Young men reveal why so many of them are single: ‘Dates feel more like job interviews’

From: https://nypost.com/2023/03/01/rate-of-single-men-in-the-us-looking-for-dates-has-declined/

They’re single but they’re not mingling.

New data from the Pew Research Center has shown that 63% of men under 30 are single – up from 51% in 2019.

COVID isolation and women’s high expectations for something serious are the main reasons they’re avoiding going out and coupling up, young guys say.

“Dates feel more like job interviews now. Much more like ‘What can you do for me and where is this going?'” said Ian Breslow, a 28-year-old high school teacher who lives in Astoria.

“The ‘getting to know you’ period is gone and that doesn’t feel so great after coming out of isolation.”

He recalled a recent first date that went quite well until the woman interrogated him on their walk home.

“She literally asked me, ‘Would you rather our kids go to public or private school?’ Followed by several more extreme questions about getting married. I just started responding with what I knew she would hate the most to get her to leave,” Breslow told The Post.

Experts agree that women are certainly wanting more than ever before.

“The overall picture [is] that if a woman is going to go on a date with a man, chances are it’s not for a casual fling,” Ronald Levant, professor emeritus of psychology at the University of Akron, told The Post.

“Especially if the woman is kind of getting close to 30, [she’s] thinking about the biological clock and wants to have a family,” he added.

Breslow isn’t looking to settle down and get married anytime soon, so he’d rather have casual flings.

“The way dating is currently just makes me want to hook up locally with no stress or strings attached,” he says. “Fortunately that part comes very easy … I’m unmotivated to search for something serious for the time being.”

Ian Breslow said the face of dating has changed greatly since COVID.
Andrew Bruno, a 28-year-old nurse from Bellmore, NY, says flirting in the post-COVID era just isn’t as fun as it once was.

“Being able to naturally approach people while out isn’t like it was pre-pandemic. People are still much less likely to leave their groups or cliques at a bar,” said Bruno. “They’re certainly less talkative and that’s lowered my incentive to put myself out there.”

He also said the pandemic, more than ever before, made dating apps the central means for meeting people — and he’s not a fan.

“That just really isn’t my style. Like there is a weekslong prerequisite before you can think about getting involved, even for casual things,” Bruno said. “I’d rather take all that effort and put it towards my career.”

And, like Breslow, he’s in no hurry to get hitched.

Andrew Bruno feels that people have become less approachable while out since COVID.
“I’m also still very young,” Bruno said. “I don’t feel the need to rush, especially if people don’t act as naturally as they did before COVID. Why would I put it all out there for someone who can’t or won’t hold a conversation?”

For Mike M., a 25-year-old in Queens, it’s his — not the opposite sex’s — social skills that are still battling a bad case of long COVID.

“I definitely can’t walk into a room and go talk to someone I’m interested [in] like I used to be able to. It feels like my outgoingness has suffered some atrophy,” Mike, who withheld his last name out of embarrassment, told The Post.

He’s also having less sex than he did pre-pandemic.

“I have definitely been going online to take care of my urges more than I have by seeing people,” Mike admitted.

What do you think? Be the first to comment.
He feels as though he lost two prime years in his early 20s of being able to date and have fun without worrying about being in a serious relationship.

Now, he’s under pressure to find a long-term commitment, but can’t put himself out there.

“I also feel like I’m caught between two worlds,” he said. “Ultimately I’ve just been crashing and have had neither lately.”
 

DamnWolves!


I will always tip my hat to a man who provides stats, as you did.

But, as with our schools, Have our pass rates have been made higher by the lowering of standards, not increasing them?

Also, while you should "the Foreign Schools" pass failure rate as higher there are 2 factors:

1. You hide with this broad stroke those countries that have higher pass rates by grouping them with countries that have lower skewering the stats. Who really cares about Doctors form Libya and other odd
2. You do not account for volume. MBBS every year total 67,000 in India.

They aren't coming here to drive cabs and then become doctors, they are being imported, ready to go, often higher skilled. India produces outstanding doctors. And when you live with people bathing in the Ganges, I think it shows you need the best.

Most American Doctors are pretty poorly trained. And the pay you pointed out is the exact reason foreign doctors take flight to the USA. There is no shortage.
 
Most American Doctors are pretty poorly trained. And the pay you pointed out is the exact reason foreign doctors take flight to the USA. There is no shortage.
While I would initially take umbrage at this description of American medical practitioners since there are many state of the art training facilities in the country, the events of 2020+ where the majority of US doctors simply put their head in the sand or actively pushed people to get the covid "vaccine" and utilize the faulty treatment procedure for those admitted patients leads me to agree with you. Though pajeets aren't any better when it comes to challenging authority in the face of actual malice. Credit given where due to that Jay Bhattacharya guy who spoke out.
 
I'm not sure it's a gender-related thing - I think it's just the inherent nature and expectations of a romantic relationship.

I wouldn't want any same-sex friends either if they had the implied time demands of a relationship, rather than the looser, casual, at-will nature of friendship.
I wasn't intendeding to mean it's a sex thing, but in general men in the past had "getaways" from social interactions, as another poster brought up man caves. Heck most of my male friends always have a day or two to get away from everyone and enjoy some along time. Most female friends (or more) I have are normally the opposite, usually yelling at me to join them in an interaction, play a game with them, watch a movie, etc. Women and girls tend to often be more socially involved evolution wise.

I don't join male friends for activity, they shrug shoulders, realize I'm having some alone time and move on. The ladies begin spamming me messages, or trying harder to get my attention or get a little annoyed I'm not joining them.
I remember someone mentioning the Men in marriages who died of a heart attack typically did so within a few years of retiring. As if their work was the only thing still keeping themselves held together.

It's like once they felt they had no real purpose anymore, they just keeled over.
After watching this with my grandfather, I'd agree it's true to some extent, sometimes I think it's less about the work and more about the loss of abilities, reflexes and more. As an avid gamer I've watched many older gamers kind of just become unglued after their reflexes started slowing and more. So I think it's less about the work and just your overall capabilities when you feel you're going to be sitting watching tv for the rest of your life or held to simple standards or lost your abilities I could see that as being entirely demoralizing leading to a loss of will to live.
 
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