Category Archives: Relationships

Why Playing Hard To Get Is A Really Bad Idea

I’m sure you’ve heard this advice before. Maybe from an aunt, your mother, or a grandmother — or maybe even from someone your own age. For some reason, one of the worst pieces of dating advice is one one that’s stood the test of time: If you like someone, you should play hard to get.

No, no you really, really shouldn’t.

For someone reason, this idea of playing hard to get hasn’t just permeated our dating culture, it’s helped shape it. A woman, coy and aloof, doesn’t rebuke a man’s attention—instead she just ignores it completely. The man, driven wild by her apathy, pursues her aggressively. Suddenly, the big reveal — she was interested all along! True love blooms!

It sounds pretty gross, right? That’s because it is. Here’s why playing hard to get isn’t a good idea.

It’s Straight Up Game-Playing

Playing hard to get is, essentially, lying. You really like someone, but instead you tell them that you’re not interested — the opposite of the truth. You lie. And when has it ever been a good idea to start a relationship off on a lie? If you start by playing hard to get, there’s no reason that your partner should ever trust you.

Even more than that, playing hard to get treats your relationship like a game. A romance blossoming between two people should be built on mutually sharing, communication, and being vulnerable to one another — it should be something that you create together. It should be something authentic. Playing hard to get and swapping barbed insults might be entertaining in a Shakespearean comedy, but it’s a hollow, if not destructive, foundation on which to build a relationship.

It’s Another Way We Tell Women To Minimize Their Feelings

Playing hard to get is theoretically relationship advice — something that’s meant to help you, ultimately, get what you want. And maybe when a friend or aunt tells you to do it, they do genuinely have your best interest at heart. But it’s hard to ignore the fact that telling a woman to pretend she’s not interested feels like another way of suffocating and silencing her. It says, “Your emotions aren’t meant to be shown, your feelings shouldn’t be voiced. Be quiet — that’s when a man will want you.” Buried in the ‘playing hard to get’ advice is a really old-fashioned, misogynistic message.

Instead, why not find someone who likes you for speaking your mind? When you don’t play hard to get, when you own your emotions and you communicate them in a grown-up way, you can find someone who likes you for you — for your honesty, maturity, and candor. Dating advice shouldn’t just be about finding a partner, it should be about finding the right partner, someone who’s going to value being with you in all of your glory. So be honest, be direct, be open. Feel confident in your feelings — and empowered enough to share them. If someone doesn’t like that, then they’re just not the right person for you.

It Promotes Rape Culture

It’s true. Sure, it’s one of those pieces of advice that’s been banging around for so long that it’s easy to write it off as “quaint” or “old-fashioned,” but playing hard to get actually reinforces a much more sinister mentality. Playing hard to get perpetuates an idea that when a woman says “no” she means “yes” — one of the foundations of rape culture. Telling a woman to hide her feelings only to reveal them later is incredibly damaging — for young women and for young men. We want to teach young people that “no” means “no” and “yes” means “yes” — in a romantic setting and in a sexual one. Doing anything else is a huge disservice — and potentially very dangerous.

Instead, let’s embrace enthusiastic consent — in romantic pursuits as much as anything else. Not playing hard to get, especially at a young age, means engaging in tricky conversations about feelings and emotions. It means being open and navigating difficult territory. It means, ultimately, becoming better communicators and better partners — and isn’t that ultimately what we want for the next generation? If so, then we have to start by setting the example — and handing it down.

See more: There’s a Reason You Never Like the “Nice Guy”

When someone tells you to “play hard to get” — maybe even if you’ve suggested it yourself — they probably didn’t have any ill-intent in mind. It feels like it should be harmless advice, even good advice — it’s been around for so long, after all. But the truth is, there’s a lot that’s problematic and downright dangerous about encouraging women to play hard to get and teaching men that women like to play hard to get. So instead, let’s promote candor, courage, and respect for each other’s emotions — and a world where we all know that “no” never means “yes.”

I'm the Oprah of dating advice, but haven't ever had a relationship

Submit your questions for Meredith here.

Q. Dear Meredith,

I am a 22-year-old art student. In my group of friends, I am known as the Oprah or Dr. Phil because I give good advice. I help my friends with their love lives, but I haven’t been in a “relationship” since the fifth grade. I’ve had depression and anxiety since I was 15, which gets in the way of my confidence. Sometimes I feel tied down with a ball and chain strapped to my ankle. Whenever I find the confidence to talk to a guy I like, I feel stuck.

I want to avoid online dating; I’ve always wanted to meet a guy in a library or a coffee shop. Recently, I went on a lunch date with a friend of a friend, but I wasn’t interested in a second date. I spend a lot of time fantasizing about a perfect boyfriend: We travel the world with our friends and make each other’s lives more colorful. I don’t mind being single. But how much longer am I going to be alone? What should this depressed girl do?

— Alone

Advertisement

A. First, make sure you’re getting the treatment you need. I assume you’re in therapy/have a doctor for depression and anxiety, but if not, seek help. Self care is the most important thing.

Get Today’s Headlines in your inbox:
The day’s top stories delivered every morning.

Moving on to the dating. Please know that with that one mediocre lunch date, you proved that you can do it. You had a meal with someone, decided you didn’t like them enough to see them again, and then moved on. That’s like . . . 99 percent of the dating experience. Please give yourself credit for making it happen.

Also know that many single people would love to find romance in a coffee shop or library. But it’s a busy world — and those romantic meetings aren’t as perfect as they look in the movies. If you start talking to someone at the library, you have to decode that person’s intentions. On an app, you can assume (to some extent) that the people you meet have signed up to date. My advice? Have first dates in all of those lovely places. Tell the people you meet on apps that you’d like to get together at a coffee shop, the library, etc. Then you get to live the fantasy.

No matter what, try not to label yourself as “the friend who gives advice but never dates.” Sometimes when we make sweeping generalizations about our romantic lives, we make all of the negative things come true — whether we want to or not. You are someone who wants — and is capable of — finding love. You just don’t know when it’s going to happen.

— Meredith

READERS RESPOND

Stop telling yourself that you don’t mind being single. Obviously you do, and that’s OK. ROADRUNNER

Your depression does not doom you to being alone or unhappy. But your grossly unrealistic expectations of what a relationship is most certainly will. THATGUYINRI

I was also the person who “gives advice but never dates.” I was always waiting to meet a special person in my normal (nerdy) activities or at work, but it didn’t happen. When I turned 30, I realized that my past strategy [wasn’t working]. So I went on dating sites. Three years later, I went on yet another routine coffee date. And it was fantastic. We got married a year later. CHASINGPAPER

Meredith Goldstein is in her ninth year of writing Love Letters for The Boston Globe.

Khloe Kardashian Gives Kendall Jenner Amazing Dating Advice: Is Kendall Ready To Settle Down? – Daily Telegraph

Khloe Kardashian Gives Kendall Jenner Amazing Dating Advice: Is Kendall Ready To Settle Down?