Julie Ferman of YourTango explains
 why ‘love at first sight’ is almost a myth and how singles keep 
repeating the mistake of thinking there must be an initial spark on the 
first meet with some great guy or girl.
Have you ever wondered if you’ve 
possibly missed opportunities to date someone REALLY great simply 
because they didn’t dramatically strike your fancy at first glance?
I’m here to tell you … you’ve probably 
missed out on some wonderful potential partners. And likely, plenty of 
great people also overlooked you!
I recently read a New York Times article
 that highlighted how fatal of a mistake it is for single men and women 
to limit their love prospects only to those who instantly elicit a 
dramatic, romantic response upon that very first peek.
After many years as a personal 
matchmaker and dating coach, I see firsthand why it’s smart to look 
outside the arena of “It Girls” and “It Guys.”
Everyone who’s dating in today’s wacky 
world grew up with the media, and we’ve all been trained by decades of 
magazines, billboards, and screens (both, large and handheld) to go for 
“the Clooneys” and “the Angelinas.”
But, how often does someone fall in love
 at first sight with someone who looks like that? Oh … maybe a hundred 
times a day … and does that kind of attention (and stalking) breed 
heart, soul and rock solid character? Sadly, in my experience, I’d say 
it’s rare.
If you are waiting to fall in love with 
someone who grabs you visually from the get-go, you’re undoubtedly 
missing lots and lots (and lots) of far better partners than the ones 
who catch your eye right away. All that attention tends to breed 
entitlement and narcissism, and really who needs that?
Recent research delivers a powerful message to us, that time spent together can and often does impact romantic attraction.
Psychologists at the University of Texas
 in Austin conducted the study, measuring the level of romantic 
attraction that students had for their fellow classmates. More 
specifically, what the researchers measured was the change in attraction
 over time, as the students got to know each other over the course of 
several months — interacting with each other in a small classroom 
environment.
The findings? The
 peers that students considered at the beginning of the school term to 
have the most romantic appeal were not necessarily in the “cream” that 
rose to the top several months later. In fact, the study revealed that 
the more time spent together, the greater the disparity between 
perceptions of who was hot and who was, in the end — not.
Today’s singles are ruthless in their superficiality, and apps like Tinder and Hinge only exacerbate the problem.
With these dating tools, the question as
 to whether someone is a “Keeper” or not is a decision made in a half a 
second. I do know couples who’ve met via Tinder and Hinge, but mostly I 
see a big time sucker that leaves, both, men and women feeling empty, 
weary, dissatisfied and still alone on Friday nights (with their device,
 swiping left and right).
I’ve had the honor and joy of working 
with The Matchmaking Institute, where Dr. Helen Fisher has shared so 
much of her wisdom. She’s a biological anthropologist, a foremost expert
 in the Romantic Love and Attraction sciences, hired by Match.com as 
part of the architectural team responsible for creating Chemistry.com. 
Dr. Helen Fisher knows as much about the biology of love and attraction 
as anyone alive today, and she conducted a survey that backs up the 
University of Texas findings.
Dr. Fisher was looking closely at what 
she calls “slow love” — when romantic love develops for two people not 
at first sight, but over time.
As we might expect, the study showed 
that “slow love” happens more for women than it does for men, but not 
nearly as dramatic a difference as we might think; 43 percent of women 
and 33 percent of men reported that they have developed romantic 
attraction for and have indeed fallen in love with someone whom they had
 not initially deemed attractive.
Developing a case of “the hots” over 
time most certainly DOES occur for today’s single love seekers. In fact,
 it’s happening more now than ever, as the age at which today’s single  
men and women are coupling up continues to rise. And it’s a good thing 
that romantic attraction can and does develop over time — as let’s face 
it — for the vast majority of us, as we get older, our looks aren’t as 
likely to turn heads.
It’s a smart single person who does less
 swiping and suspends judgment for a while, to allow a person to fully 
“reveal” themselves.
What qualities and characteristics did 
Dr. Fisher’s survey reveal that make a person ultimately attractive and 
appealing romantically? The inside stuff — humor, shared interests, and 
the art of conversation. In other words, give each other a chance and 
take the time to get to know each other
 


 

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