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First, the lies in romantic movies and their effect.

In movies, partners are always portrayed as


being synonymous with being happy, loving, optimistic and they will never gonna give you up,
never gonna let you down, never gonna run around and desert you. Like Julia Stiles and
Freddie Prinze Jr., in Down to You, or the John Cusack - Kate Beckinsale couple in Serendipity
(2001) and many many other movies. This invisibly creates an uplifted standard for youngsters
who haven’t experienced life at all and expect their future partners to be as perfect as the
character on the screen that they’re watching. Of course, they will never find someone worthy to
their unbelievable standard and as basic human’s nature occur, their hearts will be shattered by
the inevitable breakup and they won’t reconsider that maybe their loss in love life is due to them,
rather they will blame the fault onto something else. According to a Harvard University article,
people with such “high” standards usually have a less active life, a greater chance of
participating in reckless behaviour and contracting melachonic depression, in some rare cases
isolation and anti-social actions are also displayed. Moreover, these people may even not have
a good love life later on. “Many couples when fighting choose to break up rather than resolve
the conflict” - Patricia Allen, a highly regarded professional in martial studying, said. “Teenagers
think that they have to find the perfect love interest to achieve true happiness which is never the
case, a always-happy-never-fight relationship is something of fiction work that they learned
through cheesy romantic films. The harder they try to find this mysterious “other - half - of - their
-souls” , the harder is it for them to find happiness and settlement in the future.” -she added.
Another 

The effect: According to a Harvard University article, people with such “high” standards usually
have a less active life, a greater chance of participating in reckless behaviour and contracting
melachonic depression, in some rare cases isolation and anti-social actions are also displayed.
Moreover, these people may even not have a good love life later on. “Many couples when
fighting choose to break up rather than resolve the conflict” - Patricia Allen, a highly regarded
professional in martial studying, said. “Teenagers think that they have to find the perfect love
interest to achieve true happiness which is never the case, a always-happy-never-fight
relationship is something of fiction work that they learned through cheesy romantic films. The
harder they try to find this mysterious “other - half - of - their -souls” , the harder is it for them to
find happiness and settlement in the future.” -she added.

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