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I published this article in the New York Times Modern Love column in January of this year.
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"To Fall in Love With Anyone, Do This."
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And the article is about a psychological study designed to create romantic love in the laboratory,
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and my own experience trying the study myself one night last summer.
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So the procedure is fairly simple:
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Two strangers take turns asking each other 36 increasingly personal questions and then they stare into each other's eyes without speaking for four minutes.
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So here are a couple of sample questions.
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Number 12: If you could wake up tomorrow having gained any one quality or ability, what would it be?
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Number 28: When did you last cry in front of another person? Or by yourself?
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As you can see, they really do get more personal as they go along.
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Number 30, I really like this one: Tell your partner what you like about them; be very honest this time, saying things you might not say to someone you just met.
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So when I first came across this study a few years earlier, one detail really stuck out to me,
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and that was the rumor that two of the participants had gotten married six months later, and they'd invited the entire lab to the ceremony.
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So I was of course very skeptical about this process of just manufacturing romantic love, but of course I was intrigued.
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And when I got the chance to try this study myself, with someone I knew but not particularly well, I wasn't expecting to fall in love.
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But then we did, and --
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And I thought it made a good story, so I sent it to the Modern Love column a few months later.
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Now, this was published in January, and now it is August, so I'm guessing that some of you are probably wondering, are we still together?
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And the reason I think you might be wondering this is because I have been asked this question again and again and again for the past seven months.
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And this question is really what I want to talk about today.
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But let's come back to it.
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So the week before the article came out, I was very nervous.
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I had been working on a book about love stories for the past few years, so I had gotten used to writing about my own experiences with romantic love on my blog.
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But a blog post might get a couple hundred views at the most, and those were usually just my Facebook friends,
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and I figured my article in the New York Times would probably get a few thousand views.
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And that felt like a lot of attention on a relatively new relationship.
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But as it turned out, I had no idea.
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So the article was published online on a Friday evening, and by Saturday, this had happened to the traffic on my blog.
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And by Sunday, both the Today Show and Good Morning America had called.
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Within a month, the article would receive over 8 million views, and I was, to say the least, underprepared for this sort of attention.
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It's one thing to work up the confidence to write honestly about your experiences with love,
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but it is another thing to discover that your love life has made international news,
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and to realize that people across the world are genuinely invested in the status of your new relationship.
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And when people called or emailed, which they did every day for weeks, they always asked the same question first:
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they always asked the same question first, "Are you guys still together?"
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In fact, as I was preparing this talk, I did a quick search of my email inbox for the phrase "Are you still together?" and several messages popped up immediately.
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They were from students and journalists and friendly strangers like this one.
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I did radio interviews and they asked.
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I even gave a talk, and one woman shouted up to the stage, "Hey Mandy, where's your boyfriend?"
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And I promptly turned bright red.
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I understand that this is part of the deal.
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If you write about your relationship in an international newspaper, you should expect people to feel comfortable asking about it.
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But I just wasn't prepared for the scope of the response.
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The 36 questions seem to have taken on a life of their own.
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In fact, the New York Times published a follow-up article for Valentine's Day,
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which featured readers' experiences of trying the study themselves, with varying degrees of success.
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So my first impulse in the face of all of this attention was to become very protective of my own relationship.
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I said no to every request for the two of us to do a media appearance together.
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I turned down TV interviews, and I said no to every request for photos of the two us.
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I think I was afraid that we would become inadvertent icons for the process of falling in love, a position I did not at all feel qualified for.
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And I get it:
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people didn't just want to know if the study worked, they wanted to know if it really worked:
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That is, if it was capable of producing love that would last, not just a fling, but real love, sustainable love.
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But this was a question I didn't feel capable of answering.
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My own relationship was only a few months old, and I felt like people were asking the wrong question in the first place.
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What would knowing whether or not we were still together really tell them?
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If the answer was no, would it make the experience of doing these 36 questions any less worthwhile?
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Dr. Arthur Aron first wrote about these questions in this study here in 1997, and here, the researcher's goal was not to produce romantic love.
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Instead, they wanted to foster interpersonal closeness among college students,
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by using what Aron called "Sustained, escalating, reciprocal, personalistic self-disclosure."
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Sounds romantic, doesn't it?
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But the study did work.
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The participants did feel closer after doing it,
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and several subsequent studies have also used Aron's fast friends protocol as a way to quickly create trust and intimacy between strangers.
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They've used it between members of the police and members of community, and they've used it between people of opposing political ideologies.
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The original version of the story, the one that I tried last summer, that pairs the personal questions with four minutes of eye contact,
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was referenced in this article, but unfortunately it was never published.
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So a few months ago, I was giving a talk at a small liberal arts college,
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and a student came up to me afterwards and he said, kind of shyly, "So, I tried your study, and it didn't work."
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He seemed a little mystified by this.
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"You mean, you didn't fall in love with the person you did it with?" I asked.
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"Well..." He paused.
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"I think she just wants to be friends."
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"But did you become better friends?" I asked.
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"Did you feel like you got to really know each other after doing the study?"
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He nodded.
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"So, then it worked," I said.
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I don't think this is the answer he was looking for.
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In fact, I don't think this is the answer that any of us are looking for when it comes to love.
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I first came across this study when I was 29 and I was going through a really difficult breakup.
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I had been in the relationship since I was 20, which was basically my entire adult life,
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and he was my first real love, and I had no idea how or if I could make a life without him.
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So I turned to science.
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I researched everything I could find about the science of romantic love, and I think I was hoping that it might somehow inoculate me from heartache.
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I don't know if I realized this at the time.
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I thought I was just doing research for this book I was writing, but it seems really obvious in retrospect.
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I hoped that if I armed myself with the knowledge of romantic love, I might never have to feel as terrible and lonely as I did then.
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And all this knowledge has been useful in some ways.
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I am more patient with love. I am more relaxed.
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I am more confident about asking for what I want.
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But I can also see myself more clearly, and I can see that what I want is sometimes more than can reasonably be asked for.
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What I want from love is a guarantee, not just that I am loved today and that I will be loved tomorrow,
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but that I will continue to be loved by the person I love indefinitely.
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Maybe it's this possibility of a guarantee that people were really asking about when they wanted to know if we were still together.
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So the story that the media told about the 36 questions was that there might be a shortcut to falling in love.
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There might be a way to somehow mitigate some of the risk involved, and this is a very appealing story,
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because falling in love feels amazing, but it's also terrifying.
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The moment you admit to loving someone, you admit to having a lot to lose,
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and it's true that these questions do provide a mechanism for getting to know someone quickly,
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which is also a mechanism for being known, and I think this is the thing that most of us really want from love:
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To be known, to be seen, to be understood.
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But I think when it comes to love, we are too willing to accept the short version of the story.
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The version of the story that asks, "Are you still together?" and is content with a yes or no answer.
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and is content with a yes or no answer.
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So rather than that question, I would propose we ask some more difficult questions, questions like:
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"How do you decide who deserves your love and who does not?"
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"How do you stay in love when things get difficult, and how do you know when to just cut and run?"
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How do you live with the doubt that inevitably creeps into every relationship?" or even harder,
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"How do you live with your partner's doubt?"
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I don't necessarily know the answers to these questions,
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but I think they're an important start at having a more thoughtful conversation about what it means to love someone.
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So, if you want it, the short version of the story of my relationship is this:
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A year ago, an acquaintance and I did a study designed to create romantic love, and we fell in love, and we are still together, and I am so glad.
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But falling in love is not the same thing as staying in love.
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Falling in love is the easy part.
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So at the end of my article, I wrote, "Love didn't happen to us. We're in love because we each made the choice to be."
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And I cringe a little when I read that now, not because it isn't true,
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but because at the time, I really hadn't considered everything that was contained in that choice.
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I didn't consider how many times we would each have to make that choice,
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and how many times I will continue to have to make that choice without knowing whether or not he will always choose me.
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I want it to be enough to have asked and answered 36 questions,
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and to have chosen to love someone so generous and kind and fun and to have broadcast that choice in the biggest newspaper in America.
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But what I have done instead is turn my relationship into the kind of myth I don't quite believe in.
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And what I want, what perhaps I will spend my life wanting, is for that myth to be true.
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I want the happy ending implied by the title to my article, which is, incidentally, the only part of the article that I didn't actually write.
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But what I have instead is the chance to make the choice to love someone, and the hope that he will choose to love me back,
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and it is terrifying, but that's the deal with love.
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Thank you.