What sounds witty in the moment often sounds wounding to the person you care about most.
Sarcasm relies on a mismatch between what is said and what is meant. While that twist can feel clever, new evidence shows it rarely feels kind to the person on the receiving end. Psychologist Susan Krauss Whitbourne reports that a University of Connecticut study comparing literal praise, blunt criticism, teasing, prosocial “white lies,” and sarcasm found sarcasm rated the least polite form of reply by people of every age group. Men judged it slightly less rude than women did, and British participants thought white lies were more courteous than Americans, but sarcasm still came out on the bottom across the board.
Because sarcasm is easily heard as veiled criticism, the researchers argue, it violates the basic conversational rule of speaking clearly and cooperatively. Whitbourne notes that older adults grasp these nuances just as well as younger adults, so age offers no safe haven for sarcastic quips. In close relationships, sarcasm can therefore feel more like a cutting remark than a joke, eroding trust and warmth over time. To keep a partnership thriving, the article concludes, opt for direct, positive communication, or, at the least, friendly teasing, rather than the barbed humor of sarcasm.
Differences in politeness perception of irony and prosocial lies: Exploring the role of age, gender, and geographic location — Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology (DOI: 10.1037/cep0000324, PubMed ID: 38451725)
Researchers showed short video vignettes to adults in the U.S. and U.K. and asked them to judge five reply styles. Sarcasm was consistently judged least polite, while playful teasing and literal praise were judged most polite. Men tolerated sarcasm slightly more than women, and U.K. participants viewed prosocial lies as more polite than U.S. participants. Age did not diminish people’s ability to read the intended meaning behind sarcastic or teasing remarks.
“6 Reasons Sarcasm Kills Relationships,” HomeWord (May 4 2022)
Marriage researcher Shaunti Feldhahn describes how habitual sarcasm erodes trust, trains partners to expect cruelty, and blocks honest conversation, urging couples to replace sarcastic zingers with sincere encouragement.
“The Problem with Sarcasm,” GoodTherapy (Aug 15 2018)
Therapist Sarah Swenson explains that sarcasm is “hostility disguised as humor.” Because it masks criticism behind a joke, recipients feel hurt yet unable to protest without being told they “can’t take a joke,” a dynamic that gradually damages intimacy.
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