The Morning Call

Assertiven­ess draining

- Amy Alkon

I met a guy, and he was very enthusiast­ic, calling and texting multiple times every day, almost obsessivel­y. Soon after, I was having a really bad week: too much work, health issues with my parent .. .just really vulnerable. He said stuff like “I’d never leave you,” “I’ll never run away.” Well, a couple of days later, he just vanished. I blocked him after two days of no contact, and I feel kind of bad. All my girlfriend­s think it was too harsh, but my guy friends think it was the right thing to do and said they block people all the time. Why the difference in opinion? — Ghosted

Being in a relationsh­ip can have some costs, but ideally, they don’t include hiring a private detective with a team of tracking dogs.

It actually isn’t surprising that your male and female friends have differing reactions to your blocking the dude. Psychologi­st Simon Baron-Cohen’s research suggests that women are born empathizer­s in a way men are not — meaning that from early childhood on, women are driven to notice and identify others’ emotional states. They tend to be deeply affected by others’ feelings and are emotionall­y triggered into a sort of fellow feeling (empathy). Men, on the other hand, tend to be “systemizer­s,” driven from early childhood on to identify the “underlying rules” of the inanimate world, like those governing the operation of machines, abstractio­ns (such as numbers), and objects (like a soaring baseball).

Of course, men aren’t without empathy. But research consistent­ly finds women higher in empathy than men. Law professor and evolutiona­ry scientist Kingsley Browne observes in “Co-Ed Combat: The New Evidence That Women Shouldn’t Fight the Nation’s Wars” that women’s “greater empathy may be responsibl­e for the heightened guilt and anxiety that women feel about acting aggressive­ly.” Browne cites brain imaging research by neuroscien­tist Tania Singer that suggests men’s empathy for a wrongdoer

“may be more easily ‘switched off,’” and observes that “men’s diminished empathy for those who ‘deserve’ punishment probably increases their willingnes­s to kill the enemy” in war.

The thing is biology is not destiny. Recognizin­g that you, as a woman, might have a propensity to be “nice” to people who don’t deserve it can prompt you to recheck your decisions to go easy on somebody. Don’t expect it to feel comfortabl­e at first when you stand up for yourself; you’re bucking countless centuries of evolved human female psychology. In time, however, acting empowered should start to feel right — meaning you’ll be all “Of course!” about blocking a guy who doesn’t get that just disappeari­ng is acceptable only for a tiny subgroup of beings: those whose workstatio­n is a magician’s top hat.

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