Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought two-thirds of teenage girls were suicidal? I wonder if maybe these phenomena the press keeps reporting are overblown or inaccurate.
One-third of teen girls are depressed and have contemplated suicide.
As of 2022, Pew Research Center found, 30 percent of U.S. adults are neither married, living with a partner nor engaged in a committed relationship. Nearly half of all young adults are single: 34 percent of women, and a whopping 63 percent of men.
Not to be dense, but... how? Assuming a rate of homosexuality or bisexuality of 15%, who are the 66% of coupled women coupled with, if only 37% of men are coupled?
The article mentions this. They are puzzled by the math too. Some women are dating each other and many women are dating/marrying men who are older, whether by a couple years or by more.
I'm still not sure how it adds up, TBH.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also - men never leave women. It's always the woman who leaves the man. Maybe not 100% of the time - but nearly.
Important to note that this does not mean men do not precipitate the end of the relationship. Women leave because of infidelity, loss of interest, unequal childcare and housework, and lack of emotional presence of support... by men. Men are willing to maintain a crappy relationship because they still get stuff out of it -- free childcare, a nicer home, financial stability, access to sex or affection. Women leave because they are giving more than they are getting, and realize they could do the same amount of work but be more personally fulfilled on their own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Most young men are single
Good for them. Unlike women, men don't base their entire self worth on whether the opposite sex deems them worthy of "a relationship."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a lazy white man problem. I'm first gen immigrant and have two sons - one is in med school, the other one sophomore at MIT. In my house I didn't allow Bs and laziness. They both know how to cook, clean after themselves, and fix things around the house. They are happy, well adjusted young adults with friends and they have girlfriends. I have 3 brothers and 8 male cousins and the only one who is single is broke and a drunk.
This is why I only date immigrants. If men from Iran and Pakistan of all places can figure out how to be masculine without being brutes, there's no reason why American men can't. I truly do not understand.
And they all know how to cook and clean, and they even wipe their as--s.
I'm the 1st gen immigrant mom so your post made me realize that three of my neighbors (wasp women) are married to very successful POC men. One to an Indian surgeon, one to a Korean dentist, and one to a big law partner who was born in the Caribbean.
Anonymous wrote:
Most young men are single
Anonymous wrote:30M here and I'll give my perspective, I don't think there's one single cause but a huge one is the prevalence of dating apps. A lot of these articles ignore how dating apps have risen to become the dominant way that singles are meeting these days, and they are extremely unfavorable to men who are not in the top 5-10% looks bracket. I never see this mentioned in any of the published commentary on this topic but it's intensely talked about on various internet forums.
I don't believe the main issue is education or income, as I know plenty of men who are above average in this area and they still struggle immensely to meet women because they aren't particularly good looking (not ugly, just not tall/hot/ripped) and they have zero outlets to meet women in person, so they go on Tinder or Hinge and get ignored... as in can't even get a single date. These are guys in their 20's/early 30's who have advanced degrees making 200-300k.
On dating apps a small cohort of good looking men are monopolizing access to women, IMO the problem lies in how they force you to evaluate a partner on looks and nothing more. With men, this isn't much of a problem because men already prioritized looks before dating apps. With women, it is a problem because women by nature are more multi faceted in evaluating a potential partner. But when women use dating apps they are FORCED to only choose men on looks which isn't something they would normally do in person, and it turns out that when women are judging men on looks alone they tend to be much more ruthless and can only find a small % of the male population good enough. Men can find a broad range of women visually attractive, but women can only find a small percent of men visually attractive (if they know nothing about the guy).
It's now become socially unacceptable, or just too risky, to approach women in many real life situations. As a result, men are flooding to dating apps where 80-90% just can't compete.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the same for African American women, yet we still find ways to thrive.
This!
And no one gives us consideration, empathy, nor shown any concern regarding our singlehood.
Anonymous wrote:It's the same for African American women, yet we still find ways to thrive.
Anonymous wrote:Isn’t the US just poised to become like South Korea and Japan where a large percentage of young people do not date, have sex, marry or have children? Why not just look at those countries. We are having the same issues - it’s just delayed.
Anonymous wrote:Isn’t the US just poised to become like South Korea and Japan where a large percentage of young people do not date, have sex, marry or have children? Why not just look at those countries. We are having the same issues - it’s just delayed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I notice that articles like these always frame the issue as some deficiency or failing with men, whereas when a demographic trend is unfavorable for women it is usually externalized, attributed to some outside force or...blamed on men again.
We need to start being honest about how held-preferences, individual action and societal forces are combining to foment these trends.
It's easy to just resort to bludgeoning men, but I don't think it's the answer long term.
I do think the answer is with men. My dh was raised by his parents to be a full partner: work, cook, clean, love children, remember holidays. So many men just weren't. They basically think all they need to do is get a job. Showing up doesn't count anymore for men. Women do it all and men need to step up. I'm raising my sons to do better.
I have both sons and daughters and I also think schools play a role. They are geared towards girls who sit better and don't need as much activity.
Schools have more movement, moving around, and movement breaks than they did when we were in school. I think the problem is the opposite, that schools expect a lot from girls but have low expectations of boys and low requirements. And therefore low results.