Unrequited love can be painful, so painful that we often falsely believe our feelings are reciprocated, even when they are not.1 This can often occur in the context of friendships, where one friend is happy with the status quo, and the other hopes it will turn romantic.2 Often, we imagine that the friend reciprocates those feelings, even when they don’t.3,4
Should we stop fantasizing that one day things will change, and just be realistic about these one-sided relationships? Or is there reason to hold out hope? New research examines when one-sided romantic feelings can become a self-fulfilling prophecy.5
In a recent paper, Edward LeMay and Noah Wolf claim that falsely projecting your own romantic desires onto a friend may give you the confidence to pursue that friend by flirting, having more physical contact, or even expressing your desires.5 This kind of behavior can put into play a self-fulling prophecy. A self-fulfilling prophecy is when your attitudes toward a person ultimately cause that person to behave in a way consistent with your expectations due to the way you treat that person.
There are two links in the self-fulfilling prophecy chain:
- Your expectations lead you to treat someone differently.
- That person changes their behavior due to your treatment of them.
For example, imagine that Leonard has a crush on his friend Penny, but Penny doesn’t feel the same way. However, Leonard falsely believes that Penny secretly has feelings for him. This could embolden Leonard to flirt, be more affectionate, playfully tease her, and even confess his feelings for her. Eventually Leonard's behavior stirs romantic feelings in Penny and she starts to see him differently. This possibility was examined in two studies.
In the first study, 127 pairs of opposite sex friends (all college students) completed questionnaires assessing their romantic desire for their friend and their perception of their friend’s romantic desire for them. They also reported on how often they engaged in romantic initiation behaviors, such as telling the other person about their romantic interest, attempts at physical intimacy (e.g., “Tried to kiss him/her”), flirtation, nonverbal communication (e.g., “Looked deep into his/her eyes), and appearance enhancement (e.g., “Tried to make myself look more attractive around him/her”). They also completed a questionnaire assessing their own mate value — that is, how good of catch they felt they were.
The results showed that we do project our romantic feelings onto our friends. When participants had romantic or sexual desire for their friends, they tended to overestimate how much that desire was reciprocated. This was especially likely to occur for participants who felt that they, themselves, were a good catch. This is because a less confident person is unlikely to falsely believe that others are interested in him/her without evidence. Moreover, those who projected their own desire onto their friend were more likely to engage in relationship initiation behaviors, such as flirting.
These results establish the first link in the self-fulfilling prophecy chain: Falsely believing your friend desires you makes you more likely to take the risk of flirting with them or confessing your feelings. But does this really lead to increased interest, over time, on the part of the friend? In a second study, the researchers surveyed 102 opposite sex friend pairs once a week for a one month period, completing the same measures as the previous study. Participants also evaluated their friend’s mate value.
The results once again showed that participants projected their romantic desires onto their friends, and this projection made them more likely to make romantic moves toward their friend. In addition, those participants who reported the highest levels of desire for their friend, and those whose desire increased over the four weeks, thought their friend desired them more, and this was unrelated to whether or not the friend’s desire increased over that time period. As in the first study, this kind of projection was especially likely to happen if the participant felt that s/he was a good catch.
These results also provide evidence for the final link in the self-fulfilling prophecy chain: The participants’ romantic behaviors toward their friends made it more likely that the friends became more attracted to them over time. But there was an important caveat to these findings — This only happened if the friend perceived the participant as a good catch. If the friend generally thought the participant was undesirable, then no amount of romancing could change that.
These results suggest that if you’re nursing a crush on a friend, you shouldn’t necessarily give up hope. Holding onto possibly false beliefs about your friend’s feelings may be good for your long-term romantic prospects. If you have the confidence to make a move, it may stoke your friend’s desire. However, this is only likely to happen if your friend already thinks that you’re a good catch, but just doesn’t have romantic feelings toward you. If you’re really not someone your friend sees as a desirable mate, you can’t expect them to change their mind about what they want in a partner.
References
1 Baumeister, R. F., Wotman, S. R., & Stillwell, A. M. (1993). Unrequited love: On heartbreak, anger, guilt, scriptlessness, and humiliation. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 64, 377-394.
2 Kaplan, D. L., & Keys, C. B. (1997). Sex and relationship variables as predictors of sexual attraction in cross-sex platonic friendships between young heterosexual adults. Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, 14, 191-206.
3 Henningsen, D. D., & Henningsen, M. L. M. (2010). Testing error management theory: Exploring the commitment skepticism bias and the sexual overperception bias. Human Communication Research, 36, 618-634.
4 Koenig, B. L., Kirkpatrick, L. A., & Ketelaar, T. (2007). Misperception of sexual and romantic interests in opposite-sex friendships: Four hypotheses. Personal Relationships, 14, 411-429.
5 LeMay, E. P., & Wolf, N. R. (2016). Projection of romantic and sexual desire in opposite-sex friendships: How wishful thinking creates a self-fulfilling prophecy. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 42, 864-878.
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