Anonymous wrote:As an older millennial who didn't grow up in a sexualized woke era I'm still trying to understand the under 35 crowd. What is a situationship? Is it hooking up? I see a lot of younger people saying they're in a situationship. How is that different from relationship?
Anonymous wrote:I’ve wondered about whether I’m in a situationship. Dated for 1.5 years, monogamous, but not actively planning engagement/ marriage. We love each other and we are exclusive, but we don’t feel we are each other’s soul mates…but we enjoy each other’s company, go on vacations, etc.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve wondered about whether I’m in a situationship. Dated for 1.5 years, monogamous, but not actively planning engagement/ marriage. We love each other and we are exclusive, but we don’t feel we are each other’s soul mates…but we enjoy each other’s company, go on vacations, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Agree with the definition that a situationship is where one party wants a relationship and the other not-so-much but the one is holding out hope so won’t break it off. (Can also be the stage that is pre-relationship definition so there is ambiguity or confusion about whether it’s a relationship or a hookup that has grown into a bit more.)
A FWB is mutually agreed non-relationship.
Anonymous wrote:As a Gen-Xer I’ll weigh in with an admittedly cis-gendered and somewhat sexist opinion:
For guys it’s a current/culturally acceptable way to have casual sex with the same person but not commit and keep scouting for new partners.
For women, it’s a way to talk yourself into having regular sex with the same person but not hold that person to actual partnership standards, in hopes that it evolves into an actual relationship.
In other words it’s a TikTok term for behavior as old as time that typically puts women at a disadvantage.
Yes I’m aware it all sounds rather arcane.
Anonymous wrote:As a Gen-Xer I’ll weigh in with an admittedly cis-gendered and somewhat sexist opinion:
For guys it’s a current/culturally acceptable way to have casual sex with the same person but not commit and keep scouting for new partners.
For women, it’s a way to talk yourself into having regular sex with the same person but not hold that person to actual partnership standards, in hopes that it evolves into an actual relationship.
In other words it’s a TikTok term for behavior as old as time that typically puts women at a disadvantage.
Yes I’m aware it all sounds rather arcane.
Anonymous wrote:Ethically its wrong.