
There was a time when abs weren’t a bonus. They were a requirement. A non-negotiable, even. Six packs meant hot, sexy, desirable. Everything else was optional. Communication could be questionable. Emotional availability barely there. Intellect didn’t really matter. As long as the jawline was sharp and the body looked good.
Attraction in your early 20s was largely driven by hormones and poor decision-making. You didn’t think so much as react. If someone made your heart race, that felt like chemistry. If they were slightly nice to you, you felt sparks. If they kept you guessing, that felt exciting. Consistent people felt boring. Logic existed somewhere in the background, but it rarely made it into the room.
You weren’t unintelligent. You were just convinced that intensity and attraction were the same thing. The faster something moved, the more real it felt. Emotional chaos was mistaken for passion. Anxiety was reframed as butterflies. The more effort it took to decode someone, the more invested you became. And yes, this usually ended in heartbreak. Very dramatic.
Then your mid-20s arrive, and something quietly shifts. One day you realise that abs no longer impress you the way they used to, but someone who replies properly does. Calm, consistent people suddenly feel attractive in a way that surprises you. And what once felt thrilling now feels slightly exhausting.
This isn’t you lowering your standards or losing your spark. It’s your nervous system maturing, your self-awareness sharpening, and your tolerance for nonsense dropping significantly. This is where attraction starts to change.
You stop confusing anxiety with chemistry
You start paying attention to behaviour, not potential
Earlier, attraction was often about who someone could become. Their ambition. Their charm. Their unfinished growth arc. You filled in the gaps generously. Later, attraction becomes about who someone actually is day to day, how they communicate when they’re tired, whether they follow through, and how they handle disagreement. Consistency starts to feel far more appealing than charisma. It’s not that you stop believing in growth. You just stop being attracted to projects.
Emotional availability becomes a turn-on
There was a time when emotional distance felt intriguing. Someone being hard to read felt mysterious. After your mid-20s, it mostly feels inconvenient. Attraction shifts towards people who are clear about their intentions, responsive without games, and capable of talking through discomfort. Stability stops reading as boring. It starts reading as attractive.
You recognise your own patterns
You are less interested in being chosen
In your early 20s, attraction often came bundled with validation. Being wanted felt important. Being pursued felt reassuring. Later, attraction becomes less about proving your desirability and more about assessing compatibility. You care more about whether you actually like them, whether your lives align, whether being with them feels supportive rather than destabilising—and, crucially, whether they are willing to adopt and love your cats the way you do.
Peace becomes part of the attraction
This is the biggest shift. Attraction after your mid-20s doesn’t disappear; it just comes with ease. It includes comfort, humour, and emotional steadiness. You want connection without constant overthinking. Excitement without emotional whiplash. You still want attraction. You just want it without the chaos.
Why it can feel underwhelming at first
When attraction changes, it can feel like something is missing. The rush. The obsession. The emotional highs and lows. But what you’re actually losing is emotional turbulence, not romance. What replaces it is attraction that’s mutual, grounded, and sustainable. It may not feel cinematic. But it feels real. And eventually, it feels far better.
Lead image credit: Netflix
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