In his recent article in the Sunday, January 13, 2013 edition of the New York Times, Alex Williams
reflects on “The End of Courtship.” I've been noticing changes for the past
several years in what used to be called dating in my counseling
practice in Newport Beach, California. Young women in their college years
and 20s particularly report dating changes, but so do people in their
30s and above.
Some of the changes have been facilitated by technology. With text messages,
many people slide into lazy habits of not making definite plans, or avoiding
rejection by not calling and inviting the other person for a specific
date/time/place/activity. Text messaging to “see what the other person is
doing,” and/or inviting them via text message to meet up and “hang out”
with you and your friends at the last minute is very common. It may be
convenient, but it just doesn't make you feel special. As Williams reports, many
young women report that invitations for dates have been reduced to the level of
a last-minute text message Friday night reading “Hey,” or “sup.” What's a girl
supposed to do with that? Hopefully, nothing.
Text messages can make it difficult to discern the tone or
nuances. It takes very little effort. It often doesn't feel very personal, like
a phone call can be. As people get more enmeshed in habitual texting, it can
seem “safer” than real, live conversations where you have to respond right
away, and can't take your time to wordsmith a response.
Hanging out and hooking up randomly are common with many college-age adults,
with alcohol-induced random romantic pairings that mean nothing. I find this
sad, and always urge the young adults I work to set their own standards, no
matter what everybody else may be doing. Sex is not a sport, and making
physical intimacy mean nothing is a huge mistake.
Online dating has changed the dating landscape as well. Some people get
overwhelmed with the candy store mentality of choices, and are frantically
dating multiple people at a time to the point of confusion, needing notes, and
feeling stressed by it. It's similar to an online job application blitz, throwing
lots of inquiry emails out there and seeing what sticks. In the age
of Google-ing someone before the first meeting, the initial in-person
conversation also changes when they already have gathered details about
you from the dating or social networking sites.
Donna Frietas, who teaches Religion and Women's Studies at Boston University
and Hofstra, has a soon to be released book I look forward to reading, entitled
The End of Sex: How Hookup Culture is
Leaving a Generation Unhappy, Sexually Unfulfilled, and Confused About Intimacy.
The decline of courtship and shift to a hookup mentality is not
progress as far as emotional intimacy, the art of getting to know someone over
time, or one-to-one conversation is concerned. Most things that are valuable in
life are not instant, and putting some effort and intentionality into dating is
still attractive.
There are other societal shifts happening concurrently, including more
longevity for most of us, and a prolonged “adultesence” into the mid-to
late 20s with the age of first marriage happening later than in generations
past. This could be changing the courtship dynamics, where no one wants to get
too serious too soon.
Regardless, I still prefer that we all develop good social skills, call
others rather than text whenever possible, and have the courage to risk
rejection and create real intimacy. Women also need to know that they can ask
for behaviors they prefer, and hold to their own personal standards. Texting
may be useful for quick information, like the fact that you may be 5 minutes
late, but it isn't a medium for developing a relationship. Online dating can be
a good way to meet someone, but real relationships have to occur in real time. Email
or texting are not good modes to work through relationship challenges. Some
things will always be better in person or in conversation that isn't preplanned
or cleverly crafted.
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