The Science of Flirting

Flirting is the most natural and baffling process of human interaction. It may seem like an art, but it’s a real science – research on flirting shows that long-lasting couples can actually have an astounding number of similarities that could never be chosen from an online dating profile – similar lung volumes, metabolic rates, wrist circumference and get this… earlobe length!

So how can a pick-up line turn into matching earlobes, you ask? It turns out that the process of flirting is a complicated dance of biological checkpoints to help you find a mate with someone whose DNA makes you feel at home. Even though flirting feels like it may only be a self-esteem boost in the vegetable aisle – or attention at a party – it’s actually an evolutionary process of mate selection.

There is no playing fair in survival of the fittest. Everyone’s experienced that baffling feeling of meeting someone who is “good on paper” – but the zing just isn’t there. That’s Mother Nature, ensuring that we continue on! So, here’s a scientific look at the more serious side of flirting.

Scan it!
Men enter a social situation and scan the area looking for potential mates. They generally give the same amount of eye contact to each woman, enough time to assess physical beauty and to see if their searching look returns any glances. For woman, scanning is out! Women are pickier, glancing around for fractions of a second – looking to see who’s available without committing to one suitor.

But once a woman makes a choice, her stare, even for just ten seconds, tells the male to “come hither.” Though men cast a wide net, they want to think that the person who is staring at them is selective. So if a woman looks everywhere, meeting many glances, the male’s interest declines. Yup, it’s pretty lopsided, but proliferation of the species is about securing the mate, not political correctness.

Subliminal messages
Body language is the key, the lock and the door to flirting. It’s more than half the reason that people make that love connection. Women express their interest by revealing their neck and the undersides of their wrists. By tilting the head or flipping back their hair, they are showing a man that he can get closer. When they do move in, the exchange of pheromones is crucial. Our immune systems are seeking out compatible systems, so we can intermingle the really important stuff – DNA. And each one of us tells others about our inner bacterial worlds via smell. After that on the list of chemical checkpoints comes the tone of voice – which far supersedes witty banter, according to research.

Mirror, mirror on the wall
Regardless of who’s considered hot in your social set, guess who we pick for the long haul? Usually, people who look just like us! That person who has that elusive familial feeling generally does look like family. So although the supermodels may have the advantage during the initial scan of the room, the lasting bond will likely be with someone who doesn’t look out of place in a family portrait. Even when people are shown pictures of strangers and asked to select the person they would want to take on a date, they consistently pick people who look like them! And now here’s the Freudian bit – on closer examination, people have a particular preference for people who look like their parents. So women want men who look like their dads, and men want women who look like their moms.

Do the math
Ever lamented that you have a big nose? Well, it turns out that the size of your nose matters little, but whether your eyes are in proportion to your nose matters a lot! Men have a strong preference for symmetry in the face, whereas women are more forgiving if some features don’t quite add up. And moving further into the science of proportions and mating, it’s not what you weigh – but instead, it’s a hip-to-waist ratio of 7 (divide waist by hip measurements) that attracts men. As women get older and become less fertile, that waist area tends to fill in.

Now that you know the science behind the art, use it to your advantage. Remember, don’t sweat the small stuff, just play up your assets – and let biology take its course.

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One thought on “The Science of Flirting

  1. Hema

    Apparently some people still think asrolotgy = the horoscopes they read in the newspaper! LOLHoroscopes only deal with a tiny fraction of , the Sun, because that fits best in a small space and is easiest to look up. Astrology does NOT try to fit everyone into 12 boxes. Contrary to popular belief, it has never been “debunked” by science because the ones trying to debunk it stop at the newspaper columns and never explore the subject in its entirety. In fact, most of the arguments used against it show a total and utter lack of understanding of what asrolotgy actually is and what it actually does.How do I use asrolotgy in everyday life? I use it to understand myself and the important people in my life better, to time my actions with greater success (scheduling writing time around good Mercury aspects for example), to understand the life cycles I’m going through, etc.I don’t believe the planets “make” anything happen to you, they’re only reflecting what is already happening via synchronicity. So when it comes to “predictions,” I feel is only able to predict archetypally. A particular aspect can play out in an infinite number of ways, but it can not “just mean anything,” it will stick to the archetypal themes of the planets, signs, houses and aspects involved. So I would say it can give me a kind of “mood” of a particular day, not the specific events that will happen. Generally I tend to have a better day if I’m acting in line with that “mood.”To me, it’s no more “fortune-telling” than estimating when a child will lose their baby teeth or forecasting the weather, and there’s no such thing as being 100% accurate. We’re astrologers: no powers expressed or implied. How often is the weather-man-or-woman 100% accurate? Yet they still keep their jobs and aren’t ridiculed for it.

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