The Asian Age

Dating apps have ruined relationsh­ips, quality of sex is worse in ‘ sexting’ age

- Zoe Strimpel By arrangemen­t with The Spectator

Iinterview­ed a prominent 1970s women’s liberation­ist recently and ended up discussing the sexual culture of her political heyday. ‘ Everyone was sleeping with everyone,’ she said. ‘ You had to have a good reason not to sleep with someone.’

I felt a stab of envy, a sharpened version of what I feel browsing black- and- white snaps from back in the day. There is often a dishevelle­d sexiness. There are the gleefully knowing expression­s from women newly unafraid of unwanted pregnancy, and the ‘ why not?’ insoucianc­e of slouching shaggyhair­ed men and their slender sheepskin- coated girlfriend­s leaning against doorposts.

What a dreary distance we’ve travelled to get to the present dating landscape. How pleasure- free it all seems as Valentine’s Day approaches. Dating apps and online porn have bred numbness and indifferen­ce.

The quality of sex is getting worse, but so is the quantity. Rates of sexual intercours­e are plummeting across a relatively wide bracket of young people — including those meant to be having babies. According to a recent report by the Global Burden of Disease study published in the Lancet, Britain is in the midst of a ‘ baby bust’ with births at below replacemen­t level. Meanwhile, in the United States the birth rate has fallen to a 30- year low.

Birth control is partly to blame — but so is the decline of any sense that sex is to be enjoyed. Given our long history of loucheness, boozefuell­ed mischief and ( since the 1960s) our famously liberal law,

it’s just sad that there’s so little joy in 21st- century British sex. What’s to blame?

One survey found that nearly half of Britons say their sex lives are derailed by ‘ stress’. But perhaps the real trouble is that young and youngish people are more obsessed with smartphone­s than with each other. Even teens, meant to be the horniest demographi­c of all, would rather — according to the British Pregnancy Advisory Service — stay in and sext than go out and spend time with another human being.

This tallies with my observatio­ns, too. Most of the single men one encounters on and offline have by now spent their formative years swiping their way through disposable connection­s and seem jaded rather than excited by the prospect of meeting a woman. Tinder logs 1.6 billion swipes a day worldwide, but only 26 million ‘ matches’.

Kate, a single friend of mine, illustrate­s the problem well. She is 37, attractive and good at her job ( she works in intelligen­ce). She speaks three European languages and plays the piano to near- profession­al standard. Her value should be high. Yet her romantic life is a swamp of false starts, sudden cancellati­ons, mystery disappeara­nces, gaslightin­gs and ghostings. Plenty of men express an interest via text, but she almost never goes on a date. Her ‘ matches’ prefer to message her at leisure via WhatsApp but never seem to want to meet up. ‘ What are these men getting out of all this rubbish?’ she said last week. ‘ They’re not even getting sex!

To make matters worse, sexual “wokeness” is on the rise. Identity politics has sucked the life from the dating scene. The # MeToo movement may have urged women to speak up, but now it’s men who are most vocal about their wants and needs. British dating sites teem with guys, mostly in their thirties, pompously signalling their politics and their preference­s, in the interest of “openness and honesty”.

Take “ethical polyamory”. This is a new take on the old “open relationsh­ip”, and it allows for multiple sexual partners. At dinner parties, I now encounter “- ethical polyamoris­ts” ( mostly men) who explain why they prefer to have multiple girlfriend­s at once. It’s not being a cad or a flake, it’s their identity, they say — and who am I to question it?

I try to keep an open mind. Last month, I chatted to a “poly” man on Bumble because he made interestin­g documentar­ies. Before long I was treated to a WhatsApp treatise on how he embraced polyamory because of his “love for women” ( and himself). His desire to protect women from “getting hurt” was paramount, he said. I quickly extracted myself.

More recently, while browsing OkCupid, my eye was caught by a handsome- ish man I’ll call Dave. Clicking on his profile, I was confronted with a 3,000- word essay detailing his sexual preference­s and “ethics”, informed by something called “radical candour”. Dave’s candour was indeed so radical it was blatantly antithetic­al to romance or even erotic potential. “I want things [ that include] kink, group play, burner things, etc,” he wrote. Then there was a note about “principles and ideals” before he dived into a list of partner requiremen­ts: she must be “comfortabl­e with group play, public play play parties, things like Killing Kittens, Torture Garden, etc dom/ sub play and most other kinds of things.” Is it any wonder that so few people are having sex?

We may seem to have more choice than ever, but what good is that if nothing pleasant or meaningful comes of it? Britain’s sexual landscape has become arid. We have freedom like never before, and yet our choices have never felt more sparse.

I was confronted with a 3,000- word essay detailing his sexual preference­s and ‘ ethics’, informed by something called ‘ radical candour’. Dave’s candour was indeed so radical it was blatantly antithetic­al to romance or even erotic potential.

 ??  ?? ‘ I want to stockpile and she wants to declutter.’
‘ I want to stockpile and she wants to declutter.’

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