The Opinions - People Still Want to Get Married. Why Aren't They?
Episode Date: October 29, 2025What’s the problem with marriage? That depends on whom you ask. The Times Opinion editor Meher Ahmad is joined by the Opinion writer Jessica Grose and the author Glynnis MacNicol to discuss the curr...ent shift away from marriage and romantic relationships, and what these cultural changes mean for our society at large.Thoughts? Email us at theopinions@nytimes.com. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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This is The Opinions, a show that brings you a mix of voices from New York Times opinion.
You've heard the news. Here's what to make of it.
I'm Meijer Ahmad. I'm an editor for New York Times Opinion section.
And recently I've been reading and hearing a lot about the malaise that women are feeling about romantic relationships, particularly the heterosexual kind.
In articles on podcasts, there's been a slew of deep dives into the emotional labor of dating men, the problem with marriage, and how dating apps are the same.
leaving women feeling hollow. But of course, people have been complaining about the travails of
coupling for generations, but it seems like something new as a foot. So what's with this onslaught
of relationship discontent in the cultural zeitgeist? I'm joined by my colleague Jessica Gross,
who writes about family, culture, and relationships, among other things, and writer Glinnis
McNichol, who has written two memoirs about being single, childless and continuing to pursue
happiness in a meaningful life into her 40s and 50s. Jess, Glennis, thank you for being here.
Thanks so much for having us.
Thank you.
So I wanted to start by talking about, like, is there a sense of doom around relationships in our culture right now?
Just maybe if you want to start?
So I think a number of things are going on at once.
If you look at the polling of high schoolers, roughly the same percentage are saying they definitely don't want to get married as did decades ago.
So it's like 5% saying this is definitely not for me.
where I think we are seeing the discontent is number one online dating.
I think people find it dehumanizing, soulless, unfun.
I say this from zero experience.
I have not been on a date since 2005.
But that is my sense that a lot of it is specific unhappiness with the online gamification of relationships.
But then also, I do think that this is the first generation.
So millennials, you know, younger Gen X, Gen Z, where for some people, marriage is not compulsory.
You don't have to get married to have an idea that you will have a fulfilling life.
And so once it's a choice, then there's a lot more negotiation.
And I also think we're in a moment where more and more women are financially self-sufficient.
And so in terms of coupling just for financial reasons, which has been, if you know the history of marriage, marriage used to be an exclusively financial arrangement. But in the, you know, let's say 200-year history of love marriage, the idea that women could be self-supporting and self-sustaining, that's like the past 20 years that it's a majority of women who could support themselves into adult life. And so that's just a renegotiation of traditional gender roles. And I think the
complicated feelings around the renegotiation of those traditional gender roles is ongoing.
Glynis, what's your take? Where do you think the sense of doom is coming from?
Well, I'm on the flip side of Jess, which is I'm in my early 50s, and I have been on a date in recent times.
But I'm on sort of the other side of the doom, I think, is coming primarily from women in their 20s and early 30s who would historically be looking to,
marry or to have children. And the exhaustion and the sense of pessimism is it's coming from
not seeing a path forward to that in the structures that we've been presented as, you know,
the traditional ways to approach both. And I don't, I don't fault them for that. I think online
dating, and even in my experience of it, as just as the gamification of it leaves you with a sense
of, you know, I don't like this one. I'll move on to the next one. There's not sort of a commitment factor
because it doesn't benefit these apps. And I would also say, you know, in bigger picture, yes, the financial
expectations that used to be the basis for partnership have diminished, but the cultural expectations have,
too. So the more that women are able to tell their own stories or create their own narratives,
it diminishes marriage as the goal, essentially, and allows women to explore other avenues that are as
satisfying or more satisfying or lead to a happier, more fulfilled life. And oftentimes, that is
outside of marriage. And so, you know, previously there was no comparison between, you know,
the only avenue to happiness and satisfaction was through marriage and motherhood. And anyone
outside of that was the lonely spinster ants in the attic. And now we have a lot of examples of
what it looks like to be leading a life outside of that and the ways it can be fulfilling and
enjoyable and adventurous. And so I think in this conversation of rethinking what this looks like,
you're like, well, actually, the alternative doesn't look too terrible. And then you add to that,
just one final thought is, you know, in a country that does not provide child care or much support
for women who do want to be parents, you hear a lot of stories about that path in life and how
punishing it is. And again, in comparison to the alternative, when the alternative for the first time
in history is starting to look far more enjoyable, I think contributes to this sense of,
well, what is the point of this? Well, so rates of marriages have been steadily falling over a century,
but they've plateaued in the last few years. And there was a recent Pew Research Center survey,
in which 48% of women said that being married was not two or not at all important for a fulfilling life compared to 39% of men.
So what do you make is the reason behind this?
Is it social media?
Is it apps?
Is it the state of the world?
I mean, both of you sort of circled around this question of like alternatives to this one form of partnership in a way.
But I am curious whether you see the plateau as having some kind of factor into these larger societal trends too.
I mean, marriage is considered by a lot of people to be a capstone. This is sort of how the sociologists refer to it. And so people really think that they need to have their ducks completely in a row financially and emotionally before they are ready to get married. And that didn't used to be the case. I mean, people used to get married a lot younger. The biggest thing I would say is that it is taking young people much, much longer to feel that they are in
a place that is settled enough to get married.
And I think, you know, as Glennis correctly points out,
there is a vision of a fulfilling alternative.
And so I guess I always pay a lot of attention
to the way these questions are asked.
And so I think I probably would say being married
is not too important for a fulfilling life
because I believe that other people
can definitely have a fulfilling life without being married
while also knowing that my being married in what I think of as a good marriage is one of the most important aspects of my life.
Yeah, that makes sense.
I also think we came.
It's hard to separate COVID, I think, from this conversation.
Because during COVID and coming out of COVID, we heard so loudly and understandably from so many women who felt that they were shouldering all of the household responsibilities, all of the child care responsibilities in a very, you know, intense and difficult.
time. And I think how that narrative filtered down to younger people thinking about whether or not
they wanted to get married is hard to say. And I also think people changed their minds. You know,
my niece told me when she was sick. She idolized me and she was like, I don't want to get married.
I want to live in New York by myself and be a colorer. And I thought wonderful, you know,
like you have another example. And now she's, you know, a teenager. And all she talks about is, you know,
like, not all she talks about, she talks about plenty of things, but it's like when I have kids,
when I'm married. I think, you know, so these ideals shift as you age and everyone's experience
is so individual. I think, you know, we have the statistics that are so popular now that say
marriage benefits men and it doesn't benefit women. But at the same time, you don't know who's
shouldering the intimacy or the emotional support in the house. Like, you can't see inside other
people's marriages. I think the bigger question that applies to this is how are we
through laws and nationwide structure supporting the institution of marriage so it can be as fair
and as egalitarian as possible. And that often comes down to child care and the penalties women
experience once they do start having children. Yeah. I mean, Glynis, I think just like,
since you're interested, you know, broadly in how these changes are happening in the culture,
are these changes in the sense of people rejecting marriage as an institution, heterosexual
partnership as an institution, are they necessarily a bad thing? I mean, for you, you've written a lot
about what you're describing, building your life around embracing singlehood and outside the confines
of this kind of specific institution. You've also written pieces in the times about this.
What do you make of the degree to which the culture is shifting? Do you think that more and more
women are starting to embrace this idea? You know, you've mentioned that these narratives are just
starting to emerge. Does it feel more viable to more women at this point?
I mean, I can only tell you, based on the women I hear from, I think there's, when narratives,
do pop up. There's an enormous relief in seeing your life reflected in a cultural narrative
to not have that feels extremely isolating and punishing. And that also filters down to how we
regulate institutions and just as basic as, you know, traveling, right? You are financially punished
for traveling by yourself. I think this is why Tracy Ellis Ross's solo show has taken off the way
it has, is that it's just nice to see some version of your life out there. But the reality is
to be financially independent is very, very difficult.
We're not living in a world in which the structures support that in any way.
There are amazing things about living like this,
and there are very difficult things about living like this,
which is exactly the same truth about marriage, in a good marriage, right?
Like, I can love my life, which doesn't suggest that there aren't very hard things,
and some of those hard things are not tied to,
the ways in which I am required to live in America. But, you know, that's very true of marriage at the same time.
Well, so let's talk about the people who are still in pursuit of this type of partnership, not just marriage, but heterosexual
partnership. And one of the things that some of these pieces have touched on is the idea that these dating
apps as a means to finding a partner have made it so difficult. I think, Linus, you touched on this
kind of feeling of endless option and just kind of continuing on. And, you know, I'm curious if
these apps have made it so
women, men, anyone using them
feels as if they have this ideal
in their head, a kind of like perfect partner.
You hear of red flags a lot.
Like if this person has this red flag, then I'm not going to go
on a second date, you know.
But in a city like New York or, you know,
major American cities, it can kind of just feel
like the deck is endless. You can keep swiping
and going through as many of these
profiles as you want until you find
the perfect person. Is that
what's adding to a level of
dissatisfaction too? I think it's hard to separate the experience of dissatisfaction of a dating app
and the swipingness from a similar dissatisfaction of all of us living on our screens or on Instagram
or the isolation of a primarily digital existence in our social lives, which plenty has been
written about the loneliness of Gen Z or the way that people are not socializing the way that
they don't having as much sex. The drinking culture is gone, which may not be a bad thing.
And I think it's very difficult.
Like part of this exhaustion is you're only responding to a screen version of someone.
You're not having a real life experience.
You're having it's like responding to a like a magazine person.
There's no reality to it.
And that in and of itself, regardless of whether you're searching for romance or partnership or whatever it is, is exhausting.
I'm exhausted looking at my friends on Instagram sometimes that can make me feel terrible.
So I think that, you know, these things are all connected.
and that if you're a person in pursuit of partnership,
particularly if you're a person who wants to be married and have children,
which is a completely valid goal,
like the, I think often of like I get exhausted,
and I'm not in this, you know, for the long term,
and it's just, it's this sense of disposability.
And there's not even just like the basic, the way you meet someone
and you like, do you like how they smell?
Do you like with their expressions, you know,
how they, so much of whatever,
relationship, any relationship is built on, is, you know, in-person contact. And these
apps remove that to a degree that just makes an already, I think precarious is not the right
word, a situation with some risk attached to it in terms of emotions or expectations,
even more.
Yes, vulnerable.
Even more so. And then add to that a generation of kids. And I think, Jess, you've
written about this who, you know, are so much on their screens or they're not leaving
the house. So this is how they're interacting with the world and how do you have real any relationship
when it's only screen-based. Jess, what about you? Would your husband pass a red flag test if you met
him on an app today? Today, yes. When we started dating in our early 20s, we would have just
failed every internet red flag test. He lived with five other guys in a concrete room with no windows,
his room that we referred to as the dumb, dumb, done.
Red flag, major red flag.
And I had my own slate of, you know, early 20-something issues.
So I, if anyone under the age of 30 is listening to this, I would say people do grow up.
It does happen.
I think there's this notion that, like, you don't grow and change.
Everyone is just themselves.
And it's like, no, thank God.
You know, I'm not the same person that I was 20 years ago when we have.
I think the hope is you grow and change in the same direction together.
But I also think just when you're saying that, I'm just thinking, you know, as we push marriage later and later, you establish yourself as an individual with your own likes and dislikes about how you live.
And it becomes more difficult to give those things up and align yourself with someone.
Whereas when I was 25, the stuff I put up with when I was 25, it's just I didn't know any different.
Like you just have a much higher tolerance for the way other people behave because you have not established yourself fully yet.
What's interesting about what both of you guys are talking about is sort of what I'm hearing is that you're not seeing a whole scale rejection of partnership.
Neither are you seeing a full embrace of the alternatives as like the next step for women as they kind of like progress in society or feminism, whatever we want to call it.
But we're now in this era where that partnership is not the default.
And if it's not the default that there's this kind of like well spring of other options that's now starting to spring up.
And what those other options look like, whether it's like financially feasible or whether it feels good is still kind of like being muddled out.
Like to me, that's what I hear from women my age and older who are navigating life outside of a heterosexual partnership is just sort of like, is this better than what my life was in a marriage?
Maybe it is in a lot of ways.
I don't know if I should continue going this way.
What's my life going to look like when I'm 80?
These are the kind of like questions that start to spring up
when we're essentially charting a new path or questioning whether this, you know, one structure is the structure for us to kind of pursue.
Yeah, I mean, I feel like in every major life choice, it's tradeoffs, right?
It's so individual and it is so based on what your desires are and how well you know yourself.
I mean, there's so many discussions on having kids or not having kids.
And I just always knew I wanted them.
This was a fairly uncomplicated thing for me.
And I completely understand that that is not the case for a lot of people.
I agree with Glynis that I think that things are sort of changing in terms of more options seeming attractive.
But I think that the panic and interest and, you know, spiciness of all of these takes will just is sort of eternal.
I'd also just say, like, we've only had one way for women to live for most of history.
So a small portion of women are now very recently able to live in a different way in a way that's, like, somewhat satisfying.
And it's having an outsized effect on our understanding of what's going on because it's that new.
And that's shocking. And so I think that's useful to keep in mind that how brand new this is. And just the idea that, you know, there's a slice of the population, and even in America, a slice of the population who is able to support themselves outside of marriage in a way that they enjoy or find satisfying or is in some way aligned with how they want to live is striking us as enormous just because it hasn't really existed in any way before.
I think is, you know, something to keep in mind as we continue to see these panicked articles
about people not getting married or not having kids or whatever it is. And part of it also kind of
just seems like the stigma of it all has been lifted a little bit more. A little bit, yeah.
So if like if that's, the panic is one side of the coin. I think the increase of people writing
this piece is also indicative of the fact that more and more people are starting to do that.
Well, thank you so much both. This has been.
a wonderful conversation, and I really appreciate you both taking the time to chat with me.
Thank you. Thank you.
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