About 7,920,000 results. That’s how
many pages the internet can find on how to just accept a compliment. You would
think it’s the easiest thing in the world, just to say two words – Thank you.
Most of us know that it’s not.
So why
is it so hard for us to accept that someone admires us? Perhaps we’ve all got
bad cases of inferiority complexes. Or, perhaps we’re concerned that receiving a
compliment is a mere social cue to give one back. This week, I did an
experiment to see how many people struggle with such a seemingly simple concept
– accepting a compliment.
I
decided to see if there was a difference in the way a boy takes a compliment as
opposed to a girl. My hypotheses were that men would show discomfort in being
complimented by a woman, and a woman would disagree in modesty whilst returning
a compliment. I came to these hypotheses because of behaviours I have observed
and questioned in the past; a lot of men seem to perceive a compliment as a
form of flirting… hence the discomfort. Women on the other hand, more often
have low self-esteem causing their modesty in accepting or completely refuting
a compliment. Respectively, I have also noticed women give compliments often in
expectation for one back. This has become
a social norm.
For each of the 26 people
involved – 13 women and 13 men – I used the same simple, vague compliment: “You look really cute today”. All compliments were delivered face to face
on the same day, and none of them knew I was gauging their reactions for a
social experiment.
The
women of the experiment were almost exactly as I predicted them to be. Only one
of the 13 girls simply accepted the compliment. The rest of them refuted the
compliment and/or complimented me back. Some of the responses I got included, “no!”
and, “oh me? Thanks I guess, your braid is nice!”
The men
of the experiment all reacted very similarly. Upon receiving the compliment,
all 13 boys turned their heads away and smiled nervously. After that, the
reactions varied from “I know”, to “You think so?” I found it quite interesting
how all 13 boys involved had the exact same initial reaction.
From
all of this, I conclude that the way both men and women receive compliments are
the social norm. That norm is the universal belief that compliments are driven
by things other than the sheer admiration from one person to another. So how
can we change it?
Consider
this: the only way to change a social norm is to regularly behave against it.
Accept compliments with a gracious thank you when they come your way. Believe
them. Give compliments whenever you can. And remember, it’s not weird if you’re
being nice.
And it’s
not weird if it’s science.
Hey Andrea,
ReplyDeleteI hadn't ever thought of this, but now that you mention it, that's totally a thing. People in my experience definitely respond to compliments this way. Sometimes I get the impression that people don't want to seem vain, but I think it's important to define the distinction. To acknowledge your own strengths (and to accept that others acknowledge them too) doesn't make you conceded. It makes you confident, and there's nothing wrong with that. Also, I was wondering if you had the resources to use a larger sample size. If not, the one your using is fine, but you might get different results if you survey more people.
Good job,
Emma.