Compatibility vs. Chemistry – What Makes Love Last?

Compatibility vs. Chemistry – What Makes Love Last?

COMPATIBILITY VS. CHEMISTRY – WHAT MAKES LOVE LAST?

By Evan Marc Katz

I don’t mean to pound the drum like this. Honestly, I don’t look for these articles; they just tend to find me. Thanks to living in the Information Age and the advent of Big Data, we now have the tools to prove things we’ve always hypothesized, like global warming. Now, lots of scientists are shining the light on my personal hobby horse: compatibility vs. chemistry. Enter Ty Tashiro, Discovery Network’s relationship expert and University of Maryland professor.

While liking and lusting are both key features of romantic love, you’re better off betting on the former.

In his forthcoming book, “The Science of Happily Ever After: What Really Matters in the Quest for Enduring Love,” Tashiro plots a path to happily ever after, using analysis of studies about what makes love last and what’s likely to bring about a romantic implosion. In other words, focus less on chemistry and more on compatibility.

His words, not mine.

According to a U.S. News piece, “While liking and lusting are both key features of romantic love, you’re better off betting on the former,” Tashiro says. According to research cited in his book, lust declines at a rate of 8 percent per year of marriage, while liking declines at a rate of 3 percent. Moreover, specific personality traits are likely to predict marital success — and failure — in the long run. And since you can’t have it all — it’s a mathematics impossibility, he says — it’s best to pick based on personality. That’s not to throw sex out the window — it’s fundamental for a successful marriage. (Quoting one of his graduate school advisers, Tashiro writes, “If your partner is bad at tennis, it’s not a big deal, because you can go play tennis with someone else. If your partner is bad in bed, well, that’s a big deal.”)

Ideally, if you can match up with someone based on three personality traits — which he calls agreeableness, lack of neuroticism, and lack of seeking novelty — you’re more likely to have your bases covered, sexual innuendo and all.

Agreeableness, lack of neuroticism, lack of seeking novelty: These are the traits that make for healthy long-term partnerships.

Agreed. And it’s why so much of my advice is based on encouraging my smart, strong, successful women readers to be patient, supportive, easygoing, secure, and fundamentally accepting of men. (Again, I would advise men the same thing if they were, in fact, my clients). So when I get exasperated by the comments from my detractors who tell me that I’m wrong, I can only reiterate: my advice isn’t my opinion. My advice is based on three things: science, personal experience, and ten years of coaching.

Agreeableness, lack of neuroticism, lack of seeking novelty: These are the traits that make for healthy long-term partnerships. Does anyone want to advocate for difficult, neurotic, and fickle?

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