Infatuation Rules
Photo: Disha Sheta
Most emotional affairs and physical affairs start as benign friendships. There usually is no intention for these bonds to become anything more. Regardless, the line is thin between close friendships and emotional affairs. Furthermore, emotional affairs can also quickly lead to flirtation and sexual encounters.
Emotional attraction is all about how you make another person FEEL. It can be triggered in a variety of ways: through touch, pheromones, body...
Read More »
"[One month is] not too soon if you spend every single day together for an entire month," Golden says. "That's long enough to fall in love and to...
Read More »Emotional affairs can wreak havoc on your marriage as well as your family. You only have a certain amount of “emotional energy.” If you are focusing your energy elsewhere, it can start to have a detrimental effect on your relationship and your family. This article discusses the signs that you or your partner might be having an emotional affair. It also explores the impact this may have on your relationship with your partner.
When you go silent on a man, it makes him miss you more and think of how to come back to you. Indeed, silence after a breakup is usually...
Read More »
If you have a friendship that you feel you are the only one that participates in, makes all the plans, always there for them without asking...
Read More »Emotional affairs may begin with conversations about work and other topics but they often shift into more intimate details about your life, relationships, personal issues, and sex life. This tendency to make yourself emotionally vulnerable while disclosing intimate details about yourself and your feelings deepens your attachment to this other person. You discuss very personal topics, such as the problems in your current relationship. You share all or most of your problems and concerns with this person. As you do this, you also grow more discontent with your spouse.
You should talk to your partner as much as you would if they lived close by. Establish communication habits that work for both you and your...
Read More »
Say it in person. You've shared a lot with each other. Respect that (and show your good qualities) by breaking up in person. If you live far away,...
Read More »Your partner seems to be drawing away from you and rarely shares information about their life with you
New research shows that relationships are actually more vulnerable to demise far sooner than the dreaded seven year itch. The most common time for...
Read More »
It is the process of nurturing social connection. Bonding typically refers to the process of attachment that develops between romantic or platonic...
Read More »
Dear (Name) I cherish you a lot, but I do not feel any romantic love for you anymore. I'm sorry our relationship has to end because our deep...
Read More »
The social psychologists at Harvard University found that while it isn't difficult for attractive people to find a partner, they are less likely to...
Read More »