Over the past several months, I havenât been able to escape Chappell Roan. The 26-year-old singer shot to fame this spring after finding viral success with infectious synth-pop songs celebrating unbridled sexual freedom. The most popular tracks of her recent album, with titles like âHOT TO GO!â and âRed Wine Supernova,â are repeat plays at seemingly every house party and dive bar Iâve been to this year.
Roan has become the latest balladeer of idealized, unburdened young adulthood, forming the soundtrack to countless twentysomething nights punctuated by sticky floors, fake eyelashes, and the anonymous intimacy of dancing with strangers. At a friendâs recent karaoke birthday partyâone of those nights where I found myself in a dark, palpitating, multi-screened roomâguests sang no fewer than three different songs from her album.
One of those songsââCasualââis set apart from the rest of Roanâs hits. Despite going viral for joyful, raunchy anthems hailing the pleasures of casual sex, Roan has released a near-perfect musical distillation of the heartbreak that often follows so-called âcasualâ relationships. The songâs resonance with so many young people, I think, is particularly telling.
âItâs hard being casual/ When my favorite bra lives in your dresser/ Itâs hard being casual/ When Iâm on the phone talking down your sister,â Roan sings during the songâs haunting bridge. âAnd I try to be the chill girl that/ Holds her tongue and gives you space/ I try to be the chill girl but/ Honestly, Iâm not.â
Roan is describing a textbook âsituationship,â an increasingly popular term used to describe any unlabeled, undefined romantic relationship. While some use the term neutrally, I most often hear it used to describe something much more inherently negativeâa distinct mismatch in which one member of a casual entanglement is content with the arrangement while the other quietly yearns for a committed, labeled relationship. One salient definition offered by an Urban Dictionary user describes situationships as âemotional trauma in a gift box.â
Romantic dissatisfaction and ambivalence are all over the most popular music of the past year. âWe had sex, I met your best friends/ Then a bird flies by and you forget,â Sabrina Carpenter sings in âThe Sharpest Tool,â adding, âIf that was casual, then Iâm an idiot.â Brat, Charli XCXâs wildly successful album, is largely devoted to romanticizing the emotionally unavailable, hyperattractive, unanchored young woman. However, things take a turn in the albumâs penultimate track, âI Think About It All the Time,â in which the narrator reveals her yearning for romantic stability and motherhoodââas well as her conflict over whether to make choices that could bring her incredible joy, but also restrict her freedom. âAnd theyâre exactly the same, but theyâre different now,â she sings about two friends who recently became parents. âAnd Iâm so scared Iâm missinâ out on something/ So, we had a conversation on the way home/ Should I stop my birth control?â
In a situationship, thereâs frequently not just the imbalance of one partner who cares more than the other, but also an inner turmoil in each personâthe dueling desires to embrace domestic security and the urge to be unburdened and unrestrained by romantic commitments. While itâs easy to dismiss situationshipsâ rising popularity as just another permutation of age-old dating woes, thereâs an important hitch. Unlike previous cohorts of young people, Generation Z is afflicted with endemic risk aversionâa personality feature that makes many current twentysomethings uniquely commitment-phobic.
In fact, Gen Z might just be the most risk-averse generation on record. Fewer Gen Zers got a driverâs license, drank alcohol, or had sex as teenagers than their parents did. The same young adults now report skyrocketing rates of anxiety and other mental illnesses, with some estimates finding that as many as 1 in 5 18-to-24-year-olds have been diagnosed with depression. Timidityânot to mention self-conscious neuroticismâis increasingly the norm.
But how did Gen Z become so risk-averse? The most popular answers are a combination of too much time on social media exacerbated by pandemic isolation and a lack of childhood independence. While earlier cohorts spent their adolescence hanging out with friends away from adult supervision, Gen Z childhoods were defined by increasing isolation, screentime, and parental hovering.
An ongoing study from Montclair State University argues that some of this risk aversion is due to the current political climateâor perhaps young peopleâs perception of it. âGen Zâs mental health has deteriorated due to a worldview that the society and environment around them are crumbling,â writes justice studies professor Gabriel Rubin. âRights are being taken away, the Earth is burning, maniacs could kill you with a gun, and viruses could shut down society again.â
This generational cautiousness has unsurprisingly affected how young people approach sex and dating. If you never learned how to take social risks as a teenager, starting in adulthood will be that much harder. If the world seems like itâs teetering on the edge of disaster, itâs hard to focus on anything else. Itâs also hard to place much confidence in official relationships. If everything else is âdeteriorating,â why commit if it could all be taken away?
According to market researcher YouGov, 50 percent of Americans aged 18â34 say theyâve been in a situationship. Over the same period of time, a report from the dating app Hinge found that 56 percent of Gen Z Hinge users said that fear of rejection caused them to stop pursuing a relationship, and 57 percent admitted that theyâd held back on confessing their feelings for fear it would be a âturn-off.â This anxiety extends off-app, too. A recent survey found that almost half of young men have never approached a woman in public before, with most reporting âfear of rejectionâ as their reason for holding back. These trends foster a pervasive culture of romantic risk aversionâone that encourages young people to put on a self-protective facade of detachment and apathy, of which situationships are a key part.
However, the situationship is not resulting in the outcomes young people say they want. Gen Zers, like other adults, are generally looking for committed partnerships, and most hope to get married someday. According to one Pew survey, only 15 percent of single daters under 40 were looking just for casual dates, and nearly 7 in 10 unmarried young adults say they want to get married someday. Another 2023 survey from wedding website the Knot found that only 8 percent of Gen Z respondents agreed that marriage was âoutdated.â
However, despite these wishes, few are actively pursuing themâat least not at the same rates as their parents and grandparents. Researcher Lyman Stone estimates that among current 23-year-olds, only around 60 percent of women and 50 percent of men will have married by 35, down from around 80 percent in 1994.
At first glance, it seems strange that situationships would be treated as the less risky alternative to traditional dating. While traditional relationships come with a ready-made set of expectations and boundaries, a hallmark feature of a situationship is the sense of being unmoored. Drifting into a quasi-relationship doesnât just mean straddling the line between a committed partnership and a fully transactional friend-with-benefits arrangementâit also means leaving behind the typical, somewhat reliable guidelines of traditional dating.
Itâs a harder, murkier path, but for some Gen Zers, it feels like the safer one. Telling someone how you really feel about them carries the risk of intense discomfort, and many of us would rather avoid the potential conflict altogether. Maybe weâll be greeted with an enthusiastic acceptance of our affections, but itâs just as likely that these âdefine-the-relationshipâ moments will end in tears and hurt feelings.
These moments are hard, and the blurred boundaries of a situationship make it easier to avoidâor at least delayâthem, no matter what side of the arrangement you find yourself on. For the partner on the losing side of a situationship, the arrangement works to delay inevitable rejection. Unrequited love hurts, and persisting in a situationship satisfies an immediate desire to stay with your partner, even if one can sense that, deep down, theyâll never get the commitment they actually want.
Of course, these conversations are difficult for everybody, not just Gen Z. No one likes to be rejected, and loving someone is vulnerable at any age. But Gen Zâs particularly high levels of risk aversion makes âWhat are we?â discussions harder than they have to be, and the normalization of situationships provides a tempting way to opt out of discomfort.
A situationship also makes it easier to break up with someone without, well, actually breaking up with them. âGhostingââending a relationship by suddenly cutting off communicationâhas long haunted the cultural lexicon. In a 2023 survey, 77 percent of Gen Zers said theyâve ghosted someone before, and 84 percent of Gen Z and millennial respondents said they had been ghosted, 10 percent of them after several months of dating.
The rise of situationships ârepresents the continuing expression of the ambiguity that our contemporary culture offers,â says Brad Wilcox, who is a sociology professor and director of the National Marriage Project at the University of Virginia as well as the author of the book Get Married: Why Americans Must Defy Elites, Forge Strong Families, and Save Civilization. Mediating our relationships online, Wilcox argues, has âfurther degraded young adultsâ capacity ⊠to have those challenging and difficult conversations both at the start of a relationship, but also in the midst of a relationship.â
Situationships enable all manner of antisocial behavior. If someone was never really your girlfriend or boyfriend, many young people believe you donât owe them the satisfaction of a face-to-face conversation explaining why you donât want to see them anymore. Breaking up with a girlfriend of several months over text or ghosting is cruel. But in a situationship, the etiquette is much less defined.
In the early days of the pandemic, I struck up a virtual flirtation with another student at my university. I was clawingly lonelyâa one-two punch of lockdown and a dizzying breakup. A few Zoom dates became hourslong nightly video calls. When I went back to our college town to move my remaining possessions out of my apartment, we spent 36 straight hours together.
The problem was, I knew almost immediately that I didnât like him. There wasnât anything wrong with him, really. I just had the nearly immediate, gut-level feeling that he wasnât for me. But he was someone to talk to, and more importantly for my bruised ego, he was someone who wanted to talk to me.
In the end, I used a petty political disagreement to end our quasi-relationship. The new school year was beginning, and even with stringent COVID restrictions, I couldnât plausibly reject his offers to meet in person again. It was the cowardâs way out, but I had let the emotional entanglement go on for far too long to be honest without seeming unforgivably cruel.
When I feel self-serving, I chalk up my behavior to a form of COVID-era psychosis. It was an embarrassing and unkind lapse in judgment. But whose judgment wouldnât be impaired by months spent practically alone?
Too many young people havenât emotionally progressed from the pandemic. In December 2020, 38 percent of 18-to-29-year-olds agreed that they experienced âfeeling loneliness a lot of the day yesterday.â While that percentage had declined to 24 percent by February 2023, young adults still soared above the adult average of 13 percent. In all, twentysomethings in early 2023 were just as lonely as the adult average during the thick of lockdowns.
Situationships seem almost inevitable when more young people are lonelyâthose on both ends of the arrangement are more likely to stick with a situationship if it feels like itâs their only source of companionship. In turn, that loneliness feeds into another preexisting risk aversion: Being alone is scarier than ending an unsatisfying half-relationship.
Further, itâs easier to slide into something murky and undefined when you donât have concrete expectations of what romantic relationships are even supposed to be like. Fewer young people have even had a traditional dating experience. In 2023, 76 percent of Gen Xers reported having a boyfriend or girlfriend during their teen years. For Gen Zâs young adults, it was just 56 percent.
Finding romantic stability shouldnât be reserved for only the most gregariousâor obnoxiously persistent, depending on whom you askâamong us. But when risk aversion is the norm, anything other than passivity starts to seem terribly embarrassing: too eager, too excitable, and painfully needy.
âPeople definitely now have this horrible habit of ironic distance, and not wanting to be the person to âcatch feelingsâ first, because that implies a level of vulnerability,â Maria Pattison, a 23-year-old recent college graduate, told me. âIf you just say, âOh, well, weâre in a situationship,â the responsibility of having to sort through your feelings ⊠is completely waved away by this highly casual term.â
Maintaining that sense of âironic distanceâ is a social imperative in many Gen Z circles. One of the worst social sins is being âcringeââbasically, overly earnest, cloying, and completely unaware of just how stupid you look. Enthusiasm, much less genuine emotion, can even be perceived as a kind of horrible oversharing.
âYaâll ever notice how stupid and embarrassing and ugly and cringe you get when you like someone?â said one young woman in a TikTok video with 1.5 million views. âWhen you like them, you care so much what they think about you and it fucks you up.â
Many of us now fear getting caught experiencing desire itself. Itâs fine to want sex, but to want something deeperâan intimate, unguarded emotional connectionâbetrays a terribly uncool weakness. A renewed obsession with attachment theory has produced a glut of social media influencers who argue that a desire for frequent communication or affection from oneâs partner is a sign of deep psychological damage. Caring at allâwanting to be lovedâis all too easily pathologized.
This pressure inevitably has a gendered impact. A cool personâa cool girl in particularâhas plenty of sex, but also experiences an almost inhuman lack of real desire. This figure is aspirational precisely because her lack of wanting means she can never really be rejectedâher partners always like her more than she likes them. Lux Lisbon from The Virgin Suicides and Ramona Flowers from Scott Pilgrim vs. the World are just a couple of the examples that come to mind. Films like Lady Bird and Shiva Baby both focus on young women who try desperately but ultimately fail to be sexually adventurous but emotionally disinterested cool girls.
Dolly Aldertonâs 2023 novel Good Material vividly captures why so many people fear allowing themselves to care deeply about a relationship. In the book, Andy, a 35-year-old stand-up comedian, is abruptly left by Jen, his girlfriend of almost four years. He muddles through the devastating breakup, eventually striking up a situationship with a 23-year-old woman named Sophie. Andy realizes he wants to end their relationship once he notices that Sophie, who had been affecting disinterest in formally dating him, is more interested than she had been letting on.
âA change in power has occurred and neither of us realized what was happening until it was done. In my experience, it happens in every single relationship that fails,â Andy says to himself. âIt happened the other way around with me and Jen, which now feels almost unimaginable. Jen was the one who wouldnât leave me alone in the very beginning. Then about three and a half months in, something shifted. I became the person who was more interested, who was pushing for more time together. She became the manager of UsâI would ask for things and she would grant them to me.â
âShe was the one with all the power,â he concludes. âBecause the person who is in charge in a relationship is the one who loves the least.â
Maintaining this sense of power has its downsides. Forcing yourself to appear disinterested ultimately makes your own feelings a source of secret shameâthey become negative, inspiring guilt rather than excitement. As a result, weâve embarked on a cohort-wide game of hard-to-getâpreserving our dignity but compromising our chance to experience the companionship of another person who sees and loves you as you are.
But why do so many young people fear earnestness so much? Whatâs so uniquely terrible about neediness? Or even just having needs at all? For many Gen Zers, an online adolescenceâspent at once on full public display, yet isolated from the close personal relationships that matter mostâhas made us pathologically defensive.
Ironically, as Gen Zers arrived in adolescence already performing themselves online, weâve reached a strange impasse. So used to having cameras trained on our every move, presenting the best, most flattering version of ourselves at all times, many young people now act as if everyone is always watching. The fear of being uncool, of letting our true thoughts bubble too close to the surface, pervades our thoughts, even when alone.
Growing up under this self-imposed spotlightâconstantly performing, always one misstep away from online shameâdoes to romance what having constant access to hundreds of images of yourself inevitably does to body image. Just as those pesky candid photos can make you painfully aware of physical flaws you would have never noticed in a less digital age, living online exposes you to all the cringe-inducing ways social interaction can go wrong. Avoiding hundreds of possible blunders renders it nearly impossible to loosen up and be yourself around someone else, something thatâs essentially required if you want to find a fulfilling relationship.
A 2023 Gallup poll found that the average teenager spent 4.8 hours a day on social media, raising the question of how many adolescents ever disengage from this kind of public performance.
As a result, weâve become stage actors in our own lives, eagerly performing for an online audience, but so afraid of social error, afraid of causing offense, afraid of having our desires perceived, that intense self-protection seems not just safe, but morally correct. There is a prevailing sense that a good person relies on others as little as possibleâno one wants to ask their friends to perform âemotional labor,â or be guilty of âtrauma dumping.â Getting close to someone and seeking their emotional intimacy is frequently cast as burdensome.
You can find this shift in something as seemingly innocuous as increasing rates of phone call anxiety among youth. For many young people, any form of communication that requires someoneâs immediate attention has become generally stigmatized. Texts are fine, but donât expect prompt responses. Out-of-the-blue phone calls are for emergencies and are frequently answered with a mix of confusion and concern. Meanwhile, browsing the feeds of popular relationship influencers targeting young people gives the impression that we should aim to be atomized hyperindividuals who rely on others as little as possible. Asking your partner for attention, comfort, or even fidelity (the rise in polyamory seems driven in part by the idea that itâs unfairly stifling to not want your partner to sleep with other people) is asking undue labor of them. Maybe they should draw better boundaries, maybe youâre toxic, maybe you have an anxious attachment style. Related From Slate Tanya Chen What Serial Daters and Matchmakers Alike Think We Should Do About Our Dating Crisis Read More
âNow I understand why people be single for so long,â reads the text of one viral TikTok video. âItâs like, once you become single and understand how worthy your peace is you just donât wanna give that up for just anybody.â
Too many young people seem to believe that romantic relationships primarily exist as an add-on to an already fully realized life, rather than a union with a flawed person with whom youâre building something greater than the sum of your parts. When mutual acceptance is tossed aside in favor of a single-minded drive to âprotect our peace,â our relationships become brittle and transactional.
Unhappy situationships, like all other doomed romances, end eventually. You canât escape the risk of a devastating breakup by feigning disinterest. But unlike in a formal relationship, you end up with a lot less to hold on to when all is said and done. I asked Maria, my friend who dated someone without really dating him at all, if sliding into a situationship ever saved her any heartbreak. âNo,â she told me. âIt did not save me any hurt whatsoever.â
âBy not calling someone, say, âmy boyfriend,â he actually becomes something else, something indefinable,â college sophomore Jordana Narin wrote in a 2015 Modern Love essay. While the phenomenon Narin describes wasnât yet called a âsituationship,â she vividly describes the muddled heartbreak at the end of one. âWhat we have together becomes intangible. And if itâs intangible it can never end because officially thereâs nothing to end. And if it never ends, thereâs no real closure, no opportunity to move on.â Popular in Life
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The problem, though, is that a life spent avoiding pain at all costs is inevitably a small and lonely one. You canât find love without the risk of loss. It speaks to a deficiency of meaning in our culture that so many young people are looking at this tradeoff and deciding that avoiding heartbreak and rejection is more important than finding lasting partnership. Other people, it seems, just arenât worth the unpredictability they invariably bring into our lives.
Gen Zers are setting themselves up to be one of the loneliest generations in recent memory. Too many of us will spend our adulthood without emotional intimacy and without the relationships that marked our parentsâ and grandparentsâ lives. Itâs not too late to change course, but cultural trends as pervasive as this are hard to dislodge.
Young people desperately want to be happy. But too many of us donât know how or canât access the bravery to open our lives to it. What allows us to save face in the short term is precisely whatâs leading to long-term dissatisfaction. We know, deep down, where to find the way out. The question is whether we can summon the courage to begin.
People always want to have their cake and eat it too. I think what makes our time unique is people have been liberated to an unprecedented degree, so they are less constrained in their pursuit of having it all. Unfortunately, itâs impossible to both have your cake and eat it too. Life is all about tradeoffs, if you want a committed relationship, youâll have to sacrifice sexual freedom. If you want sexual freedom, youâll have to sacrifice commitment. Most people donât like it when their partner has sex with someone else, so generally people are not going to be cool with you going outside the relationship for casual sex. Seems like a lot of people expect their partners to be cool with it, though. The apparently think they should be able to fuck whomever they want AND their romantic partner should be waiting for them, ready to give them love and affection when they want it. Itâs a very main character mindset: everyone is just an NPC in my story; they are all there to satisfy my desires and I have no obligations or responsibilities to any of them.