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2 Tell-Tale Signs Of ‘Fake Love’ In A Relationship, By A Psychologist

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Home » 2 Tell-Tale Signs Of ‘Fake Love’ In A Relationship, By A Psychologist
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2 Tell-Tale Signs Of ‘Fake Love’ In A Relationship, By A Psychologist

Press RoomBy Press Room21 May 20267 Mins Read
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2 Tell-Tale Signs Of ‘Fake Love’ In A Relationship, By A Psychologist

Hindsight is 20/20 when it comes to love. When a relationship ends, it’s not uncommon to look back and ask yourself, “How did I miss that?” or, “Why didn’t I see it sooner?” From the outside, the warning signs can look obvious. But from inside the relationship, they rarely feel obvious at all.

That’s because romantic relationships don’t arrive with means for external commentary or objective scoring. They unfold gradually, all while being shaped by your emotional investment and sense of hope. Even relationships that later prove unstable or inauthentic can feel, at the time, incredibly emotionally convincing. It’s not until the relationship ends that you realize, in retrospect, that what you had wasn’t real.

“Fake love” is one term used to describe a relationship that appears intimate yet lacks a stable emotional foundation. These relationships can feel intense, even consuming, but leave either one or both partners feeling ambiguous. Two patterns show up repeatedly in these kinds of partnerships, which often only become recognizable in hindsight: love that escalates too quickly, and love that depends on you behaving in very specific ways.

1. Real Love Is Not ‘Love-Bombing’

At the beginning of some relationships, affection comes in overwhelming waves. Messages are constant. Compliments feel almost cinematic in scale. Plans are made quickly, sometimes within days. There’s a strong sense of urgency. It can feel almost as if the relationship needs to accelerate just to keep up with how emotionally intense it feels.

This pattern is often referred to as love-bombing. A 2017 study defines this as a pattern of excessive communication early in a relationship that can function as a way to gain psychological influence or control. The authors suggest that this intensity is often leveraged strategically to shape power dynamics within a relationship. What makes it especially insidious, however, is that it’s often interpreted by the recipient as a deep emotional investment.

A typical example might look like this: Within the first week of meeting, someone begins messaging constantly from morning to night. They say they’ve “never felt this way before,” talk about future travel plans and introduce the idea of exclusivity almost immediately. When the other person doesn’t respond quickly enough, they may receive follow-up messages asking if everything is okay or expressing anxiety about the connection shifting.

From inside the relationship, this can feel incredibly flattering, or as though they’re experiencing a whirlwind romance. Intensity is, in turn, interpreted as certainty, and that certainty is interpreted as compatibility. The emotional pace gives the impression that something rare and meaningful is unfolding.

But as time goes on, the tone of the intensity starts changing. The same urgency that once felt exciting begins feeling like pressure. Expectations for responsiveness may increase. Emotional highs may be followed by sudden drops in attention or warmth, which creates a cycle that becomes increasingly difficult to interpret.

Healthy romantic development isn’t nearly as fast or all-consuming as love-bombing. Partners gradually become close through quality time. Their affection for one another grows alongside knowledge of their habits and values. And importantly, it leaves space for pauses, uncertainty and independent life outside the relationship.

But for many, this is a disparity that only becomes clear in hindsight. One pattern deliberately accelerates intimacy through intensity, while the other develops intimacy through accumulation. Both feel thrilling, but one is less authentic than the other.

2. Real Love Is Not Conditional

Another pattern that often only becomes visible after a relationship ends involves affection that shifts depending on behavior, mood or compliance. This is what psychological researchers refer to as “conditional positive regard.”

Conditional positive regard refers to the experience of receiving warmth or acceptance only when certain conditions are met. In relationships, this usually looks like a partner who’s only affectionate under certain circumstances, or a partner who only seems to be in a good mood when things go their way.

In a 2015 study published in the Journal of Personality, researchers found that perceived conditional positive regard is associated with lower relationship quality across different types of relationships, including (but not limited to) romantic partnerships. The authors note that this effect is partly explained by reduced satisfaction of basic psychological needs, namely autonomy. In other words, this conditionality leads partners to feel less free to be themselves within the relationship.

This dynamic usually starts off subtly. A partner may become noticeably warmer and more engaged when you agree with them, when you match their emotional tone or when their preferences are prioritized. But if you were to express a different opinion, set a boundary or make an independent decision, they become noticeably withdrawn or even refuse to be kind or affectionate altogether.

Whether done unknowingly or manipulatively, these unspoken conditions lead the other to believe that only certain versions of themselves are worthy of connection. Since the others are always met with coldness or withdrawal, they may begin to internalize those versions of themselves as unlovable.

At first, this can feel more confusing than immediately alarming. Partners may assume the other is simply in a bad mood, or even that they’ve inadvertently upset them. As a result, they might respond by adjusting themselves rather than questioning the dynamic itself. They make a point of being more agreeable, more careful and more attuned to the emotional cues that typically precede the withdrawal.

This is where conditional affection becomes difficult to detect in real time. It can resemble normal relationship negotiation, where partners naturally adjust to each other. But the difference lies in flexibility. In a healthy, loving partnership, a difference in opinion or behavior shouldn’t meaningfully threaten emotional security. Only in a conditional dynamics will emotional security be dependent on specific consistencies in behavior.

Unconditional love, at its most stable form, doesn’t ask you to change who you are or what you think. Connection should never come at a price so big that you can’t be yourself. Partners should always feel safe enough to disagree with one another. Safe enough to express their individuality. Safe enough to have normal fluctuations in their emotions. But most importantly of all, partners should feel safe enough to have these experiences without them becoming tests of worthiness.

The reality is that stable, healthy love won’t always look lavish or exciting — and that isn’t a bad thing, regardless of what others (or even a partner) tries to convince you. What matters more is that it’s steady. It doesn’t ask you to rush into anything, nor does it ask you to be anyone other than who you already are.

How To Spot Fake Love In Your Relationship

Both love-bombing and conditional positive regard are similar in how drastically they reshape the emotional environment. They give rise to something that feels like love but, ultimately, is neither stable nor conducive to long-term happiness. Worse, neither of the two patterns is obvious while it is happening, especially for someone unacquainted with them.

With distance, however, they become much clearer. Intensity reveals its pace, and affection reveals its conditions. What once felt like overwhelming love takes on a wholly different meaning as soon as it’s viewed from outside the emotional momentum of the relationship itself. And thankfully, simply knowing what to look out for makes awareness during the experience itself much easier, instead of just interpretation after the fact.

Want a clearer sense of how satisfied you currently are in your own relationship? Take my science-backed Relationship Satisfaction Scale to assess how balanced, secure, and fulfilling your love is.

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