logo
What Happens When Teens Don't Date

What Happens When Teens Don't Date

The Atlantic10-03-2025
Lisa A. Phillips has found herself in a strange position as of late: trying to convince her students that romantic love is worthwhile. They don't believe in overly idealizing partnership or in the clichés fed to them in rom-coms; some have declared that love is a concept created by the media. Phillips, a journalist who teaches a SUNY New Paltz course called 'Love and Heartbreak,' responds that of course relationships aren't all perfect passion, and we should question the tropes we're surrounded by. But also: Those tropes began somewhere. Across cultures, people describe the experience of falling for someone in quite similar ways, 'whether they grew up with a Disney-movie IV in their vein,' she told me, or 'in a remote area with no media whatsoever.' The sensation is big, she tells her students; it's overwhelming; it can feel utterly transcendent. They're skeptical.
Maybe if Phillips had been teaching this class a decade ago, her students would already have learned some of this firsthand. Today, though, that's less likely: Research indicates that the number of teens experiencing romantic relationships has dropped. In a 2023 poll from the Survey Center on American Life, 56 percent of Gen Z adults said they'd been in a romantic relationship at any point in their teen years, compared with 76 percent of Gen Xers and 78 percent of Baby Boomers. And the General Social Survey, a long-running poll of about 3,000 Americans, found in 2021 that 54 percent of participants ages 18 to 34 reported not having a 'steady' partner; in 2004, only 33 percent said the same.
As I've written, a whole lot of American adults are withdrawing from romance—not just young people. But the trend seems to be especially pronounced for Gen Z, or people born roughly between 1997 and 2012. Of course, you can grow into a perfectly mature and healthy adult without ever having had a romantic relationship; some research even suggests you might be better off that way. In the aggregate, though, this shift could be concerning: a sign, researchers told me, of a generation struggling with vulnerability. A first love, for so many, has been a milestone on the path to adulthood—a challenging, thrilling, world-expanding experience that can help people understand who they are and whom they're looking for. What's lost if that rite of passage disappears?
You can experience so much without being in a defined relationship. You can flirt; you can kiss; you can dance. You can have a crush so big it takes up all the space in your brain; you can care about someone deeply; you can get hurt—badly. Plenty of young people, then, could be having transformative romantic encounters and still reporting that they've never been in a relationship. It could be the label, not the emotional reality, that's changing, Thao Ha, a developmental psychologist at Arizona State University, told me. She's found that lots of high schoolers report having 'dated' before—a looser term that might better suit the realities of adolescent courtship today. (In a YouGov poll from last year, about 50 percent of respondents aged 18 to 34 said they'd been in a 'situationship,' or undefined relationship.) Some of that activity might not entail exclusivity or regularity, or any promise of long-term commitment. But it could still help young people with what researchers told me are some core rewards of early romantic exploration: gaining autonomy from parents, developing a sense of identity, what Phillips called an 'existential' benefit—the 'sometimes painful, sometimes amazing trial-and-error process of seeking closeness.'
Becoming a well-rounded grown-up, in fact, doesn't really require romantic experience of any sort. Adolescence and emerging adulthood are times of uncertainty; what young people need most, Amy Rauer, a human-development professor at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville, told me, is often just a cheerleader: a peer, a grandparent, a coach, or someone else making them feel valued, which can set them up to feel secure in future relationships. Teens can also learn social skills—how to make small talk, resolve arguments, empathize across differences—in all kinds of platonic relationships.
Some research, Phillips pointed out, actually suggests that young people might benefit from a lack of romantic activity. One study found that, compared with their dating peers, students who dated very infrequently or not at all over a seven-year period were seen by their teachers as having better leadership and social skills, and reported fewer symptoms of depression. After all, young love isn't always positive. It can be an emotional whirlwind; it can distract from schoolwork, or from friends, or from other interests. In the worst cases, it can be abusive. (Adolescent girls experience intimate-partner violence at particularly high rates.) And when it ends, teens—with little perspective and few learned coping mechanisms—can be absolutely wrecked.
Despite how common a lack of relationship experience is now—especially but not only for teens—a lot of people still feel embarrassed by it. TikTok is filled with influencers declaring that they're 26 or 30 or 40 and have never been in a relationship, sharing how insecure that's made them feel; commenters stream in, by the hundreds of thousands, to divulge their own feelings of shame. Many of my friends, who are entering their 30s, constantly stress about this: They fear they won't know how to be a good partner if the opportunity arises. But all of a person's interactions, not just romantic ones, can shape how they'll show up in a relationship. One 2019 study, which followed 165 subjects ages 13 to 30, found that strong friendships in adolescence predicted romantic-life satisfaction in adulthood; early romantic experience, meanwhile, wasn't related to future satisfaction at all. (Teens commonly learn how to fight and make up with friends, Phillips told me, but they might be less likely to stick it out with a lover long enough for conflict resolution.)
Overall, when it comes to who you are in a relationship, what matters most is simply who you are, period. And the traits that make you you are likely to remain fairly stable throughout your life. A 2022 study found, for instance, that subjects who were single during adolescence—but had their first relationship by age 26—reported no lower self-esteem than those who'd started dating earlier. Tita Gonzalez Avilés, a personality psychologist at Germany's Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz who has led some of this research, told me that although people often think their relationships will change them, the influence typically happens the other way around: Who you are shapes what kind of relationship you'll have. Research has even shown that people's satisfaction in a relationship tends to remain pretty consistent across their various partners.
Given all that, you might think it a good thing that Gen Z has less going on in the romance department. Perhaps young people are busy with other pursuits, focusing on friendship and school and hobbies; maybe they no longer want to settle for a mediocre partner. The transition to adulthood tends to take longer today, pushing back lots of different milestones—steps such as financial independence, buying a home, and, notably, getting married—sometimes indefinitely. In that sense, young people have an eminently rational reason to hold off on seeking partnership: The deadline is extended. But researchers have pointed to other, more worrisome reasons for the romance dip.
Phillips has heard a lot about situationships—and scenarios that aren't even well-defined enough to use that label. For her new book, First Love, she interviewed more than 100 young people and parents, and found, as Ha did, that early romance today tends to reside in a gray area. 'You have a long period of we're talking,' Phillips told me. 'You're kind of dancing around the idea of a sexual-romantic connection, maybe even having some of those experiences, but not really talking about what it is.' For some, the lack of strict relationship expectations can be freeing. But many, Phillips told me, find the ambiguity distressing, because they don't know what they have the right to feel—or the right to ask for. Some recounted how they ended up feeling invested in a fling—and described it not only as bad news, but as a personal failure: They said that they 'got caught' (as if red-handed), 'caught feelings' (like an illness), or succumbed to 'dumb-bitch hour' (when late at night, defenses down, they texted a crush and—God forbid—let themselves feel close to someone). 'Young people would be hard on themselves,' Phillips told me, 'because they would think, Okay, this person let me know this wasn't going to be a thing. And then my heart let it be a thing.'
The young-love recession, in other words, might reflect a real shift in how comfortable Americans are, on the whole, with emotional intimacy. Generational researchers have described Gen Z as a cohort particularly concerned with security, averse to risk, and slow to trust —so it makes sense that a lot of teens today might be hesitant to throw themselves into a relationship, or even just to admit they care whether their dalliance will continue next week. In a 2023 Hinge survey of Gen Z daters, 90 percent of participants said they wanted to find love—but 56 percent said that fear of rejection had kept them from pursuing a potential relationship, and 57 percent said they'd refrained from confessing their feelings about someone because they worried it would 'be a turn-off.' Those reservations can create a self-fulfilling prophecy, Phillips said, in which young people keep a romantic prospect at arm's length—and then, when they feel confused or get hurt anyway, they become even more wary of relationships. 'Why would I want to go any further in this world,' she said many wonder, 'when I had this flirtation that seemed to be very close and very promising and went nowhere?'
Read: The people who quit dating
I heard something similar from Daniel A. Cox, the director of the Survey Center on American Life: People still badly want connection, but among Gen Z, 'there's a real sense of anxiety about how to go about it.' That social nervousness affects platonic and romantic relationships alike; he's found, in fact, that people who spend more time with friends are also more likely to have dated regularly during their teen years. 'Trying to forge romantic connections and be vulnerable—it's really difficult,' he said, 'when you're constantly worried about being hurt or being taken advantage of.'
Some of that self-protective instinct has probably trickled down from older generations, especially when it comes to dynamics in heterosexual relationships. As Cox has found while reporting a forthcoming book on the gender divide, men and women seem to be growing ever further apart. Young men are shifting rightward, and many are feeling misunderstood. Women, meanwhile, have become more suspicious of men. Fear of sexual assault has increased significantly in recent years, and so has concern about dating-app safety. If so many grown women are feeling vigilant, imagine how girls and younger women feel: at a vulnerable age, still learning about the world and already surrounded by the message—and, in plenty of cases, the reality—that boys and men are dangerous. Imagine, too, how some boys and young men feel: just figuring out who they are and already getting the message that they're not trusted. Perhaps it's not surprising that people are trying to control their romantic feelings, whether by focusing on friendships or by keeping situationships allegedly emotion-free.
Even under conditions of a gender cold war, many girls might get on fine—but boys could suffer more. When psychologists told me that young people can flourish in the absence of romance, that was assuming they have close friends to rely on and to teach them social graces (including one as simple as making conversation). Boys and young men, who aren't as likely to have such tight bonds, tend to learn those skills from women. Maybe they have a sister or a mother or female friends who can help with that—but if not, Cox told me, being single might put them at a real emotional and developmental disadvantage. That might make them less prepared to date.
Read: The golden age of dating doesn't exist
A rise in skepticism toward romance is a loss, not just for boys but for society as a whole. Romantic love isn't better or more important than platonic love, but it's different —and telling yourself you have no need for it doesn't necessarily make it true.
Phillips talked to her students about an excerpt of Plato's Symposium, in which—at the beginning of time—Zeus splits each human in two in order to foil their plan to overthrow the gods. From then on, everyone wanders around yearning for their other half. Falling in love, according to the story, is when you finally find it. Alas: Her students hated the story. They didn't like the idea of only one other person being meant for each of us, or the suggestion that they'd be incomplete without such a reunion. They told her they wanted to be whole all by themselves—not dependent on a soulmate. They had a point.
And yet, Phillips still felt there was something sad about their reaction. They didn't seem to understand that 'relationships are an interpersonal exchange,' she said: that 'they involve both feeling expanded by someone else and then some genuine sacrifices.' You are at least a little dependent on someone in a relationship; that's what the symbiosis of love requires. It's scary—but it can be interesting, and beautiful when it's good, and sometimes formative even when it doesn't stay good. You might want to find out for yourself.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

25 Genius Home Upgrades That Transform Daily Life
25 Genius Home Upgrades That Transform Daily Life

Buzz Feed

time7 hours ago

  • Buzz Feed

25 Genius Home Upgrades That Transform Daily Life

Sometimes, a small addition to your home can make such a big difference that you wonder how you ever lived without it. Recently, people on Reddit shared their favorite small home upgrade that improved their lives, and it's given me a ton of ideas. Here's what people had to say: "I got a smart bulb in my bedroom lamp that slowly comes up in brightness for 20 minutes before my alarm goes off. Because our bodies are programmed to wake with the rising sun, I actually feel more awake when the alarm goes off, rather than like a patient being jarringly shocked back to life by an alarm going off in the dark." —HaiKarate "We added smart open/close sensors connected to smart thermostats, so if someone leaves any window open, it sets temp high in summer or low in winter and then reverts to regular schedule when windows close. Also notifies me of which window opens/closes." "Ceiling fan on the back porch to keep bugs away." "A high-quality garden hose and nozzle. The nozzle is a nice-to-have, but the hose is just soooo much easier to use. Such a time saver when getting it out and hanging it back up. Less kinks and easier to move around." —DavidAg02 "Motion sensor switches in the laundry room and walk-in closets. My wife kept forgetting to turn off the light in her closet, so I installed them. Typically, we have our hands full moving folded laundry, so a motion sensor switch eliminates us from using our elbows/hands. Also keeps the wall and switch clean since we also go in and out to the garage through the laundry room." "I started keeping scissors in every drawer, and as they migrate away, I just keep replacing them until the house reaches equilibrium." "Keeping a battery on-hand for power outages is really nice. You could build a simple DIY solar system, or just use a bench (lab) power supply to keep the battery trickle-charged. Then, connect a cigarette lighter and USB car charger to the battery. Boom, you now have phone, laptop, and USB flashlight backup power." —960be6dde311 "Here's a relatively minor, but stupid life hack that came with my house: the light switch to the basement is installed upside down. Infuriating, right? Wrong! When you're going down the stairs with a basket of laundry, a downward motion turns on the lights. When you're coming up with a basket of laundry, and upward motion turns off the lights. It just works naturally." "My husband bought some smart LED light bulbs from Phillips that have an app to use them. You can adjust the color, set up a timer, and turn them on or off from the next county over. I'm a big fan! I especially love the color adjust feature. He has them set to a warm tone, almost peachy. It is so homey!" "Maybe not a home upgrade but a robot vacuum. We have a dog that sheds like a fool and a long-haired orange cat. It takes a minute or two to empty and brush out the container every morning. It keeps the hair under control, so I only have to actually vacuum every 10-14 days." —Unlikely_Kangaroo_93 "Top down window shades if you're in an area where the homes are close together, as well as magnetic door holders if you're the type who likes to have your windows open for the breeze." "Installing those outlet covers that include a nightlight built-in, especially on stair landings and outside the bathroom." "Outlets with USB/USBC ports included and code locks for front door." —gretchens "Adding a garbage disposal. We still compost food scraps, but cleaning the soggy crumbs out of the sink drain was always my least favorite chore." "A motion sensor for the driveway/front walk. If I'm coming home, it kicks on for me to pull in. If I'm already home, I know if anyone is outside or coming up the walk in the evening." "Dimmers in several rooms: main bathroom, baby's room, and baby's bathroom. It's such a lifestyle improvement to be able to dim the lights when we're getting ready for bed or in the morning. I also have a few smart ceiling lights in the living room and kitchen that I can dim with a phone app. I don't love connected devices, but it was the simplest solution." —1bananatoomany "I built a bar as soon as I moved in. It's been the center point of conversation, the hub of entertainment, and the greatest investment I've made in the home." "Blackout shades on my bedroom windows that slide into a frame that's attached to the window frame, so there's no light at all when I'm sleeping. I no longer wake up at dawn every day, and I don't have to put a sleep mask on to sleep in past 5 a.m." "We installed pot racks in our pantry, and we hang all our pots and pans there now. It improved access to the items we use all the time and freed up a ton of cupboard space." —AThousandBloodhounds "It's amazing how quiet new dishwashers and bathroom fans have become. If yours are 10+ years old, you'll be stunned at how much pointless noise you've acclimated to." "I installed timers on the light switches that control the outside lights. Saves the headache of remembering to turn them on before I go to bed and off when I wake up, and gives me some peace of mind when I am gone that the lights still change (like someone is home). Such an easy thing to do!" "A bidet." —Lotsavodka"My bidet has a motion-sensing light and lid built in. Also, heated seat and water."—lead_injection "Fingerprint locks on my front and back doors! With a push-button start on my car, my keys never leave my purse; it's wonderful! I can also control them from my phone from anywhere, so letting someone in to water my plants is easy." "We replaced our kitchen cabinet hinges with soft-close models. Much quieter when kids slam them late at night." "Two comforters for the bed! There's no reason to ever have to fight for covers." —PaxtonSuggs "Wall-mounted can crusher. You can fit more cans in the recycling and reduce trips to the larger bin in the back of our house." "Instant hot water heater. Makes nearly boiling water at the tap. If you like tea, need to quickly sanitize things, or boil pasta, etc, it's the best $400 I've spent on my house, I think." "I replaced the old smoke/CO2 alarms throughout my home after moving in. They look nice, the batteries last 10 years, they are very easy to get down if needed, and I have the option to silent test them, which is perfect for dogs. I can also silence them from the app (yep, my cooking has already caused one to go off), which comes in handy for tall ceilings and having to find a ladder during the chaos of one going off." "The cherry on top is that I can see the status of them on an app, including battery status. So if one goes off and I'm at work, I get a notification. The app is also set to bypass DND if alarms go off, so I would never miss an alert. I highly recommend it."—hark_the_snark And finally, "All our doors have handles, not knobs. Hands full? Just lean whatever you are carrying on the handle and it opens." Is there anything else you would add? Tell us all about it in the comments or via the anonymous form below!

82% of moms say they feel lonely—this is the wake-up call we can't ignore
82% of moms say they feel lonely—this is the wake-up call we can't ignore

Yahoo

time19 hours ago

  • Yahoo

82% of moms say they feel lonely—this is the wake-up call we can't ignore

Modern motherhood might look Instagram-perfect, but beneath the filter, a growing loneliness is taking hold. A new report from Peanut, the app for moms, gives hard numbers to what many Millennials and Gen Zers feel: motherhood often feels like a solo act in a world that promised us a village. As a mom of five raising kids in a new state (we moved two years ago), loneliness is a familiar feeling. It often feels like everyone else already has their mom crew or is lucky enough to have involved family nearby (I don't.) But here's the stunner: The vast majority of moms feel lonely. How can all of us feel so alone? Related: Don't stop believing—even when you're living in a lonely world The stats paint a stark picture According to Peanut's new report, Where Did the Village Go?, 2,250 surveyed moms revealed just how deep the loneliness runs: 82% of mothers report feeling lonely 50% say they cry weekly due to lack of support Nearly 90% rely on digital connections over face-to-face support Only 14% live near family—even though 65% want intergenerational help These numbers point to a systemic collapse in community support for moms. One anonymous Peanut user said it plainly: 'For someone to have checked in on me fresh postpartum—that would have made all the difference.' Another shared: 'One mom friend… who I could text to say 'this is hard' without shame.' Moms aren't meant to raise kids alone In fact, many experts say that never before in human history has more been expected from the nuclear family (AKA, moms), without levels of support from grandparents, aunts and uncles, and involved neighbors. Where did the village go? The built-in village—grandparents, neighbors, community—has fragmented. Instead, moms spend hours scrolling parenting apps, walking through solitude, or troubleshooting in isolation. What's fueling this loneliness? Peanut points to typical modern pressures: Delayed parenthood Uprooted lives Relentless work schedules Pandemic fallout. Notably, while 65% want intergenerational support, only 14% live near family. That glaring gap means grandparents, once just next door, now seem lightyears away. We may say we uplift motherhood—but our systems don't. When schools shut without backup plans, or companies dismiss flexible work, moms scramble. Cultural praise doesn't translate to practical support—they're still the ones making it all work. Related: The messy, hilarious truth about new motherhood—told in painfully funny comics And yet, there's hope Moms are recreating their villages in fresh ways: stroller workouts that double as support groups, library story-time crews that become lifelines, and WhatsApp groups that hold space for midnight meltdowns. They're forging communities online, in parks, and even through support tools like Peanut. The need for connection hasn't gone away. Only the infrastructure has. It's time to do more than acknowledge the problem Peanut's report ends with a clear call: make asking for help normal. Reshape workplaces to truly value parenting. And challenge the government to treat caregiving like the essential labor it is. If you're looking for your village, this is your reminder: needing support doesn't make you weak—it makes you human. And you are far from alone. We are all lonely. That's a sign that we all need the village we desperately crave. Mamas, how are you building your village? Whether it's a playgroup, a meal swap, or a midnight meme-sharing circle—tell us what's working (or what you wish you had). Your voice could help someone else find their people. Sources: Where Did the Village Go? Peanut. Where Did the Village Go? report on modern motherhood, 2024. Solve the daily Crossword

'Sexual conservatism,' virginity and why Gen Z is having less sex
'Sexual conservatism,' virginity and why Gen Z is having less sex

USA Today

timea day ago

  • USA Today

'Sexual conservatism,' virginity and why Gen Z is having less sex

Research shows America's youth today are having less sex. The 2023 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Youth Risk Behavior found adolescent sexual behavior declined since 2013. A 2022 survey from the Kinsey Institute that found one in four Gen Z adults say they have never experienced partnered sex. But are Gen Z really as modest as some may think? Carter Sherman, 31, a journalist for The Guardian, digs into that question with her new book "The Second Coming," which explores Gen Z's sex lives — or lack thereof. Sherman found through interviews with more than 100 young people that this generational dry spell is less puritanical and more political, with Gen Zers abstaining from sex for a complex variety of reasons. Gen Z is sometimes framed as a "nation of virgins," Sherman writes, but our obsession with their lack of intercourse may really say more about our constant need to tell young people how to have sex. Rather than be corrective, she argues, we should focus on approaches that promote safe, consensual encounters and reduce shame. The following interview has been edited for length and clarity. Question: You share at the opening of the book you were obsessed with losing your virginity as a teen — sobbing to your mother when you learned a best friend lost theirs to a classmate before you. How is the idea of virginity impacting how we think about young people and sex? I was so obsessed with my own [virginity]. Truly, my last few years of high school were dominated by my a total freak-out that I was still a virgin. I felt that I should have already had sex and my friends were leaving me behind by having sex, and I felt I wasn't living up to the standard of being a teenager. Part of my own journey in writing this book was coming to understand that standard was based on false information. You're either too virginal, or not virginal enough. There's no way to win. I don't think we've moved from the idea of virginity. At the end of the day many of the young people I spoke to felt their virginity was important, and some feel that their virginity was treated as too important. We are always setting standards that don't match up to reality and make us feel worse about ourselves. What doesn't help is the level of shame people carry around and the feeling they're constantly doing it wrong. How much of a factor is the end of Roe v. Wade playing in Gen Z's not having sex? Gen Z is absolutely aware of how much the overturning of Roe v. Wade has changed the U.S., and in particularly their sex lives. Sixteen percent of Gen Zers are now more hesitant to date since the fall of Roe. There are so many young women I talked to who shared a level of sheer anxiety that Roe's overturning sparked. What the overturning of Roe has done is create a deep of anxiety but also create a generation that is ready to do battle over this. Feeling this stuff doesn't make you feel safe enough not only to be in a sexual relationship but also a romantic one. At the same time, you spoke with conservative youth, particularly men, and found that movements to embrace traditional sex roles have also complicated youth feelings about sex. What I call "sexual conservatism" speaks to that. This is the movement to make it dangerous to have queer, unmarried or recreational sex. Sexual conservatism has done a much better job of speaking about the difficulties of raising a family in this country than progressives. It's very appealing for young people to go toward sexual conservatism because the only people they hear talking about it are those on the right. If you feel like you're not being heard, you're going to go to the only people talking about this issue in a comprehensive manner. Gen Z has so much online information about sex, including porn, at their fingertips. How does that impact their sex lives? I really love how the internet has opened up discussions about what is sexuality. But social media also does this thing where it makes people extremely aware of the ways they believe they're falling short with sex. We're gauging our sexual value by likes, matches and follower counts. It makes people not want to engage in sex because they feel they have to look perfect naked in order to get naked. That's not a recipe for vulnerability or connection. How does OnlyFans fit into all of this? As Only Fans bleeds into mainstream social media, it becomes another metric whereby people evaluate themselves and make themselves also appear that way. For young people, the line between (real life) and virtual sex is very much diminishing and blurring. I don't think that's necessarily a bad thing, it's just how it is at this point. If we want to have conversations about sex, we have to acknowledge so much of young people's sex lives are shaped by the interactions they're having online. What is your advice for older adults trying to relate Gen Z right now? It's less about having the exact right information and more about approaching the topic with an empathetic attitude. Young people through the internet have more taken an approach to LGBTQ+ identities that are more iterative. Recognizing that and not treating that with suspicion is what's important for older people who might not understand what young people are going through. Gen Z men, women have a political divide It's made dating a nightmare What's the bottom line about Gen Z's sex lives? I don't really care if young people are having less sex if that's something they're comfortable with. What I worry about is if having less sex is a proxy for not having relationships, not having connections with yourself and what makes you feel good.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store