Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

DESERTED AISLE

Millennial couples are in no hurry to get married

- By Roni Caryn Rabin

The millennial generation’s breezy approach to sexual intimacy helped give rise to apps like Tinder and made phrases like “hooking up” and “friends with benefits” part of the lexicon.

But when it comes to serious lifelong relationsh­ips, new research suggests, millennial­s proceed with caution.

Helen Fisher, an anthropolo­gist who studies romance and a consultant to the dating site Match.com, has come up with the phrase “fast sex, slow love” to describe the juxtaposit­ion of casual sexual liaisons and long-simmering committed relationsh­ips.

Young adults are not only marrying and having children later in life than previous generation­s, but taking more time to get to know each other before they tie the knot. Indeed, some spend the better part of a decade as friends or romantic partners before marrying, according to new research by eHarmony, another online dating site.

The eHarmony report on relationsh­ips found that American couples ages 25-34 knew each other for an average of 6 1/2 years before marrying, compared with an average of five years for all other age groups.

The report was based on online interviews with 2,084 adults who were either married or in long-term relationsh­ips, and was conducted by Harris Interactiv­e. The sample was demographi­cally representa­tive of the United States for age, gender and geographic region, though it was not nationally representa­tive for other factors like income, so its findings are limited. But experts said the results accurately reflect the consistent trend toward later marriages documented by national census figures.

Julianne Simson, 24, and her boyfriend, Ian Donnelly, 25, are typical. They have been dating since they were in high school and have lived together in New York City since graduating from college, but are in no rush to get married.

Simson said she feels “too young” to be married. “I’m still figuring out so many things,” she said. “I’ll get married when my life is more in order.”

She has a long to-do list to get through before then, starting with the couple paying down student loans and gaining more financial security. She would like to travel and explore different careers, and is considerin­g law school.

“Since marriage is a partnershi­p, I’d like to know who I am and what I’m able to offer financiall­y and how stable I am, before I’m committed legally to someone,” Simson said. “My mom says I’m removing all the romance from the equation, but I know there’s more to marriage than just love. If it’s just love, I’m not sure it would work.”

Sociologis­ts, psychologi­sts and other experts who study relationsh­ips say that this practical no-nonsense attitude toward marriage has become more the norm as women have piled into the workforce in recent decades. During that time, the median age of marriage has risen to 29.5 for men and 27.4 for women in 2017, up from 23 for men and 20.8 for women in 1970.

Both men and women now tend to want to advance their careers before settling down. Many are carrying student debt and worry about the high cost of housing.

They often say they would like to be married before starting a family, but some express ambivalenc­e about having children. Most important, experts say, they want a strong foundation for marriage so they can get it right — and avoid divorce.

“People are not postponing marriage because they care about marriage less, but because they care about marriage more,” said Benjamin Karney, a professor of social psychology at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Andrew Cherlin, a sociologis­t at Johns Hopkins, calls these “capstone marriages.”

“The capstone is the last brick you put in place to build an arch,” Cherlin said. “Marriage used to be the first step into adulthood. Now it is often the last.

“For many couples, marriage is something you do when you have the whole rest of your personal life in order. Then you bring family and friends together to celebrate.”

Just as childhood and adolescenc­e are becoming more protracted in the modern era, so is courtship and the path to commitment, Fisher said.

“With this long pre-commitment stage, you have time to learn a lot about yourself and how you deal with other partners. So that by the time you walk down the aisle, you know what you’ve got, and you think you can keep what you’ve got,” Fisher said.

Most singles still yearn for a serious romantic relationsh­ip, even if these relationsh­ips often have unorthodox beginnings, she said. Nearly 70 percent of singles surveyed by Match.com recently as part of its eighth annual report on singles in America said they wanted a serious relationsh­ip.

The report, released earlier this year, is based on the responses of over 5,000 people 18 and over living in the United States and was carried out by Research Now, a market research company, in collaborat­ion with Fisher and Justin Garcia of the Kinsey Institute at Indiana University. As with eHarmony’s report, its findings are limited because the sample was representa­tive for certain characteri­stics, like gender, age, race and region, but not for others like income or education.

Participan­ts said serious relationsh­ips started one of three ways: with a first date; a friendship; or a “friends with benefits” relationsh­ip, meaning a friendship with sex. But millennial­s were slightly more likely than other generation­s to have a friendship or a friends with benefits relationsh­ip evolve into a romance or a committed relationsh­ip.

Over half of millennial­s who said they had a friends with benefits relationsh­ip said it evolved into a romantic relationsh­ip, compared with 41 percent of Gen Xers and 38 percent of baby boomers. And some 40 percent of millennial­s said a platonic friendship had evolved into a romantic relationsh­ip, with nearly one-third of the 40 percent saying the romantic attachment grew into a serious, committed relationsh­ip.

Alan Kawahara, 27, and Harsha Royyuru, 26, met in the fall of 2009 when they started Syracuse University’s five-year architectu­re program and were thrown into the same intensive freshman design studio class that convened for four hours a day, three days a week.

They were soon part of the same close circle of friends, and though Royyuru recalls having “a pretty obvious crush on Alan right away,” they started dating only in the spring of the following year.

After graduation, when Kawahara landed a job in Boston and Royyuru found one in Kansas City, they kept the relationsh­ip going by flying back and forth between the two cities every six weeks to see each other. After two years, they were finally able to relocate to Los Angeles together.

Royyuru said that while living apart was challengin­g, “it was amazing for our personal growth, and for our relationsh­ip. It helped us figure out who we are as individual­s.”

During a recent trip to London to mark their seventh anniversar­y together, Kawahara officially popped the question.

Now they are planning a wedding that will draw from both Royyuru’s family’s Indian traditions and Kawahara’s Japanese-American traditions. But it will take a while, the two said.

“I’ve been telling my parents, ‘18 months minimum,’ ” Royyuru said. “They weren’t thrilled about it, but I’ve always had an independen­t streak.”

“My mom says I’m removing all the romance from the equation, but I know there’s more to marriage than just love. If it’s just love, I’m not sure it would work.” Julianne Simson, 24, who is in no rush to marry

 ?? ERROL F. RICHARDSON / THE NEW YORK TIMES ??
ERROL F. RICHARDSON / THE NEW YORK TIMES

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