We like to believe attraction is personal-an instinctive truth that reflects who we are and what we want. Most of us assume our "type" simply emerged, fully formed, untouched by the world around us.But what if it didn't?Your Type Isn't Accidental explores how dating preferences are quietly shaped long before we recognize them as our own. Through cultural observation, psychological insight, and careful reflection, this book examines how familiarity, social approval, and unspoken boundaries influence who feels possible to us-and who does not.Rather than arguing that attraction is right or wrong, this book asks a more unsettling question: how much of what we want was learned, filtered, or quietly negotiated away?Elliot Marrow traces the subtle ways desire adapts to expectation-how people learn which attractions are encouraged, which are tolerated, and which carry a cost. Along the way, the book examines the relationships that never start, the comfort that replaces chemistry, and the choices people defend long after they are made.This is not a guidebook or a manifesto. It offers no prescriptions and no moral conclusions. Instead, it invites readers to notice patterns they may recognize in their own lives-and to consider how preference, permission, and belonging quietly shape romantic decisions.For readers who find that analysis alone cannot capture the emotional weight of these questions, the book ultimately gestures toward story as a way of understanding what theory cannot fully explain.Your Type Isn't Accidental is for readers interested in modern relationships, social psychology, and the hidden forces that shape love-especially those willing to sit with questions that don't come with easy answers.