Relationships
In Love With Romantic Love? That Comes With Risks
Our love affair with romantic love can be stifling and depressing.
Posted November 7, 2018
In the U.S., and many other places, people are in love with romantic love. They act like they cannot get enough of the love stories that dominate movies, TV shows, novels, and songs. They seek romantic love in their own lives, sometimes desperately, as if finding it will magically transport them into some higher state of bliss. (It won’t.) They’ve gone way over the top with their splashy destination weddings and the marriage proposals that they turn into public spectacles. Even high schoolers have gotten in on this matrimaniacal excess, as they try to create viral, Instagram-ready “wow” moments with their prom proposals.
Does this infatuation with romantic love seem dreamy? Or, at worst, harmless? It is not. Romantic narratives are stifling. They take this vast, infinitely varied set of entities we call humans and reduce them to one story. We humans are more than that.
What helps to make life joyful and meaningful for every one of us is our imagination — our ability to envision many ways to live a life — together with our boldness and resilience in the face of relentless cultural storylines that try to get us all to trod along the same, worn-out paths.
Too often, social scientists are in on the matrimania, perpetuating misleading narratives about the benefits of marrying, when more and more studies are showing that people who marry do not become any happier than when they were single and, in some ways, end up a little less healthy.
Fortunately, not all scholars have jumped aboard the matrimaniacal bandwagon. Some researchers are discovering the downsides of matrimania. They are documenting the ways in which romantic themes limit the aspirations of young women. They are also showing that adolescents who get their wish and become romantically involved end up more depressed than adolescents who spend the same amount of time without any romantic relationships.
How romantic images limit women’s aspirations
Why is it that so few women pursue careers in STEM fields (science, technology, engineering, and math), even when they show interest and talent in those areas? In part, the lure of romantic images and conversations and interests are to blame.
Do those clichéd romantic images of sunsets, romantic dinners, and candles seem innocuous? They aren’t. Research shows that when women in college see romantic images (instead of images of things that suggest intelligence, such as books and libraries), they express less interest in science and technology.
Does it seem like conversations about dating are also inconsequential? They aren’t. Again, if female college students overhear a conversation about another woman’s date, they express less interest in careers in science and technology than if they overhear a conversation about a course.
In another study, female college students kept diaries of their communications with their romantic partners. On days when they texted or called or spent time with their romantic partners, they paid less attention in math class and spent less time on their math homework. The day after, they were still shortchanging math class and math homework.
For adolescents, romantic relationships may be depressing
A nationally representative study of more than 8,000 adolescents (age 12-17) in the U.S. were followed over the course of a year. The adolescents who become romantically involved got more depressed than those who did not — even if they stayed with the same person over the course of the year and didn’t break up.
Some of the adolescents really wanted to be in a romantic relationship. Others didn’t much care. It was the adolescents who craved romantic relationships the most who became more depressed over the course of the year, whether or not their wish came true.
Adolescents who became romantically involved also drank more than their peers who did not have romantic partners, and they also got in more trouble.
Some of the adolescents in the study were gay or lesbian and some were asexuals. Those people also grew more depressed if they became romantically involved. Their depression was even deeper than it was for the heterosexuals who had romantic relationships over the course of the year. (For even more results from this study, click here and here.)
Killing sprees
One of the killing sprees for which the U.S. is so infamous happened close to me, near the University of California at Santa Barbara. In 2014, a young man stabbed or shot to death six people before killing himself. In essays and videos that the killer left behind, he expressed rage at women’s lack of interest in him. He never could get a girlfriend, and now he was going to get revenge. Today, he is known as an “incel” (involuntarily celibate). Chillingly, other similarly enraged men aspire to be like him, and a few even follow through with their own murderous rampages.
I’m not saying that romantic narratives caused the Santa Barbara slaughterer or any of the others to go on their killing sprees. But it doesn’t help that one kind of relationship is so revered above all others. It doesn’t help that all sorts of other worthy pursuits do not get the attention or the accolades that romantic partnership does.