The Free Press Journal

Show your love without saying ‘I Love You’

As per the study, small non-romantic gestures, like snuggling can make people feel more loved

- AGENCIES

Small, non-romantic gestures – such as snuggling with a child – can make people feel more loved than simply saying ‘I love you’, a study has found. Meanwhile, controllin­g behaviours – like someone wanting to know where they were at all times – were seen as the least loving, researcher­s said. “Whether we feel loved or not plays an important role in how we feel from day to day,” said Saeideh Heshmati from the Pennsylvan­ia State University in the US.

“The top scenarios that came back weren’t necessaril­y romantic. So, it is possible for people to feel loved in simple, everyday scenarios. It doesn’t have to be over-thetop gestures,” said Heshmati. For the study published in the Journal of Social and Personal Relationsh­ips, researcher­s recruited 495 adults to answer a questionna­ire about whether or not they thought most people would feel loved in 60 different scenarios.

The situations included positive actions, like being greeted by a pet; neutral scenarios, like feeling close to nature; and negative situations, like someone acting possessive. After gathering the data, the researcher­s analysed it with a cultural consensus model – a framework for measuring the beliefs of a culture.

“We found that behavioura­l actions – rather than purely verbal expression­s – triggered more consensus as indicators of love. For example, more people agreed that a child snuggling with them was more loving than someone simply saying, ‘I love you,’” said Heshmati.

“You might think they would score on the same level, but people were more in agreement about loving actions, where there’s more authentici­ty perhaps, instead of a person just saying something,” said Heshmati. Participan­ts also agreed on what does not make people feel loved. Behaviours that could be seen as controllin­g were ranked among the least loving actions.

“It seems that controllin­g or possessive behaviours are the ones people do not feel loved by,” said Heshmati. “If someone wants to know where you are at all times, or acts controllin­g, those actions are not loving to us. This could be a cultural difference, though,” she said. “There’s research showing that in more communal societies, these types of controllin­g behaviours may be seen as affection,” she added.

“We found that behavioura­l actions – rather than purely verbal expression­s – triggered more consensus as indicators of love. For example, more people agreed that a child snuggling with them was more loving than someone simply saying,‘I love you,’” - Saeideh Heshmati from the Pennsylvan­ia State University, US

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