8 minute read

This Generation Loves Porn

Next Article
Digital Dating

Digital Dating

Advertisement

Spring 2022Issue 8 Why younger generations are saying ‘I Don’t’

Young adults’ desire to marry has greatly dwindled over the years as factors like fear of commitment, inflation and high divorce rates have taken a toll on younger generations.

A majority of millennials — those born from 1981 to 1996 — aren’t tying the knot at the same rate as previous generations. 56% of millennials are not married, leaving less than half of millennials saying “I do,” according to the Pew Research Center.

For communications major and millennial Cara Polus there is a different mentality towards marriage that her generation has, compared to how her parents approached it, who have been married for over 35 years.

“There’s a lot of fear around marriage and getting trapped into something that may not be good,” Polus said. “A lot of people are just wanting to go on a journey with someone before they commit to something that big.”

Current generations feel hesitant towards marriage due to the high divorce rates in baby boomers, which have doubled over the past 25 years, according to a Pew Research study.

Tyler Mikkelson, a communications major and a millennial, voiced the same sentiment while adding that he has many friends with divorced parents.

“My parents never got divorced, but half of my friends’ parents got divorced. How do you see that and say, ‘Oh, marriage is a good thing,’” Mikkelson said. “My brother’s friends got married in their early thirties [and] late twenties, and they seem happy. We’ll see in 10 years.”

To add to the concerns from younger generations, a recent survey by the Institute for Family Studies showed that the most popular place to meet for young adults is online.

Those born from 1997 to 2012, deemed Generation Z, can attest to the rise of online dating.

Carla Cruz, a biology major who is a part of Gen Z, claimed that social media plays a big role in why this generation isn’t marrying.

“I feel like it has a big impact on our generation,” said Cruz. “The older generations were into being more connected with their significant other. Our generation is more isolated.”

Commitment issues come to mind for art major and Gen Zer Daniel Espinoza, who also highlighted social media as the culprit. Espinoza asserted that this generation doesn’t want to settle down, and the rise of social media makes it easy to play the field.

Rebecca Namuddu, a Gen Z psychology major, believes the lack of marriages also has to do with inflation. The most recent consumer price index report indicated the highest level of inflation since 1982, with an increase in prices of 7.5% in 2021.

With inflation on young people’s minds, there is also the concern of economic security. Young adults ages 18-34 want a healthy socioeconomic relationship — having a full-time job that pays high wages and great housing — before a wedding, according to a 2018 report from the U.S. Census Bureau.

As millennials seek to avoid and change the mistakes of past generations, in terms of marriage, it will be interesting to watch which footsteps Gen Z chooses to follow.

This Generation Loves Porn:

How is it a ecting their perception of intimacy?

While millennials and Generation Zers are constantly bombarded with depictions of sex and the pressure to have it through pornography and television, young adults and teenagers are having less sex than previous generations, according to psychologist Jean Twenge.

Younger generations might value relationships, but the idea of sex has taken precedence over the emotional. Survey data collected in the journal Sexual Addiction & Compulsivity from 400 internet users revealed a correlation between pornography usage and loneliness.

Pornhub’s 2020 tech review claims the site generates 130 million views daily. The review found that viewership increased by 42% in the U.S. at the start of the pandemic. Users between the ages of 1834 make up 51% of Pornhub viewers.

Porn has created a sexual divide between generations. Younger generations appear to be having less sex compared to older generations when they were young adults. Growing access to the internet seems to be a contributing factor.

According to The Journal of Sex Research, easy access to pornography means young adults are more likely to consume it than previous generations. For male college students, 67% agreed that pornography is “an acceptable way to express one’s sexuality,” while only 37% of their fathers felt the same. Nearly 50% of female college students agreed, compared to just 20% of their mothers.

Television paints the image of young adults today as sex obsessed, but that’s not entirely true. By combining seven large studies done between the years 1976-2016, Twenge found that young people today have less sex, do less drugs, try alcohol later, and go out less than any previous generation.

Rae Alexandra, arts and cultural writer for KQED, explained that although television depicts young adults as sexually promiscuous, the number of teens having sex is dropping.

“Yet the 17-year-olds in ‘Euphoria’ are presented as doing almost nothing else,” Alexandra said.

“Euphoria” is a popular HBO show that is setting viewership records as it depicts the complicated lives of a group of high school students navigating the world of sex, drugs, trauma, relationships and identity.

In the pilot episode, Kat, played by Barbie Ferreira, sits in a room full of boys. They ask her questions about her sexual history, insinuating that she isn’t cool because she is a virgin. Embarrassed, she lies about her sexual experience. When asked about her “body count,” the number of people she has slept with, she insists her number is high.

Growing social anxiety might be a reason for young adults and teenagers having less sex. The Centers for Diesease Control and Prevention released a Youth Risk Behavior Survey that found a decrease in sexual intercourse among high schoolers from 1991-2015.

Tara Parker-Pope of the New York Times said social isolation in millennials can explain why they are having less sex than older generations. Sexual activity of young adults contradicts the way the media portrays hookup culture. In a report by San Diego State University, 15% of young adults born in the 1990s reported having no sexual partners since turning 18, compared with only 6% of Gen Xers.

We see the sexual divide between generations, but what about the divide between those who participate in casual sex and those who don’t? Lisa Wade, sociology professor and author of “American Hookup: The New Culture of Sex on Campus,” discussed the reality of hookup culture for many students.

“About a third of students opt out altogether; they find hookup culture unappealing and would rather not have sex at all than have it the way this culture mandates,” Wade said in the Scholars Strategy Report. Some claim mental health can be affected by participating in casual sex.

“While some feel fulfilled by hookups, others may feel pressured by media or peers to engage in these kinds [of] sexual encounters.”

-Alexis Mendez, member of CSUN’s Campus Care Advocates

Parker-Pope contends that engaging in hookups makes sex less meaningful. A 2018 survey from Cigna showed that people ages 18-22 are reported to have the highest loneliness score, 48.3%, while those 72 and older are the least lonely, at 38.6%.

Susan Krauss Whitborne, psychology professor and writer for Psychology Today, reported that, “College students who recently engaged in casual sex reported lower levels of self-esteem, life satisfaction, and happiness compared to those who had not had casual sex in the past month.”

This is not to say that casual sex makes you depressed, but rather that loneliness can be casued by impersonal relationships. Loneliness can lead to “forms of anxiety, depression, suicidal ideation and poor health behaviour like disordered eating, substance use, and poor sleep quality,” said psychologist Nancy Sokarno.

With casual sex considered a rite of passage for college students, the importance of affirmative consent is needed now more than ever. Ideas of consent can be effected for those who are engaging in sex with these current ideas of intimacy, shaped by isolation or pornography.

Leah Fessler, a gender and relationships reporter, told The Atlantic that instances of sexual assualt on campuses are always credited to intoxication but hardly ever look at the social pressures that push students into engaging in hookups. Sexual assualt statistics done by the Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network shows that 54% of people between the ages of 18-34 have reported being a victim of sexual assault.

Barrett Morris, CSUN’s Title IX coordinator, explained that when students don’t have a respect for principles like intimacy and consent, rises in sexual assault can be the result.

“Not having a value for intimacy is a big part of sexual assualt,” said Morris. “People who have a respect for intimacy are less likely to be accused of sexual assult.”

“Grown-ish” follows the life of Zoey Johnson as she explores relationships, college and friends. In an episode titled “Messy,” affirmative consent is questioned after rumors spread about two students hooking up while under the influence. As a result, the school enforces an “Enthusiastic Sober Consent” policy, similar to that of Title IX’s affirmative consent.

Some students are against the policy. The group is divided, with the majority of them arguing that the policy would ruin their college experience. This scene portrays college students as sex obsessed. One character argues, “We came here to meet new people, get trashed with them and then have sex with them.”

There are also young adults who feel pressured by the culture of hooking up.

Alexis Mendez is a member of CSUN’s Campus Care Advocates, a group that assists in confidential crisis care on campus.

“While some feel fulfilled by hookups, others may feel pressured by media or peers to engage in these kinds [of] sexual encounters,” Mendez said.

This article is from: