Digital Love: Connection or Illusion? is a timely and deeply human exploration of how technology is reshaping the way we experience love, intimacy, and emotional connection. We swipe to desire, text to connect, and scroll to compare-yet many of us feel lonelier than ever. In a world where romance begins with algorithms, affection is measured in likes, and relationships can disappear without explanation, this book asks a vital question: Are we more connected, or are we drifting further apart? Blending psychology, cultural analysis, and emotional insight, Digital Love examines how dating apps, social media, texting, artificial intelligence, and constant connectivity are transforming our understanding of love. It explores modern phenomena such as ghosting, emotional dependency, digital infidelity, virtual partners, and online attachment-revealing how these experiences affect our sense of self, trust, and belonging. Rather than condemning technology or romanticizing the past, this book offers a balanced and compassionate perspective. It acknowledges the ways digital tools have expanded opportunity, inclusion, and connection-while also confronting the emotional costs of speed, abundance, and performance-driven intimacy. Through thoughtful reflection, it reveals how love has become faster, more visible, and more fragile-and why authenticity now requires greater intention than ever before. Each chapter invites readers to reflect on their own relationships and habits, asking difficult but necessary questions: What happens when attention becomes currency? When desire is gamified? When emotional safety is outsourced to screens? And when artificial intelligence begins to simulate intimacy? Ultimately, Digital Love: Connection or Illusion? is not about rejecting technology-it is about reclaiming humanity within it. It is a call to slow down, set boundaries, relearn presence, and choose depth over convenience. It challenges readers to love consciously in systems designed for distraction. This book is for anyone who has felt confused, exhausted, or hopeful about modern love-and for anyone who believes that even in a digital world, real connection is still possible.