So, long-term relationships can be tough.
You pass the honeymoon phase quicker than it came and suddenly you’re so
comfortable with one another that it starts to get boring. Worse than this, you
stop listening to each other – I mean really listening, being attentive. College
relationships make this even harder, because you spend so much time together
without realising. At university, you’ve got your own room, own life, and
unrestrictive absentee parents. It makes the honeymoon phase escalate even
quicker, and before you know it, your partner is making less effort and keeps
forgetting to tell you they love you.
My friend has a partner who has slipped
into this ‘routine relationship’ a few times now. He’s becoming a lazy partner
– he’s stopped taking her out on romantic dates, stopped being attentive when
she’s really excited about something, stopped instigating sex, and has even
stopped checking her out. She wants to persuade him to start treating her like
he used to. Her method of dealing with this is using techniques like repetition
and flattery – whenever he pulls away, she messages him more, pushes for
dates, tells him how amazing he is, how thankful she is to have him in his
life, how much she loves him. She believes that if she persists enough, her
flattery and familiarity will start to breed liking (rather than boredom) and
he’ll come around.
This does not work. In fact, it probably
makes it worse. Her partner convinces himself that if she loves him that much,
there’s nothing he could possibly do wrong to lose her. His ego inflates.
A more effective method of dealing with
this might be to exploit the sexual economics of scarcity. By making
herself scarcer instead of more available, psychology demonstrates that she’ll
start to become a more desirable catch. Her newfound rarity and unavailability
will demonstrate her high value and urge her partner to get his act together.
This pressure is further heightened by the fact that many university couples
decide that it’s unlikely their relationship will last beyond university (with
jobs, responsibilities, geography and, well, life getting in the way). Because
of this, my friend’s partner can’t be sure they’ll still be together after
graduation. This creates the perfect time bomb that makes the technique exert
even more pressure on him. Now, not only is she rare and unavailable, there is
also limited time to have her.
If he responds well to this behaviour,
she should stop immediately and make herself available to him again – despite
the age-old story, men do not desire women who are hard to attain, especially
if they behave misanthropic or cold. However, if this still doesn’t work, she
can take a further step by making sure he knows that other men can’t get her,
but he can.
Walster, Walster, Piliavin and Schmidt (1973)
demonstrate this by empirically studying the psychology of ‘playing hard to
get’. Seventy-one male university students were each given 5 folders containing
background information on 5 (fictitious) women. They were required to choose
one for a date. The subject was told that the women had already examined his
background information and evaluated him along with her own other 4 choices on
a ‘date selection form’ included in each folder. The subject was given these
forms, with ratings on a scale ranging from -10 (definitely do not want to
date) to +10 (definitely want to date) for the subject, as well as for the
other 4 anonymous dates.
The independent variable (elusiveness of
the woman) was manipulated through these 5 forms:
- One woman indicated that she was willing
to date any of the men assigned to her, but was not enthusiastic about any of
them either (‘uniformly hard-to-get’ condition). She rated all 5 of her date
choices from +1 to +2.
- One woman indicated that she was
enthusiastic about dating all 5 of the men assigned to her (‘uniformly easy-to-get’
condition). She rated all 5 date choices from +7 to +9.
- One woman appeared easy for the subject
to get, but hard for anyone else to get (‘selectively hard-to-get’ condition).
She indicated minimal enthusiasm for the other 4 date choices (rating from +2
to +3), and extreme enthusiasm for the subject (+8).
- Two women did not provide forms (‘no
information’ condition)
As you can see in the bar graph above,
participants preferred women who were easy for them to get, but hard for others
to get (the selective woman). The least desired woman was the one playing
hard-to-get for everyone.
In the case of my friend, she is already with her partner – she is easy to get. However, making herself slightly less available both increases her value to him, and brings her closer to being ‘back on the market’. But, of course, she is not available to other men, and having been in a long-term committed relationship, her partner knows that other men will find it hard to get her. This combination is perfect in persuading him to rethink his behaviour in the relationship.
In the case of my friend, she is already with her partner – she is easy to get. However, making herself slightly less available both increases her value to him, and brings her closer to being ‘back on the market’. But, of course, she is not available to other men, and having been in a long-term committed relationship, her partner knows that other men will find it hard to get her. This combination is perfect in persuading him to rethink his behaviour in the relationship.
Walster, E., Walster, G.W., Piliavin, J., & Schmidt, L. (1973). 'Playing hard to get': Understanding an elusive phenomenon. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 26, 113-121.
Riana Mahtani
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