Unrequited Love

Unrequited love or one-sided love is love that is not openly reciprocated or understood as such by the beloved.

The beloved may not be aware of the admirer's deep and pure affection, or may consciously reject it knowing that the admirer admires them. Merriam-Webster defines unrequited as "not reciprocated or returned in kind".

Psychiatrist Eric Berne states in his book Sex in Human Loving that "Some say that one-sided love is better than none, but like half a loaf of bread, it is likely to grow hard and moldy sooner." However, the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche contends that "indispensable...to the lover is his unrequited love, which he would at no price relinquish for a state of indifference." Unrequited love stands in contrast to redamancy, the act of reciprocal love, which is the tendency for people to like others who express liking for them.

Analysis

Unrequited Love 
According to legend, the Greek poet Sappho fell from a rock out of unrequited love for the ferryman Phaon. Painting by Ernst Stückelberg, 1897.

Route to unrequited love

According to Dr. Roy Baumeister, what makes a person desirable is a complex and highly personal mix of many qualities and traits. But falling for someone who is much more desirable than oneself — whether because of physical beauty or attributes like charm, intelligence, wit or status — Baumeister calls this kind of mismatch "prone to find their love unrequited" and that such relationships are falling upward. According to some psychologists opposites do attract.

'Platonic friendships provide a fertile soil for unrequited love'. Thus the object of unrequited love is often a friend or acquaintance, someone regularly encountered in the workplace, during the course of work, school or other activities involving large groups of people. This creates an awkward situation in which the admirer has difficulty in expressing their true feelings, a fear that revelation of feelings might invite rejection, cause embarrassment or might end all access to the beloved, as a romantic relationship may be inconsistent with the existing association.

Unrequited love victims

The inability of the unrequited lover to express or declare their love often leads to negative feelings such as depression, low self-esteem, anxiety and rapid mood swings between depression and euphoria. [citation needed]

Rejectors

'There are two bad sides to unrequited love, but only one is made familiar by our culture' – that of the lover, not the rejector. In fact, research suggests that the object of unrequited affection experiences a variety of negative emotions on a par with those of the suitor, including anxiety, frustration, and guilt. As Freud long since pointed out, 'when a woman sues for love, to reject and refuse is a distressing part for a man to play'.

Advantages

Unrequited Love 
Dante looks longingly at Beatrice Portinari (in yellow) as she passes by him with Lady Vanna (in red) in Dante and Beatrice, by Henry Holiday

Unrequited love has long been depicted as noble, an unselfish and stoic willingness to accept suffering. Literary and artistic depictions of unrequited love may depend on assumptions of social distance that have less relevance in western, democratic societies with relatively high social mobility and less rigid codes of sexual fidelity. Nonetheless, the literary record suggests a degree of euphoria in the feelings associated with unrequited love, which has the advantage as well of carrying none of the responsibilities of mutual relationships: certainly, "rejection, apparent or real, may be the catalyst for inspired literary creation... 'the poetry of frustration'."

Eric Berne considered that "the man who is loved by a woman is lucky indeed, but the one to be envied is he who loves, however little he gets in return. How much greater is Dante gazing at Beatrice than Beatrice walking by him in apparent disdain".

"Remedies"

Roman poet Ovid in his Remedia Amoris "provides advice on how to overcome inappropriate or unrequited love. The solutions offered include travel, teetotalism, bucolic pursuits, and ironically, avoidance of love poets".

Cultural examples

Unrequited Love 
A wrapped, unopened Valentines Day gift with heart-shaped helium balloons attached sits discarded in a dumpster.

Western

  • In the wake of his real-life experiences with Maud Gonne, W. B. Yeats wrote of those who 'had read/All I had rhymed of that monstrous thing/Returned and yet unrequited love'.
  • According to Robert B. Pippin, Proust claimed that 'the only successful (sustainable) love is unrequited love', something which according to Pippin, 'has been invoked as a figure for the condition of modernity itself'.

Eastern

  • The medieval Japanese poet Saigyō may have turned from samurai to monk because of unrequited love, one of his waka asking: "What turned me to wanting/to break with the world-bound life?/Maybe the one whose love/turned to loathing and who now joins with me in a different joy". In other poems he wrote: "Alas, I'm foreordained to suffer, loving deep a heartless lass....Would I could know if there be such in far-off China!"
  • Unrequited Love 
    Mural of a text message reading "I love you" and an ellipsis as a typing awareness indicator on the left.
    In China, passion tends to be associated not with happiness, but with sorrow and unrequited love.

See also

References

Further reading

  • Robert Burton, The Anatomy of Melancholy (New York 1951) THE THIRD PARTITION: LOVE-MELANCHOLY
  • Mead, Nicole L.; Baumeister, Roy F. (2007), "Unrequited love", in Baumeister, Roy F.; Vohs, Kathleen D. (eds.), Encyclopedia of Social Psychology, SAGE Publications, ISBN 9781412916707
  • J. Reid Meloy, Violent Attachments (1997)
  • Peabody, Susan 1989, 1994, 2005, "Addiction to Love: Overcoming Obsession and Dependency in Relationships."

Tags:

Unrequited Love AnalysisUnrequited Love AdvantagesUnrequited Love RemediesUnrequited Love Cultural examplesUnrequited Love Further readingUnrequited LoveAffectionLoveMerriam-Webster

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

2024 AFC U-23 Asian CupRoad House (1989 film)2024 Indian general electionJesse PlemonsBBC World ServiceMinouche ShafikTokugawa IeyasuPriscilla PresleyGeorge VIChet HolmgrenMax VerstappenMalaysiaXXX (2002 film)Mike Johnson (Louisiana politician)Killing EveGreat aukGeri HalliwellMinecraftTelegram (software)Ryan GoslingBrian PeckJodie Comer2024 Bondi Junction stabbingsKylian MbappéSwerve StricklandElon MuskSugar (2024 TV series)Meg BennettM. Night ShyamalanBob MarleyWrestleMania XLO. J. SimpsonConor McGregorAlgebraic notation (chess)Burj KhalifaJoJo SiwaAnne HathawayMin Hee-jin2024 Mutua Madrid Open – Men's singlesMTV Splitsvilla season 15AGeneration XCassandra NovaGilbert du Motier, Marquis de LafayetteColumbia UniversityHafþór Júlíus BjörnssonGoogle TranslateIsrael–Hamas warOscar De La HoyaMark Kerr (fighter)South KoreaEmma CorrinAbigail (2024 film)John TravoltaLeBron JamesSkibidi ToiletMetropolitan Area Outer Underground Discharge ChannelInter MilanAavesham (2024 film)Quentin TarantinoSaint GeorgeTaiping RebellionMichael Porter Jr.Doreen LawrenceVirat KohliElla PurnellChatGPTChinaList of ethnic slursShannon TweedXXXXLana Del ReyJosé MourinhoBlack Sails (TV series)Corsi–Rosenthal BoxList of highest-grossing Malayalam filmsJoseph StalinRussian invasion of Ukraine🡆 More