Heart, it turns out, not made of glass
Apparently the heart is more resilient than we all give it credit for. At least that’s according to a new study from Northwestern University.
Eli Finkel, assistant professor of psychology, studied college students over a nine-month period and discovered that on average people who are anticipating what their breakup will be like grossly overestimate their level of distress. He says that is especially true of those who are strongly in love when they make their forecasts.
“So those people are especially wrong,” said Finkel. “They think they are going to be devastated, and they are much less devastated than they thought.”
It turns out, in most cases it only takes a few days for us — men and women alike (the study revealed no difference in sex) — to start focusing on all the bad things that annoyed us about our partners. And in our minds we start exaggerating how terrible those things were. (Like how much he hated your cat. There’s something seriously wrong with a man who can hate a little tiny, sweet kitty THAT much. Seriously. No really, you’re better off without him.)
Though to be fair, the study does go on to say that the same is true of many dreaded human experiences. We anticipate that many things — surgery, a trip to the DMV — will be much worse than they actually are.
No, wait, sorry. The DMV will actually be worse than you imagined.