We Always Forget: Why People Probably Like You More Than You Think

Ever walked away from a conversation replaying every awkward pause, convinced you talked too much—or too little?

Most of us do.

But science says we’re wrong about how others see us.

According to a study at Yale University’s Clark Relationship Lab, people consistently underestimate how much others like them.

After chatting, participants guessed they scored about 4.75 out of 7 on the “liking” scale.

Their partners, however, rated them at 5.42.

That’s a 12.36% gap—a small but telling reminder that we’re far more likable than we believe.


Psychologists call this the “Liking Gap.”

It’s the quiet space between how we think we come across and how warmly others actually perceive us.

The gap shows up in everyday life: a coworker’s short text, a friend who forgets to reply, the stranger who doesn’t smile back.

We fill those blanks with insecurity—assuming neutrality or even rejection—when, more often than not, the truth is just distraction, fatigue, or shyness.


So how do you close the gap?

By flipping the mental script.

Instead of wondering “Do they like me?”, start with the assumption that they probably do.

Make liking the default, not the prize.

That single shift changes everything—from posture to tone to eye contact.

When we assume goodwill, we behave more openly, and that openness tends to invite genuine warmth in return.

It’s not delusion; it’s calibration.


Think about the last person who made you feel instantly comfortable.

They probably weren’t performing.

They simply carried an easy confidence—the kind that says, “We’re already on good terms.”

It’s hard not to like people who make us feel that way.


So perhaps the real confidence trick isn’t charm or eloquence.

It’s giving others the benefit of the doubt before they’ve earned it.

Until proven otherwise, assume you’re already liked.

Because statistically—and emotionally—you probably are.

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