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Fakings Ellas Tambien Caen Y Si Tienen Novio Peor La Misma Access

At first glance, this popular phrase from certain corners of social media and street-level psychology sounds cynical. It suggests that deception—particularly emotional or romantic deception—is a universal trap. Men fake interest, status, or commitment; women fall for it. But the second half of the sentence is the real dagger: "and if they have a boyfriend, it's even worse."

He doesn’t need to be better—he just needs to sound better. He gives intense attention, then pulls back. She feels the absence. When she has a boyfriend, she compares: "Why doesn’t my boyfriend make me feel this way?" fakings ellas tambien caen y si tienen novio peor la misma

The faker knows this. He doesn’t need to win her completely right away—just enough to create doubt, excitement, and secrecy. Neurochemically, novel stimuli release dopamine. A long-term boyfriend becomes familiar, reducing dopamine spikes. The new man—even if fake—activates reward circuits. The boyfriend’s real text says "What do you want for dinner?" The faker’s text says "I can’t stop thinking about you." At first glance, this popular phrase from certain

If the boyfriend is distant, the fake suitor fakes closeness. If the boyfriend is broke, the fake suitor fakes wealth. If the boyfriend is predictable, the fake suitor fakes spontaneity. But the second half of the sentence is

"Faking ellas también caen y si tienen novio peor la misma."

Women are not naive. In fact, research in social cognition suggests women are often better at detecting lies in close relationships. So why do they fall? Because they want to fall. The fake narrative offers something their current reality lacks: excitement, certainty, or the illusion of a perfect future.