
Become Familiar With How Women Flirt
According to Rutgers University anthropologist and best-selling author Helen E. Fisher, women worldwide use a remarkably similar sequence of expressions to signal interest. As Fisher explained on Psychology Today, the sequence unfolds as follows: first, the woman smiles at her admirer, simultaneously raising her eyebrows swiftly and widening her eyes to fix her gaze upon him. Next, she lowers her eyelids, tilts her head downward and to the side, and averts her eyes. Often, she complements these gestures by covering her face with her hands. She then releases nervous giggles as she retreats behind her palms. This distinct sequential flirting gesture led German ethologist Irenaus Eibl-Eibesfeldt to believe that it is innate—a courtship behavior that evolved long ago to communicate sexual interest.