Falling head over heels in love may be a thing of the past, according to science imageBROKER.com/Alamy
Individualism â prioritising your own goals over those of the wider community â is on the rise, and according to one of the largest ever studies on love, it is affecting how we feel about our partners. But this may not be a bad thing.
âBeing completely in love and dependent [and] intensively thinking about one person may reduce your ability to work or study, etcetera,â says at the University of SĂŁo Paulo in Brazil, who wasnât involved in the study. On the flip side, reducing our focus on our romantic partner could allow us to invest more time and energy into other relationships or hobbies, she says.
Previous research suggests that . âMy opinion is that younger generations [today] are likely to be more self-obsessed [and] more individualistic [than previous generations at the same age],â says at Western University in Ontario, Canada, who also wasnât involved in the latest study.
This can be pointed at globalisation or modern technologies like social media. But when it comes to the consequences of individualism, specifically around romantic love, . This is probably because the studies were small and focused on just one or two countries, says at the University of WrocĆaw, Poland, who presented the new study at the conference in Edinburgh, UK, earlier this month.
She and her colleagues recruited more than 61,000 adults, aged between 18 and 90, from 81 countries, who had been in a romantic relationship for anywhere from weeks to years.
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The participants completed online surveys on how intensely they loved their partner. This involved ranking on a scale of 1 to 5 how strongly they agreed with statements such as âI feel a deep emotional bond with this personâ and âI am committed to maintaining this relationshipâ.
They also completed surveys where they indicated, on a scale from 1 to 7, how much they agreed with statements such as âgroup success is more important than individual successâ and âindividuals should pursue goals only after considering the welfare of the groupâ.
Together, the surveys revealed that participants with a more individualistic mindset seem to experience romantic love less strongly, even when accounting for factors such as sex, age and economic background. The researchers found similar results when they replicated the study in a separate group of more than 6000 partnered adults from 50 countries.
Individualism may be making us love less intensely if it affects our ability to connect, says at The London School of Economics and Political Science. âIf you’re constantly worried about you as an individual [and] the way youâre perceived as an individual, you feel a lot more competition because you think everybodyâs an individual fighting for scarce resources,â he says. âSo, whenever you’re interacting with someone else, youâre thinking, âhow do I put my best face forward?â.â
This could make it harder for people to be vulnerable, which is a core part of loving intensely, says Curran. âYou would find it hard to reveal your whole self to someone else,â he says.
If you find that individualism is negatively affecting the intensity of love you feel, there may be ways to overcome it. For instance, encouraging people to view themselves as a part of a wider community, like through talking therapy, could be effective, says Schermer.
Kowalâs team is planning to explore how the intensity of romantic love we feel affects our well-being by tracking about 2000 partnered people in Poland for one year.
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