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Psychology Episode 74 June 12, 2023
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Charm is magnetic. It draws you in, makes you laugh, and keeps your guard down. But not all charm is genuine. Some people use it as performance, not personality. They mirror your energy, speak your language, and study your reactions. You walk away thinking you have met someone special, but what you actually met was strategy.
Performative charm feels exciting because it is designed to. It is a curated version of someone who knows exactly what to say and when to say it. At first, it feels like connection. Later, it reveals itself as control.
Let’s break down how to recognise when someone’s charm is authentic and when it is carefully staged.
Healthy chemistry happens when two personalities meet halfway. Performative charm copies rather than connects. You might notice they love every band you love, share every opinion you express, or finish your sentences a little too perfectly.
Mirroring creates quick intimacy, but it also blurs individuality. If someone constantly agrees or adapts to please, it signals that they value being liked more than being known.
Genuine attraction adds colour to conversation. Performative attraction copies your palette.
Everyone loves praise, but authentic compliments are specific. A performative charmer uses flattery like currency. They compliment your looks, your energy, your vibe — all in broad, emotional terms that could apply to anyone.
It feels warm at first, but it lacks depth. They might say “you’re amazing” five times a night but never mention why. The praise is designed to trigger dopamine, not intimacy.
A real connection notices details. A performer memorises reactions.
Charm without vulnerability is performance. When someone makes you laugh but never lets you in, pay attention. Performers master storytelling but fear emotional transparency. They use humour, wit, or mystery to maintain control.
If every conversation feels like a show and never a moment of stillness, you are dating a persona, not a person. The strongest red flag is when their charm disappears the moment you ask a real question.
Performative charm relies on audience. When they have your full attention, they glow. When you pull back, they fade. You might notice mood swings that depend on validation — excited when admired, cold when ignored.
This dynamic often repeats online. They post curated highlights, chase compliments, and measure worth by engagement. The performance continues even when you are not in the room.
Authentic charm stays consistent in private. Performative charm only exists when it is being watched.
Charmers know how to create emotional rushes. They accelerate intimacy through compliments, physical touch, and promises. You mistake adrenaline for chemistry and intensity for depth.
But genuine connection grows quietly. It feels safe, not urgent. Performers push the pace because performance cannot last forever. The longer they stay, the more the mask risks slipping.
When everything feels like a movie scene, stop and ask yourself: is this story being written with me or for me?
1. Overuse of “you’re perfect.” Nobody real speaks in absolutes.
2. Love bombing early on. Excessive attention before genuine knowledge of you.
3. Storytelling dominance. They talk often about how others adore them.
4. Emotional hot and cold. Energy changes when they are not the centre.
5. Avoidance of quiet moments. Stillness breaks their rhythm.
Charm is not the problem. Performance is. Real charm invites authenticity. Performative charm demands applause.
Charm should make you feel comfortable, not confused. It should bring curiosity, not caution. When someone’s charm feels rehearsed, it probably is.
The difference between real connection and performance lies in consistency. Real people grow warmer with time. Performers lose energy once the show is over.
Again, charm is not the art of pretending to be interesting. It is the courage to be real.
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These Hoes Ain’t Loyal is a raw and honest podcast about love, loyalty, passion, and betrayal. It helps you understand the psychology behind your actions and your partner’s. Each episode uncovers real reasons
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