Mail/MailOnline
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I investigate what ‘I haven’t had any work done’ REALLY means
In the celebrity world, it usually translates to ‘I haven’t actually sliced into my face’. Read more on MailOnline…
April 2, 2013
Why Mormons love the Tinder ‘hook-up’ app
Because the Latter-Day Saints are all about casual dating – minus the sexting. Read the rest at MailOnline…
March 28, 2013
Trout pouts are out: The chin is in
‘But for potential patients, it’s not as simple as walking in with a Mr Potato Head profile and asking for the Christina Hendricks cleft.’ Read the rest of my riveting investigation into why the ‘chinplant’ is the fastest-growing cosmetic surgery procedure in the US on MailOnline.
March 27, 2013
My new hobby: Drunk Facebook Graph Searching
Seriously, how can there be over 1,000 ‘Satanists who ‘like’ chocolate’ but 0 who like marshmallow Peeps?
The Love Detective: Will random Facebook stalking become the new drunk dialing?
From my test drive of Facebook’s new Graph Search feature: ‘One Facebook executive used finding a spicy meal in San Francisco as an example search.Seriously? If I want barbecued rib recommendations I can go to Yelp. I wanted help with a much more elusive query: “Where are the single men in Manhattan?”‘ – Read the rest at MailOnline
March 26, 2013
Should ambitious women marry older men?
Often, stories about massive age gaps feature pictures of of Ronnie Wood or Hugh Hefner holding hands with women young enough to be their daughters. But I was attracted to successful, charismatic, ambitious men whom I considered my peers and went through dozens of ‘Mr. Bigs’.
The ones I would consider setting up home with often didn’t consider me wife material.The men I dated either became competitive professionally or expected me to have a more traditional, stay-at-home role.’
Read more: Daily Mail/MailOnline
Should ambitious women marry older men? The Xerox CEO thinks so…and so do I!
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‘Often, stories about massive age gaps feature pictures of of Ronnie Wood or Hugh Hefner holding hands with women young enough to be their daughters. But Burns isn’t the only ambitious women to discover out that an older man’s assets go way beyond the size of his wallet…I was attracted to successful, charismatic, ambitious men whom I considered my peers and went through dozens of ‘Mr. Bigs’. But the ones I would consider setting up home with often didn’t consider me wife material.The men I dated either became competitive professionally or expected me to have a more traditional, stay-at-home role.’Read more of my article on MailOnline…
March 25, 2013
The Love Detective: Forget 7 years…beware the ’18 month itch’!
First it was the seven-year itch. Then the three-year itch. Now a rash of recent celebrity break-ups seems to suggest that the honeymoon period is getting even shorter. That’s right: The stage when complements stop, sex dwindles and suddenly a partner’s cute little quirks go from totally adorable to totally annoying could happen in as little as 18 months.
Marriage scientist Terri Orbuch, PhD, who has followed nearly 400 couples since 1986 as part of an ongoing National Institutes of Health study on relationships, claims that three years is the beginning of the danger zone for couples.
But Katy Perry and Russell Brand, Bethenny Frankel and Jason Hoppy, and Justin Bieber and Selena Gomez all split on or before before the two-year mark.
George Clooney, the de-facto poster child for short relationships, has openly admitted that most of his come to an end after two to three years.
He divorced ex-wife Talia Balsam after three years, and has said publicly that he’s ‘not the marrying kind’. Since then he’s been linked with Lisa Snowdon (on-off for five years), French waitress Celine Balitran (three years), cocktail waitress Sarah Larson (one year) and Elisabetta Canalis (two years). In between, he romanced Krista Allen, Renee Zellwegger and Teri Hatcher.
So far, he’s been with current girlfriend, former professional wrestler Stacey Keibler, for just over 18 months.
Experts have listed everything from money worries and social media to weight gain and toenail clippings on the floor as factors in our culture’s shortening relationship attention span.

But maybe it’s all down to biology.
Love is, quite literally, a drug. When we fall hard, we’re hopped up on a cocktail of potent chemicals including PEA, a natural upper, and dopamine, which triggers the same response in our brain as cocaine and chocolate. The buzz causes sleeplessness, energy and goal-oriented behavior – so we’re focused on the relationship, and our partner.
‘We’re high on love. But at some point, we have to come down’
We’re high on love. But at some point, we have to come down.
Psychologists have found that, for most of us, the ‘spark’ wears off between 18 months to two years. After that, some couples move into what scientist Dr Helen Fisher calls the ‘attachment’ phase. Endorphins, the body’s natural painkillers, induce a sense of calm well-being and those sleepless nights give way to a sense of security.
But for others who thrive on the intense drama of love’s chemical cocktail, reality kicking in probably feels like the worst hangover ever. When sizzling sex gives way to sorting socks, the fight or flight instinct kicks in.


Sometimes, it’s really not them. It’s you. Even in seemingly happy couples are subject to what psychologists call ‘hedonic adaptation’. Put simply, when the buzz that comes from something new normalizes, we are hard-wired to go out and get something else.
Cheesy movies aside, finding the right relationship also means accepting that another person can’t ‘complete’ us.
When Richard E. Lucas and his colleagues at Michigan State University studied the happiness effect of marriage, they found that the mood boost only lasts two years. After that, people revert to their normal level of happiness.
So the advice for avoiding the pitfalls of the 18-month itch is the same for celebrities and mere mortals, and it’s mostly common sense. Experts recommend being nice to each other, remembering to give complements, mixing it up and out of the bedroom and having adventures together.
As long as we avoid the number-one passion killer – boredom – attachment has its advantages.
We’re no longer blinded by chemistry, and can see the other person rationally. Getting to the other side of infatuation means discovering a partner’s flaws – even George Clooney has to cut his toenails – and sharing our own.
The initial ‘fantasy’ stage of a relationship can be amazing. But facing reality can lead us to real love.



