1. You can only fall in love when you're ready to fall in love.
Posted Apr 10, 2016
Falling in love
is passion—irrational, uncontrolled, wild. That falling in love could
follow a logical path seems impossible. Yet Hetty Rombouts, a Dutch
researcher, interviewed students and found that there are five steps of
falling in love—and that these steps seem to be invariant for most
people:
This study yields an unexpected insight: While people in love think
that their partner is “the only one,” it could in fact have been another
one.
When we are ready to fall in love, we may not be too choosy. This changes with time; commitment and intimacy grow as passion declines. Research shows that in some cases, even divorced couples miss each other despite having lived through an unrewarding marriage.
When passion wanes and we notice that our partner is not as exceptional as we once thought, we might nevertheless realize that intimacy and commitment have prospered to a degree that our beloved one has become the only one for us.
- First, a person who meets another person has to be willing
to fall in love. A settled man, a woman with a newborn baby, or a
disappointed lover may not be willing to fall in love, and their journey
ends here.
- When this person—we'll call her "Emily," but it could as easily be a
man—is ready to fall in love, she needs to meet a person who attracts her attention. This could happen because the other person is attractive, but sometimes, it is just enough that the other person is there. This person becomes the target of her desire.
- Third, Emily needs a minimal sign of interest from her romantic target—such as a smile or a nod of approval when she expresses an opinion.
- We now can proceed to Step Four, in which we leave Emily alone for some hours or even days so that her imagination and dreams can blossom.
- Now, Emily is ready to meet the target of her desire again. At this final step, the person only has to provide another sign of apparent interest, for example a smile, and Emily's love blooms.
Source: Auguste Renoir: Lovers. Public domain {{pd-1923}}
When we are ready to fall in love, we may not be too choosy. This changes with time; commitment and intimacy grow as passion declines. Research shows that in some cases, even divorced couples miss each other despite having lived through an unrewarding marriage.
When passion wanes and we notice that our partner is not as exceptional as we once thought, we might nevertheless realize that intimacy and commitment have prospered to a degree that our beloved one has become the only one for us.
没有评论:
发表评论