Table of ContentsView AllTable of ContentsTypesSignsCausesImpactHow to Heal the HeartbreakWhen to Get HelpWhen You Don’t Feel the Same
Table of ContentsView All
View All
Table of Contents
Types
Signs
Causes
Impact
How to Heal the Heartbreak
When to Get Help
When You Don’t Feel the Same
Close
It often goes something like this: you and a friend or acquaintance are getting close, hanging out a lot, having a great time together. One day you notice butterflies in your stomach and you realize you’re catching feelings for them. The feelings grow stronger and you finally work up the courage to tell them.
Devastatingly, they respond with, “Oh, that’s so sweet of you to say, but I really only see you as a friend, I hope that’s ok.” Ouch! Even though they still value you, the deep pangs of romantic rejection are very real—and now you’re expected to continue on being their friend as if nothing happened?
This is just one scenario in which unrequited love can occur. But no matter how it does, it can leave you feeling depressed, rejected, and sometimes even unloveable. Luckily, the pain of unrequited love does not have to last forever and there are many ways to move on in order to find the reciprocated love you deserve! Here are our tips and insights.
Unrequited Love Takes Many forms
There are a few different types of unrequited love, which can include:
It is important to recognize that it is common for people to experience unrequited feelings at some point. Recognizing the signs of unrequited love may help you learn to deal with it more effectively and find ways to move on.
Unrequited love involves having strong romantic feelings toward another person who does not feel the same way. It is aone-sided experiencethat can leave people with feelings of pain, grief, and shame.
Signs of Unrequited Love
There are signs that can help you understand what is going on and if the love you are feeling for someone is being reciprocated. Some people describe feeling as if they are getting “mixed signals” from a love interest only to find that it is, in fact, unrequited love.
“Am I Unlovable?”
You’re Always The One Reaching Out
Are you the only person making effort to communicate? Are you the only one reaching out to check in with the other person to see how the day is going or find out what important things are happening in their life?
When you are the only one taking the time to reach out and connect with the other person, follow up with them about things, or inquire about their life, it can be a sign that this love is unrequited.
In healing dynamics, two partners who care about each other are motivated to connect with each other and share in the pattern of fluid,healthy communication. The exchange of energy between partners in a healthy relationship feels balanced and doesn’t leave one person bearing the responsibility of connecting.
Research has shown that people who reject other people’s affections often experience guilt. Rejectors tend to view would-be lovers as unreasonable, self-deceptive, and annoying; would-be lovers, on the other hand, tend to view their rejectors as mysterious and inconsistent.
You’re The Only One Who Desires Physical Touch
Do you desire to touch the other person, to hold hands, to kiss or hug? Longing for connection often includes the desire for physical contact, and when people are equally attracted and desire physical intimacy, both parties want to connect on a physical level.
If you find that you are always the one initiating any physical touch, or that when you attempt to physically connect, you are met with resistance or the other person pulling away, it can signal that this is a one-sided longing.
You Put the Person on a Pedestal
Many times, in situations of unrequited love, one person has the other on a pedestal. The love interest is perceived as near perfect and any imperfections are easily explained away. There are rarely healthy boundaries set in unrequited love.
When people build a healthy romantic bond, they can both still see one another’s faults, vulnerabilities, or imperfections.Healthy relationshipsallow for space for people to make mistakes and use those opportunities to help create closer bonds.
Each party can see and hear each other and their areas of vulnerability. In an unrequited love dynamic, only the emotionally invested person is able to see and hear the other party. There is not a mutual, healthy acknowledgment of each other in unrequited love.
Press Play for Advice On Healthy Relationships
They Never Take Time to Get to Know You
Getting to know another person takes time. Over the course of time, partners in a healthy relationship go through experiences together, ask questions, and make an effort tounderstand and get to know each other. In an unrequited love dynamic, there is emotional investment on only one side.
You might find that you are always asking questions, initiating contact, and making efforts to invite the person into conversation or experiences. In turn, the other person may know nothing about you at all, never ask you questions, or never seem to invite you into any meaningful conversation about you, such as your desires, interests, goals, or hobbies.
You may long for the other person to know you but the opportunities for sharing with them never seem to come.
Possible Reasons for Unrequited Love
How the other person feels has more to do with them than with you—but how you respond to those feelings might be because of conflicts or challenges that you are dealing with.
Sometimes, you might love that person because you’ve idealized them in your mind. You are attached to that ideal version without really viewing them as a full, complex individual with flaws and even undesirable characteristics.
For some people, it might be a case of simply wanting someone they know they can’t have. The fact that there can never be a genuine connection is part of the appeal. For someone with aninsecure attachment style, being in love with someone who won’t return those feelings means they can stay in a distant relationship without making other real connections.
Loving someone, and being loved in return, requiresmaking yourself vulnerableand accepting that authentic, two-sided relationships involve both risk and reward. Staying stuck on unrequited love allows you to remain in the safety of a pseudo-relationship that can never be real and will never require you to become vulnerable, accept risk, and commit to another person.
Negative Impact of Unrequited Love
Unrequited love can be a source of stress and emotional turmoil. Some of the potential effects of experiencing unrequited love include:
There are many things you can do to move forward after the heartbreak of unrequited love. It may feel impossible now, especially as you begin the healing process, but know that this takes time and healing can happen.
Although unrequited love can feel extremely painful, it can offer an opportunity to grow in unexpected ways.
Through the experience of unrequited love, you can gain a better understanding of your needs, yourpatterns in a relationship, and how to become a healthy, positive partner in the future.
Take Time to Grieve
Unrequited love usually results in deep heartbreak andfeelings of rejection.When you are emotionally invested in someone and they don’t seem to feel the same way about you, you might question your worth or wonder if you will ever feel loved.
Taking time to grieve your loss is important. You are certainly not alone in your experience, as many people have been through situations in which their love for another person was not reciprocated.
Challenge the thoughts that might creep in telling you that there is something wrong with you or that you are not enough. There are a variety of reasons why love may not be reciprocated that have nothing to do with your worth or being “enough.”
Stay Busy
It’s hard to move past the pain of rejection if you aredwelling and ruminatingon your heartbreak. This doesn’t mean that you should completely avoid thinking about what has happened, but rather that you should find ways to stay busy so that you are not dwelling on negative thoughts.
Spend time with friends who can offer support. Over time, you will find that the pain lessens and you are in a better place to look back at the experience with greater objectivity.
Understand Patterns
This may be your first experience with unrequited love or you may find that this seems to be a pattern for you. Much of the way people view and experience adult relationships has to do with what they learned growing up, what they observed, and what they were taught about love and relationships.
Understanding your attachment style can allow you to gain insight into your own patterns of relationship, your needs, and how to develop healthier connections.
Invest in Yourself
When you have experienced unrequited love, it is likely you have poured a lot of emotional energy into another person, and this may leave you feeling drained. To move forward in a healthy way, it is critical that you reinvest energy into yourself, your interests, your hobbies, and yourpersonal goals.
Your sense of self can become lost when experiencing unrequited love since yoursense of selfmay be strongly connected to your love interest and your continual longing for them to return that love. Instead:
Dealing with unrequited love, a breakup, or another type of relationship distress can lead to complex feelings of sadness, anger, and sometimes depression. If you are struggling to cope because of unrequited love or some other relationship issue, consider getting help from a mental health professional.
Atherapistcan help if you:
If you are having suicidal thoughts, contact theNational Suicide Prevention Lifelineat988for support and assistance from a trained counselor. If you or a loved one are in immediate danger, call 911.For more mental health resources, see ourNational Helpline Database.
If you are having suicidal thoughts, contact theNational Suicide Prevention Lifelineat988for support and assistance from a trained counselor. If you or a loved one are in immediate danger, call 911.
For more mental health resources, see ourNational Helpline Database.
Tips If The Situation Is Flipped
It can also be challenging to cope if you are the person who doesn’t return someone else’s feelings of love. Rejecting another person isn’t easy, especially if you know how deeply they will be hurt. However, it is important to be clear to avoid future complications.
Keep in Mind
Unrequited love hurts, but it is possible to heal, grow, and move on from the experience. It’s important not to take the other person’s lack of feelings personally—it probably has more to do with them than with you. Once you can accept the reality of the situation, you can gain distance and perspective that will allow you to move on and start building a relationship that is reciprocated.
If You Want to Heal a Broken Heart, Don’t Do These 5 Things
5 SourcesVerywell Mind uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read oureditorial processto learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.Baumeister RF, Wotman SR, Stillwell AM.Unrequited love: On heartbreak, anger, guilt, scriptlessness, and humiliation.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.1993;64(3):377–394. doi:10.1037/0022-3514.64.3.377Clark EM, Votaw KLB, Harris AL, Hasan M, Fernandez P.Unrequited love: The role of prior commitment, motivation to remain friends, and friendship maintenance.J SocPsychol.2019;1-17. doi:10.1080/00224545.2019.1648234Hostinar CE.Recent developments in the study of social relationships, stress responses, and physical health.Curr Opin Psychol. 2015;5:90-95. doi:10.1016/j.copsyc.2015.05.004Leonti M, Casu L.Ethnopharmacology of love.Front Pharmacol. 2018;9:567. doi:10.3389/fphar.2018.00567Minerva F.Unrequited love hurts: The medicalization of broken hearts is therapy, not enhancement.Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics.2015;24(4):479-485. doi:10.1017/S0963180115000134
5 Sources
Verywell Mind uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read oureditorial processto learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.Baumeister RF, Wotman SR, Stillwell AM.Unrequited love: On heartbreak, anger, guilt, scriptlessness, and humiliation.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.1993;64(3):377–394. doi:10.1037/0022-3514.64.3.377Clark EM, Votaw KLB, Harris AL, Hasan M, Fernandez P.Unrequited love: The role of prior commitment, motivation to remain friends, and friendship maintenance.J SocPsychol.2019;1-17. doi:10.1080/00224545.2019.1648234Hostinar CE.Recent developments in the study of social relationships, stress responses, and physical health.Curr Opin Psychol. 2015;5:90-95. doi:10.1016/j.copsyc.2015.05.004Leonti M, Casu L.Ethnopharmacology of love.Front Pharmacol. 2018;9:567. doi:10.3389/fphar.2018.00567Minerva F.Unrequited love hurts: The medicalization of broken hearts is therapy, not enhancement.Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics.2015;24(4):479-485. doi:10.1017/S0963180115000134
Verywell Mind uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read oureditorial processto learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.
Baumeister RF, Wotman SR, Stillwell AM.Unrequited love: On heartbreak, anger, guilt, scriptlessness, and humiliation.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.1993;64(3):377–394. doi:10.1037/0022-3514.64.3.377Clark EM, Votaw KLB, Harris AL, Hasan M, Fernandez P.Unrequited love: The role of prior commitment, motivation to remain friends, and friendship maintenance.J SocPsychol.2019;1-17. doi:10.1080/00224545.2019.1648234Hostinar CE.Recent developments in the study of social relationships, stress responses, and physical health.Curr Opin Psychol. 2015;5:90-95. doi:10.1016/j.copsyc.2015.05.004Leonti M, Casu L.Ethnopharmacology of love.Front Pharmacol. 2018;9:567. doi:10.3389/fphar.2018.00567Minerva F.Unrequited love hurts: The medicalization of broken hearts is therapy, not enhancement.Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics.2015;24(4):479-485. doi:10.1017/S0963180115000134
Baumeister RF, Wotman SR, Stillwell AM.Unrequited love: On heartbreak, anger, guilt, scriptlessness, and humiliation.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.1993;64(3):377–394. doi:10.1037/0022-3514.64.3.377
Clark EM, Votaw KLB, Harris AL, Hasan M, Fernandez P.Unrequited love: The role of prior commitment, motivation to remain friends, and friendship maintenance.J SocPsychol.2019;1-17. doi:10.1080/00224545.2019.1648234
Hostinar CE.Recent developments in the study of social relationships, stress responses, and physical health.Curr Opin Psychol. 2015;5:90-95. doi:10.1016/j.copsyc.2015.05.004
Leonti M, Casu L.Ethnopharmacology of love.Front Pharmacol. 2018;9:567. doi:10.3389/fphar.2018.00567
Minerva F.Unrequited love hurts: The medicalization of broken hearts is therapy, not enhancement.Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics.2015;24(4):479-485. doi:10.1017/S0963180115000134
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