What Is It About?

Napkin Version

Infatuation provides us with the motivational nudge we often need to take the risk of connecting with others.  However it can create trouble for us if we blindly follow it, especially when based upon a shallow view of the person. 

It can feed an intense desire for the other person, which is great for physical chemistry, and giving us a powerful feeling of euphoria.  However it can sometimes motivate us so strongly, we can inflate the positive aspects of someone, and downplay the negative, resulting in an overly positive view of them. 

We can also ignore clear signs that the person is not a good match for us, or can even give up some of our power in order to secure and maintain the relationship.  Both of these can make life a lot harder for us.

THE PHYSIOLOGY

Researchers have identified three different motivational components that drive our ‘mating’ behaviour:

  • Lust: a largely hormonal-based physiological craving to seek sexual gratification.  This is thought to be the basic drive for reproduction.

  • Attraction: where we feel an increased energy and focus upon a potential mate, along with the craving for an emotional union.  This is where Infatuation lives, and is thought to help us to make a more refined selection of a partner. 

  • Attachment: where we work to keep a close social contact. This is thought to help the relationship last long enough for our children to become successfully independent.

We can feel one or more of these at the same time towards the same person, or each one separately towards different people e.g., we can desire a sexual encounter with one person, feel infatuated by another, all while feeling a deep love and commitment for a third person.

MASTERING OUR PHYSIOLOGY

Thankfully, human behaviour has evolved to a more sophisticated level than our basic physiological urges, and we have some control over how we respond to them (rather than blindly reacting).   The decisions we make regarding our relationships can impact the quality of them, and the quality of our life, so it is worth every effort to manage ourselves carefully, and to choose wisely.

ATTRACTION HAS MANY FACETS

Interestingly we can sometimes feel attracted to people who may not be a good match for a longer term relationship, but help us to change or grow in some way (usually without consciously realising it).  These people are often one or more of the following:

  • Strong in qualities we want more of in ourselves.

  • Weak in areas we deny in ourselves.

  • Behave in ways that trigger emotions needing our attention.

  • Help us to ‘escape’ from a challenging or stressful situation.

  • Teach us some kind of important life lesson.

In this regard, Infatuation can show us what to look at in ourselves, to grow into more of what we want to be, or to resolve something that may be holding us back.  Just recognising this can often reduce the intensity of Infatuation, making it easier for us to handle, and to determine what is best for us.

Handling Infatuation

In The Moment

Training our brain to use a relevant process helps us to focus more effectively and move on more easily. Using it often will also help our brain to catch Infatuation sooner, making it easier to manage.

Self-Reflection

If the emotion feels quite troubling, it’s usually worth checking if something else is going on first.

By resolving things in ourselves and clearing any other residual emotions, we can reduce the intensity of the emotion - now and when we encounter it again in future. 

Doing so also makes us less likely to ‘attract’ other difficulties that leave us feeling the same way.

See the Processing and Clearing an Emotion page for a generic process to resolve and clear an emotion.

Working Through Infatuation

The actions we choose to take in response to an emotion can make a significant difference to how well we adjust and move on from it.

The more we take genuine actions that are uplifting and ‘right’ i.e., are good for ourselves and everyone else (including the environment and other living beings) - for now, and over the long-term, the better our experience of life becomes.

It’s not always easy to navigate our way through Infatuation due to the intensity often felt. 

The following can help us to maintain a more balanced approach, and to keep things at a more manageable pace:

  • Acknowledging the physiological aspects, and giving that a suitable level of importance, all while considering the larger picture of our life (and what we are wanting to do with it).

  • Identifying what might be underneath our attraction, seeing it for what it is, and focussing upon ourselves first.

  • Knowing what type of relationship we really want, and what aspects are important to us. See the section below.

  • Looking at things from a long-term perspective.

  • Slowing things down a bit to get to know their true character beyond their immediate behaviour and personality.

  • Checking that both people are putting in a similar effort over time.  If only one person rows, both end up going around in circles.

  • Checking our intuition whilst balancing our head, heart, and hormones, to help know what would be good for us.

  • If it is an opportunity worth exploring, then taking things gently while we build solid foundations. This enables us to have a more realistic perspective on things, and to enjoy the feelings that a longer-lasting type of mutual attraction brings.

 

If we decide that acting upon the attraction wouldn’t be good for us, then the following may help [also see the Desire page]:

  • Appreciating the opportunity for what it was, or what we learned from considering it, and feeling grateful for the variety of experiences that life offers us.

  • Putting some space between them and ourselves.

  • Distracting our focus onto something more important to us.

  • Picturing the situation with all the negative consequences it comes with, and keeping that in mind whenever we think of them.

 While all of this analysis sounds quite unromantic, it can help to put us in a much better position to decide whether to explore the connection with confidence, hold back a bit until we have more clarity, or distract ourselves away from it.

IF WE ARE SEEKING A RELATIONSHIP

It might help to take a moment to consider where we are at in ourselves, what kind of relationship would suit us best at this point, and what ingredients would help to make it one we can thrive in.

Clearing Residual Infatuation

Emotional energy can stick with us, even after we have worked through and resolved whatever caused it.

There are a number of ways we can clear the energy, including doing something physical in nature, imagining the emotion leaving our body, or for more intense emotions, there is a variety of different therapies and alternative forms of energy healing that can also help.