Intelligence Gap Relationships: Are You the Smart One or the Dumb One?

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People don’t ever really mean raw IQ when they talk about intelligence in a relationship. They usually mean curiosity, communication, emotional awareness, and whether being with this person makes life feel mentally alive or strangely lonely.That question is tricky because “intelligence” is a broad word. In a Dazed piece that brought this discussion into light, sociologist Dr. Jenny van Hooff argues that what people call “intellectual compatibility” usually reflects similar educational and class backgrounds, along with shared “repertoires of knowledge and culture.” Basically, a lot of people aren’t falling for book-smart intelligence, necessarily. They’re responding to familiarity. They like being with someone who gets their references, knows the same institutions, and speaks the same social language.Research supports part of that. A 2023 study on assortative mating found that couples in Finland and the Netherlands often had similar education levels, and researchers said social background was one reason those matches happened. So the “intelligence” problem in a relationship might actually come down to class, access, and who got introduced to books, films, and ideas early, rather than some clear divide between a genius and an idiot.Attraction Dims When You Feel Like the Only Adult in the RoomThat still leaves the day-to-day issue. If one partner is curious, emotionally available, and able to talk through conflict, while the other shuts down or gets defensive, then there’s a real problem there. “If you can’t communicate as a couple, the sex just goes,” one woman told Dazed, van Hooff adding, “Intimacy and sexuality can be disrupted if the relationship dynamic feels infantilising.” That gets at the real problem. Attraction can survive a lot, but it struggles when one person starts feeling like the only adult in the room.There’s also a class angle people hate admitting, because it sounds snobbier than it actually is. Someone who grew up around art, books, and dinner-table debates might read another person as aloof when the real issue is exposure. Dazed points to Pierre Bourdieu’s idea of cultural capital for exactly that reason. A person can be bright, funny, inventive, and fully alive to the world without being able to hold forth on 1970s cinema or whatever else a wealthier family treats as basic knowledge.The real question is whether both people bring curiosity, openness, and some willingness to grow. That’s a fair expectation in any relationship. Past that point, people may be judging differences in background and exposure as if they were differences in intelligence.The post Intelligence Gap Relationships: Are You the Smart One or the Dumb One? appeared first on VICE.