Log in to leave a comment
No posts yet
We shop for partners by swiping through profile pictures and specs on dating apps as if we are browsing products. This is because we believe that numbers—height, salary, and educational background—equate to a person's value. However, even those who boast of winning in that market often feel a sense of emptiness soon after. Have you ever wondered why encounters made based on matching conditions crumble so easily?
To jump straight to the conclusion: the market value theory suggested by evolutionary psychology is woefully inadequate for explaining modern relationships. It is not that you lack charm because your "specs" are insufficient. It is simply that the frame through which we view relationships is flawed.
Most people mistakenly believe that those with superior looks or wealth stand at the apex of the dating market and will maintain that power forever. However, research data from relationship scientist Dr. Paul Eastwick points to a completely different reality.
During the first impression stage, the consensus on who is a "handsome man" or a "beautiful woman" stays at about a 30% level. In essence, objective attractiveness, which everyone agrees upon, merely acts as a gatekeeper. However, as time passes, this figure magically evaporates.
The meaning of these figures is clear. As time flows, universal aesthetic standards become meaningless. In their place stands a unique likability that appears special only to me. This is why the success rate predicted by the data provided by dating apps is so low. It is because these apps cast a collective hypnosis only on the initial influence, which accounts for less than 5%.
There is no need to feel frustrated if you feel pushed out of the battle of objective specs. You can flip the script by using the power of repeated exposure. The "Office Plus Two" effect in psychology proves that the act of repeatedly encountering someone in an everyday context actually changes the brain's structure.
A colleague who initially seemed ordinary suddenly appearing as the most attractive person in the world is no coincidence. The subtle habits, unique ways of speaking, and flexibility in handling situations discovered while sharing time are high-dimensional pieces of information that can never be conveyed through a single photo.
Likability is amplified just by repeatedly meeting someone in a comfortable environment with plenty of natural light and greenery. This is why environments where you can meet at least three times—such as book clubs or exercise communities—drastically increase the success rate of a relationship compared to one-off blind dates.
Real relationships begin after falling in love. The brains of couples who maintain a healthy relationship function differently than those of singles. This is called the "Derogation of Alternatives" mechanism.
In couples who have built strong trust, the reward circuitry does not react strongly even when they discover an attractive person outside the relationship. Rather, they unconsciously evaluate that person's appearance lower or immediately avert their gaze. This is not a matter of exercising patience; it is an instinctive defensive action of the brain to protect a precious relationship.
Added to this, the process of building an internal language shared only by the two is essential. Slang that others don't understand or jokes that burst out in specific situations make the fences of the relationship sturdy. When conflict arises, the attitude of trying to fix the problems in "our system" rather than attacking the partner's character determines the lifespan of the relationship.
The real reason a breakup is painful is that a part of your self has been carved away. Because the time and memories shared with the partner were your identity, that sense of loss stimulates brain regions similar to those associated with physical pain.
The only scientific way to overcome this is through "narrative construction." You must move beyond the stage of emotional grieving and organize the relationship from start to finish into a story with clear cause-and-effect relationships.
Logically record the specific reasons you were first attracted, the events where cracks began to form, and how the breakup served as a stepping stone for growth in your life story. The brain processes clearly defined sadness much faster than ambiguous pain.
Now, we must stop being buried in the static indicators of the dating market. Reset your criteria for evaluating a partner as follows:
Charm is not a fixed number; it is born within the dynamic harmony between two people. Asking who is of a "higher grade" is only poison to a relationship. Find the person who gives you an answer to the question: "With whom can I be most like myself?" That is the surest answer to romance provided by the data.