Modern romance

Aziz Ansari, 1983-

Book - 2015

The acclaimed comedian teams up with a New York University sociologist to explore the nature of modern relationships, evaluating how technology is shaping contemporary relationships and considering the differences between courtships of the past and present.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Penguin Press 2015.
Language
English
Main Author
Aziz Ansari, 1983- (author)
Other Authors
Eric Klinenberg (author)
Physical Description
277 pages : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages [257]-266) and index.
ISBN
9781594206276
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. Searching For Your Soul Mate
  • Chapter 2. The Initial Ask
  • Chapter 3. Online Bating
  • Chapter 4. Choice and Options
  • Chapter 5. International Investigations of Love
  • Chapter 6. Old Issues, New Forms: Sexting, Cheating, Snooping, and Breaking Up
  • Chapter 7. Settling Down
  • Conclusion
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Books Consulted
  • Index
Review by New York Times Review

Books on sex, dating and the relentless search for 'the One.' DATE-ONOMICS How Dating Became a Lopsided Numbers Game By Jon Birger 220 pp. Workman Publishing. Paper, $15.95. THE SEX MYTH The Gap Between Our Fantasies and Reality By Rachel Hills 267 pp. Simon & Schuster. Paper, $16. MODERN ROMANCE By Aziz Ansari with Eric Klinenberg Illustrated. 277 pp. Penguin Press. $28.95. BACK WHEN ADULTERY and gay sex were widely criminalized in the United States, when masturbation was thought to make you crazy and fellatio was taboo, the Kinsey Institute famously revealed that Americans were secretly less faithful, more gay, more various in their sexual practices and more perverse than most wanted to think. Sixty years later, many of us have come to regard sex - preferably passionate, hot, transformative sex - as central to our lives. In the time of Tinder, our sexuality feels anything but secret. But romance is still mysterious - what does it feel like for everyone else? - and three new books try to explain modern mating. Rachel Hills, an Australian journalist who lives in New York, argues in "The Sex Myth" that there is a new gap between what we believe and what we do: Americans are secretly having less and worse sex than everyone thinks, and feeling bad about it. She cites a recent study, which shows that on any given weekend, 80 percent of male college students think their schoolmates are having sex (it's actually 5 percent to 10 percent). Hills argues persuasively that when our value is tied to sexual desirability and performance, we live with a new kind of shame: If we're not having good sex, all the time, there's something wrong with us. In this way, the liberation of sex actually regulates us. Motivated by her own sense of falling short of some sexual ideal, and by conversations with friends who felt the same way, Hills attempts to show how we moved from "a culture that told us we were dirty if we did have sex to one that tells us we are defective if we do not do it enough." She examines social science literature and media, and interviews hundreds of people to contrast the "myth of a hypersexual society" with our lived reality. "The Sex Myth" provides a clarifying framework for understanding new versions of old contradictions - that women must choose between being "wholly 'pure' or 'empowered,' innocent Madonna or self-assured Gaga." Hills makes a smart argument against that strain of neo- or anti-feminism that would have women rebel against objectification by objectifying ourselves: We might be better off, she argues, to stop identifying ourselves primarily with our sex lives. Hills wants to show how deeply our most private anxieties are influenced by cultural forces, but Jon Birger, a business journalist, argues that the pressure to be sexual is less the result of a cultural shift than a matter of statistics. Birger's "DateOnomics" wants to do for dating what "Moneyball" did for baseball or "Freakonomics" did for everything else: move beneath appearances to reveal what can be seen only when we crunch the numbers. His thesis is that dating is difficult for women simply because they greatly outnumber men. "It's not that he's just not that into you," the jacket copy assures us. "It's that there aren't enough of him." It's important to point out here that there aren't actually more women than men in the United States: There are 1.05 boys born for every one girl. But by "women" Birger means single, college-educated, straight women, and "men" are single, college-educated, straight men. There are 33 percent more such women in their 20s than men. To help us see what a big difference 33 percent is, Birger invites us to imagine a late-night dorm room hangout that's drawing to an end, and everyone wants to hook up. "Now imagine," he writes, that in this dorm room, "there are three women and two men." If this is a predicament that brings to mind some provocative possible arrangements, this is not what Birger intends: "Date-Onomics" is written for people who assume that pairing two by two, male and female, with educated people in or above one's class, is the endgame, and his book aims to give women the data to win it. THE GENDER GAP in college education is striking, and Birger joins a chorus of critics arguing that we must do better at educating young boys to prepare them for college, adding that ignoring the gap in education is bad not only for boys but also for girls. But he attributes to the "man deficit" everything from "loosening sexual mores" to young women's increasing tendency to delay marriage, and male sexual aggression and issues with intimacy. Without substantial survey or interview data to ferret out the reasons that, for example, the number of women between 30 and 34 who are not marrying has increased by 31 percent between 2007 and 2012, he depends on anecdotes to assume that these women actually want to be married and that most women participating in "hookup culture" would forgo uncommitted sex for a "serious" relationship if only there were enough "good" men. Birger claims not to be cautioning young women to prioritize marriage, but the book seems to support exactly that conservative and panicked view. One strategy for women who want to marry, Birger suggests, would be to move to Silicon Valley, where single men outnumber single women. Another is that women who want to marry should expand their options to include men who have not gone to college and who are more likely to marry because "their" women are scarce. That marriage might not always be good for women is not a possibility he considers. In the best-selling "Modern Romance," the comedian Aziz Ansari and Eric Klinenberg, a sociologist, argue that it's exactly this perspective on dating - as a numbers game - that causes so much trouble. Like Hills and Birger, Ansari and Klinenberg want to help us understand why the search for love can feel so scary today - and they do so with charm and intelligence. Ansari's anecdotes will be recognizable to anyone who has gone through, say, the multiple stages of anxiety native to waiting for a text response from a crush. And extensive research supports the book's empathetic account of dating today - a time when about a third of relationships that lead to marriage begin on the Internet, but also a time when marriage and monogamy are not, for many, the pressing priority they used to be. Ansari and Klinenberg draw on interviews and focus groups with hundreds of people selected for diversity, the huge data troves of Match.com and OkCupid as well as Stanford University's extensive survey of how couples meet and stay together. Perhaps most illuminatingly, they persuaded dozens of research participants to show them their phones, so while some of what they come up with is humor along the lines of "most dudes out there are straight-up bozos," they have the text messages to prove it. Ansari and Klinenberg's observations aren't revolutionary, but they bear repeating: The search for love has been deeply altered by new technologies, and helped by them, too. When we find what we want, it's because we stop researching our options and treating our date as data to be mined, categorized, passed over or locked down; we stop texting and swiping and shopping for love and sex and companionship, and pause long enough to be with the person in front of us, in case those things are already here. In the time of Tinder, sexuality feels anything but secret. But romance is still mysterious. KRISTIN DOMBEK writes the Help Desk column for n+1. Her essays have been published in Harper's, The Paris Review and The London Review of Books.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [September 6, 2015]
Review by Booklist Review

Stand-up comedian Ansari has some interesting things to say about dating in our technology-saturated age. It is reasonable for readers to expect a narrative peppered with humorous snark and mock outrage (and his timing in this regard is quite good), but he has actually conducted considerable research and consulted with experts, pursuits that elevate his book above the typical lightweight comedic venture to an exceedingly relevant exploration of romance in our texting, online-dating, smartphone-driven society. Ansari's jokes, often drawn from real-life experiences, complement his in-depth look at the overload of information singles struggle through when seeking a soul mate. Texts are rife with overanalysis, a blind date means hours of Google searches, and dating web sites leave users wondering if there's someone better around the next virtual corner. Like so many other aspects of twenty-first-century life, dating has become a lot of work. Ansari's main takeaway: just go out on a date! The romantic landscape may have changed, but a good date still matters. An investigation full of valuable advice, and a lot of fun to boot.--Mondor, Colleen Copyright 2015 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Inspired by his own romantic woes, comedian Ansari teamed up with sociologist Klinenberg in 2013 to design and conduct a research project to better understand the dating game as it's played today. This books collects the insights gleaned from a variety of research methods: focus groups in major cities around the world, crowdsourcing on the website Reddit. Ansari addresses the effects of technology on modern relationships with an amusing historical overview, beginning with the classified ads of the 1980s and '90s and video dating services before chronicling the rise of industry giants such as Match.com and Tinder. He also dives into the sociological theory at play, discussing "the paradox of choice," the differences between "companionate" and "soul mate" marriages, and a generational conversation spurred by a visit to a retirement community. The book is steeped in pop culture, featuring examples from the popular Tumblr "Straight White Boys Texting," sex columnist Dan Savage's thoughts on open relationships, and Ansari's personal dating maxim, hilariously dubbed "the Flo Rida Theory of Acquired Likability Through Repetition." Despite Ansari's insistence otherwise, most of this material has been covered exhaustively elsewhere, but Ansari's oddball sense of humor does bring something new and refreshing to the conversation. Agent: Richard Abate, 3Arts Entertainment. (June) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Comic Ansari teams up with sociologist Klinenberg to explore in more depth one of his favorite stand-up subjects: 21st--century dating. The two conducted surveys and online research and held focus groups to get singles from many countries and multiple generations to talk about how they seek romantic partners, how technology has changed the search for a mate, and how instant communication has opened up a bewildering array of options, changing the singles landscape in just a few years. The book mixes sociology with humor, and Ansari's lively narration frequently goes off-script, giving interviewees gratuitous accents and chiding the reader for missing out on the graphs from the print edition. Verdict Interesting and fun, this title is recommended for fans of Ansari's live performances, readers interested in the impact of social media on human relations, or even online daters looking to up their game.--Jason Puckett, Georgia State Univ. Lib., Atlanta © Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The ever hip and funny comedian and Parks and Recreation star embarks on a surprisingly insightful exploration of the complex realities of dating today. Long before Ansari was born to his Tamil parents, people got together and married the least offensive prospect in the neighborhood. Sometimes, they looked no further than their own apartment building. Over time, and if they were lucky, they managed to form an enduring bond that grew into something a lot like love. It was crazy by today's contemporary Western standards, but Ansari's incredulousness with this anachronistic state of affairs is tempered with such a high level of earnest intelligence and compassion that he immediately establishes himself as a serious investigator. The author has plenty of jokes, for sure, but he also did his homework, teaming up with noted sociologistsincluding co-author Klinenberg (Sociology/New York Univ.; Going Solo: The Extraordinary Rise and Surprising Appeal of Living Alone, 2012, etc.)assembling focus groups, and even comprehensively exploring the idiosyncratic dating cultures of Tokyo, Paris, and Buenos Aires. Ansari also examines real-time text exchanges between singles in the United States. Is there anything more anxiety-inducing than waiting for a potential partner to return a text? Has texting become the last refuge for weak-kneed dopes too afraid to dial a woman directly? Increasingly sophisticated smartphones and dating apps provide today's singles with options their 20th-century counterparts could never have imagined. However, as Ansari cleverly demonstrates, those marvelous advances create their own unique headaches, as unlimited choices can leave the lovelorn paralyzed. Ansari's eminently readable book is successful, in part, because it not only lays out the history, evolution, and pitfalls of dating, it also offers sound advice on how to actually win today's constantly shifting game of love. Often hilarious, consistently informative, and unusually helpful. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

INTRODUCTION OH, shit! Thanks for buying my book. That money is MINE. But I worked really hard on this, and I think you'll enjoy it. First off, a little about this project. When you have success as a stand-up comedian, you quickly get offers to do a humor book. In the past, I always turned these opportunities down, because I thought stand-up was the best medium for me. In my mind, a book wouldn't be as fun as just using my ideas for stand-up. So why did I decide to write a book about modern romance? A few years ago there was a woman in my life--let's call her Tanya--and we had hooked up one night in L.A. We'd both attended a birthday party, and when things were winding down, she offered to drop me off at home. We had been chatting and flirting a little the whole night, so I asked her to come in for a drink. At the time, I was subletting a pretty nice house up in the Hollywood Hills. It was kind of like that house De Niro had in Heat , but a little more my vibe than the vibe of a really skilled robber who takes down armored cars. I made us both a nice cocktail and we took turns throwing on records while we chatted and laughed. Eventually we started making out, and it was pretty awesome. I remember drunkenly saying something really dumb when she was leaving, like, "Tanya, you're a very charming lady . . ." She said, "Aziz, you're a pretty charming guy too." The encounter seemed promising, as everyone in the room had agreed: We were both charming people. I wanted to see Tanya again and was faced with a simple conundrum that plagues us all: How and when do I communicate next? Do I call? Do I text? Do I send a Facebook message? Do I send up a smoke signal? How does one do that? Will I set my rented house on fire? How embarrassed will I be when I have to tell the home's owner, actor James Earl Jones, that I burned his house down trying to send a smoke signal? Oh no, I just revealed whose sick house I'd rented: King Jaffe Joffer himself, the voice of Darth Vader, film legend James Earl Jones. Eventually I decided to text her, because she seemed to be a heavy texter. I waited a few days, so as not to seem overeager. I found out that the band Beach House, which we listened to the night we made out, was playing that week in L.A., so it seemed like the perfect move. Here was my text: A nice, firm ask with a little inside joke thrown in. (Tanya was singing the Drake song "The Motto" at the party and, impressively, knew almost all the lyrics.) I was pretty confident. I wasn't head-over-heels in love with Tanya, but she seemed really cool and it felt like we had a good connection. As I waited for her response, I started picturing our hypothetical relationship. Perhaps next weekend we would go see a movie at the cool outdoor screening series they do at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery? Maybe I could cook Tanya dinner later this week and try out that brick chicken recipe I'd been eager to attempt? Would Tanya and I go vacation in Ojai later in the fall? Who knew what our future would be? This was going to be great! A few minutes went by and the status of my text message changed to "read." My heart stopped. This was the moment of truth. I braced myself and watched as those little iPhone dots popped up. The ones that tantalizingly tell you someone is typing a response, the smartphone equivalent of the slow trip up to the top of a roller coaster. But then, in a few seconds-- they vanished . And there was no response from Tanya. Hmmm . . . What happened? A few more minutes go by and . . . Nothing. No problem, she's probably just crafting her perfectly witty response. She started a draft, didn't feel good about it, and wanted to get back to it later. I get it. She also probably didn't want to seem overeager and be writing back so fast, right? Fifteen minutes go by . . . Nothing. My confidence starts going down and shifting into doubt. An hour goes by . . . Nothing. Two hours go by . . . Nothing. Three hours go by . . . Nothing. A mild panic begins. I start staring at my original text. Once so confident, now I second-guess it all. I'm so stupid! I should have typed "Hey" with two y 's, not just one! I asked too many questions. What the fuck was I thinking? Oh, there I go with another question. Aziz, WHAT'S UP WITH YOU AND THE QUESTIONS? I'm struggling to figure it out but trying to keep calm. Okay, maybe she's busy with work. No big deal. I'm sure she'll get back to me as soon as she can. We had a connection, right? A fucking day goes by. A FULL DAY! Now my thoughts get crazier: What has happened?! I know she held my words in her hand!! Did Tanya's phone fall into a river/trash compactor/volcano? Did Tanya fall into a river/trash compactor/volcano?? Oh no, Tanya has died, and I'm selfishly worried about our date. I'm a bad person. I shared my dilemma with a friend. "Aww, come on, man, it's fine. She'll get back to you. She's probably just busy," he said optimistically. Then I look on social media. I see her logged onto Facebook Chat. Do I send a message? No! Don't do that, Aziz. Be cool. Be cool . . . Later I check Instagram, and this clown Tanya is posting a photo of some deer. Too busy to write me back, but she has time to post a photo of some deer she saw on a hike? I'm distraught, but then I have a moment of clarity that every idiot has in this situation. MAYBE SHE DIDN'T GET THE TEXT! Yes, that's what's happened, right? There was a glitch in her phone of some sort. Of course. This is when I contemplate a second text, but I'm hesitant due to the fact that this scenario has never happened with my friends: "Hey, Alan. I texted you to go get dinner and you didn't write back for a full day. What happened?" "Damn! I didn't see the text. It didn't go through. Glitch in my phone. Sorry about that. Let's grab dinner tomorrow." Back to the Tanya situation. At this point it's been more than twenty-four hours. It's Wednesday. The concert is tonight . To not even write back and say no, why would she do that? At least say no so I can take someone else, right? Why, Tanya, why? I start going nuts thinking about it. How can this person be rude on so many levels? I'm not just some bozo. She's known me for years. I kept debating whether I should send anything, but I felt it would just be too desperate and accepted that she wasn't interested. I told myself that I wouldn't want to go out with someone who treats people that way anyway, which was somewhat true, but I was still beyond frustrated and insulted. Then I realized something interesting. The madness I was descending into wouldn't have even existed twenty or even ten years ago. There I was, maniacally checking my phone every few minutes, going through this tornado of panic and hurt and anger all because this person hadn't written me a short, stupid message on a dumb little phone. I was really upset, but had Tanya really done anything that rude or malicious? No, she just didn't send a message in order to avoid an awkward situation. I'd surely done the same thing to someone else and not realized the similar grief I had possibly caused them. I didn't end up going to the concert that night. Instead I went to a comedy club and started talking about the awful frustration, self-doubt, and rage that this whole "silence" nonsense had provoked in the depths of my being. I got laughs but also something bigger, like the audience and I were connecting on a deeper level. I could tell that every guy and girl in the audience had had their own Tanya in their phone at one point or another, each with their own individual problems and dilemmas. We each sit alone, staring at this black screen with a whole range of emotions. But in a strange way, we are all doing it together, and we should take solace in the fact that no one has a clue what's going on. I got fascinated by the questions of how and why so many people have become so perplexed by the challenge of doing something that people have always done quite efficiently: finding romance. I started asking people I knew if there was a book that would help me understand the many challenges of looking for love in the digital age. I found some interesting pieces here and there, but not the kind of comprehensive, in-depth sociological investigation I was looking for. That book simply didn't exist, so I decided to try to write it myself. When I started the project, I thought the big changes in romance were obvious--technological developments like smartphones, online dating, and social media sites. As I dug deeper, however, I realized that the transformation of our romantic lives cannot be explained by technology alone; there's much more to the story. In a very short period of time, the whole culture of finding love and a mate has radically changed. A century ago people would find a decent person who lived in their neighborhood. Their families would meet and, after they decided neither party seemed like a murderer, the couple would get married and have a kid, all by the time they were twenty-two. Today people spend years of their lives on a quest to find the perfect person, a soul mate. The tools we use on this search are different, but what has really changed is our desires and--even more strikingly--the underlying goals of the search itself.  • • •  The more I thought about these changes, the more I had to write this book. But I also knew that I, bozo comedian Aziz Ansari, probably couldn't tackle this topic on my own, and I decided to reach out to some very smart people to guide me. I teamed up with the sociologist Eric Klinenberg, and we designed a massive research project, one that would require more than a year of investigation in cities across the world and involve some of the leading experts on love and romance. Before we get into things, I want to tell you more about our project, so you know what we did--and didn't--do. The primary source of data for this book is the research that Eric and I did during 2013 and 2014. We conducted focus groups and interviews with hundreds of people in New York City, Los Angeles, Wichita, Monroe (NY), Buenos Aires, Tokyo, Paris, and Doha. These weren't ordinary interviews. First, we assembled diverse groups of people and wound up having incredibly personal conversations about the intimate details of their romantic lives. Second, and even more intriguing, many of the people who participated in our research volunteered to share their phones with us, so we could track their interactions through text messages, e-mails, online dating sites, and swipe apps like Tinder. This information was revelatory, because we could observe how actual romantic encounters played out in people's lives and not just hear stories about what people remembered. Since we asked people to share so much personal information, we promised them anonymity. That means all the names of people whose stories we tell here are pseudonyms, as is standard practice in qualitative social science research. To expand our reach beyond just those cities, we created a Modern Romantics subreddit forum on the website Reddit to ask questions and essentially conduct a massive online focus group receiving thousands of responses from around the world. (I want to give huge thanks to everyone who participated in these sessions, as the book would not have been possible without them.) So in the book, when we mention "the subreddit," this is what we are referring to. We also spent a long time interviewing some incredibly smart people, including eminent sociologists, anthropologists, psychologists, and journalists who have dedicated their careers to studying modern romance--and who were very generous with their time. Here's a list that I'm terrified I'm going to leave someone off of: danah boyd of Microsoft; Andrew Cherlin of Johns Hopkins University; Stephanie Coontz of Evergreen State College; Pamela Druckerman of the New York Times ; Kumiko Endo of the New School, who also assisted us with our research in Tokyo; Eli Finkel of Northwestern University; Helen Fisher of Rutgers University; Jonathan Haidt of NYU; Sheena Iyengar of Columbia University; Dan Savage; Natasha Schüll of MIT; Barry Schwartz of Swarthmore College; Clay Shirky of NYU; Sherry Turkle of MIT; and Robb Willer of Stanford, who also helped us design some research questions and analyze our data. In addition to these interviews, we got access to some amazing quantitative data that we use extensively here. For the past five years, Match.com has sponsored the largest survey of American singles around, a nationally representative sample of about five thousand people with questions about all kinds of fascinating behaviors and preferences. Match generously shared it with us, and we, in turn, will share our analysis of it with you. We've also benefited from the goodwill of Christian Rudder and OkCupid, which has collected a treasure trove of data on how its users behave. This information has been incredibly useful, because it allows us to distinguish between what people say they want and what people actually do. Another great source of data was Michael Rosenfeld at Stanford University, who shared material from the "How Couples Meet and Stay Together" survey, a nationally representative survey of 4,002 English-literate adults, three quarters of whom had a spouse or romantic partner. Rosenfeld, as well as another researcher, Jonathan Haidt of NYU, gave us permission to use charts that they'd developed in this book. Big thanks to them both. With the help of all these people, Eric and I managed to cover a vast set of issues related to modern romance, but we didn't cover everything. One thing that I definitely want you to know up front is that this book is primarily about heterosexual relationships. Early in the process Eric and I realized that if we tried to write about how all the different aspects of romance we address applied to LGBT relationships, we simply wouldn't be able to do the topic justice without writing an entirely separate book. We do cover some issues relating to love and romance among gays and lesbians, but not at all exhaustively. The other thing I want to say here is that most of the research we did involved speaking with middle-class people, folks who had gone to college and put off having kids until their late twenties or thirties and now have quite intense and intimate relationships with their expensive smartphones. I know that love and romance work differently in very poor and very rich communities, both in the United States and in the other countries we visited for our research. But again, Eric and I felt that studying all the variations related to class would overwhelm us, so that's not in the book.  • • •  Okay, that's pretty much what you need to know by way of introduction. But before we begin, I do want to give a sincere thanks to you--the reader. You could have bought any book in the world if you wanted. You could have picked up a copy of Unruly : The Highs and Lows of Becoming a Man by Ja Rule. You could have bought Rich Dad, Poor Dad. You could have even bought Rich Ja, Poor Ja: Ja Rule's Guide to Sensible Finance. You could have bought all of those books (and maybe you did!), except for the last one, which, despite my repeated e-mails, Ja Rule continues to refuse to write. But you also bought mine. And for that I thank you. Now, let's begin our journey into the world of . . . modern romance ! CHAPTER 1 SEARCHING FOR YOUR SOUL MATE Many of the frustrations experienced by today's singles seem like problems unique to our time and technological setting: not hearing back on a text. Agonizing over what really is your favorite movie for your online dating profile. Wondering whether you should teleport over some roses to that girl you had dinner with last night. (REALLY SKEPTICAL THAT THEY WILL FIGURE OUT TELEPORTATION BY BOOK RELEASE IN JUNE 2015 AS I WAS TOLD BY MY SCIENCE ADVISERS. EDITOR, PLEASE REMOVE IF TELEPORTATION KINKS HAVEN'T BEEN WORKED OUT.) These kinds of quirks are definitely new to the romantic world, but as I investigated and interviewed for this book, I found that the changes in romance and love are much deeper and bigger in scale than I realized. Right now I'm one of millions of young people who are in a similar place. We are meeting people, dating, getting into and out of relationships, all with the hope of finding someone we truly love and with whom we share a deep connection. We may even want to get married and start a family too. This journey seems fairly standard now, but it's wildly different from what people did even just decades ago. To be specific, I now see that our ideas about two things--"searching" and "the right person"--are completely different from what they used to be. Which means our expectations about how courtship works are too. DOUGHNUTS FOR INTERVIEWS: A VISIT TO A NEW YORK RETIREMENT COMMUNITY If I wanted to see how things have changed over time, I figured that I should start by learning about the experiences of the older generations still around today. And that meant talking to some old folks. To be honest, I tend to romanticize the past, and though I appreciate all the conveniences of modern life, sometimes I yearn for simpler times. Wouldn't it be cool to be single in a bygone era? I take a girl to a drive-in movie, we go have a cheeseburger and a malt at the diner, and then we make out under the stars in my old-timey convertible. Granted, this might have been tough in the fifties given my brown skin tone and racial tensions at the time, but in my fantasy, racial harmony is also part of the deal. So, to learn about romance in this era, Eric and I went down to a retirement community on the Lower East Side of New York City to interview some seniors. We came armed with a big box of Dunkin' Donuts and some coffee, tools that the staff had said would be key to convincing the old folks to speak with us. Sure enough, when the seniors caught a whiff of doughnuts, they were quick to pull up chairs and start answering our questions. One eighty-eight-year-old man named Alfredo took to the doughnuts very quickly. About ten minutes into the discussion, to which he'd contributed nothing but his age and name, he looked at me with a confused expression, threw up his doughnut-covered hands, and left. When we came back a few days later to do more interviews, Alfredo was back. The staff explained that Alfredo had misunderstood the purpose of the previous meeting--he thought we wanted to talk to him about his time in the war--but he was now fully prepared to answer questions about his own experiences in love and marriage. Once again, he was pretty quick to take down a doughnut, and then, faster than you could wipe the last few crumbs of a French cruller off your upper lip, Alfredo was gone-zo. I can only hope that a similarly easy way to scheme free doughnuts presents itself to me when I go into retirement. Thankfully, others were more informative. Victoria, age sixty-eight, grew up in New York City. She got married when she was twenty-one--to a man who lived in the same apartment complex, one floor above her. "I was standing in front of my building with some friends and he approached me," Victoria said. "He told me he liked me very much and asked if I'd like to go out with him. I didn't say anything. He asked me two or three more times before I agreed to go out with him." It was Victoria's first date. They went to a movie and had dinner at her mom's house afterward. He soon became her boyfriend and, after a year of dating, her husband. They've been married for forty-eight years. When Victoria first told me her story, it had aspects I expected to be common among the group--she married very young, her parents met her boyfriend almost immediately, and they shifted into marriage fairly quickly. I figured that the part about marrying someone who lived in her same building was kind of random. But then the next woman we spoke with, Sandra, seventy-eight, said she got married to a guy who lived just across the street. Stevie, sixty-nine, married a woman who lived down the hall. Jose, seventy-five, married a woman who lived one street over. Alfredo married someone from across the street (probably the daughter of the neighborhood doughnut shop owner). It was remarkable. In total, fourteen of the thirty-six seniors I spoke with had ended up marrying someone who lived within walking distance of their childhood home. People were marrying neighbors who lived on the same street, in the same neighborhood, and even in the same building. It seemed a bit bizarre. "Guys," I said. "You're in New York City. Did you ever think, Oh, maybe there's some people outside of my building? Why limit yourself so much? Why not expand your horizons?" They just shrugged and said that it wasn't what was done. After our interviews we examined whether this spoke to a larger trend. In 1932 a sociologist at the University of Pennsylvania named James Bossard looked through five thousand consecutive marriage licenses on file for people who lived in the city of Philadelphia. Whoa: One-third of the couples who got married had lived within a five-block radius of each other before they got married. One out of six had lived within the same block. Most amazingly, one of every eight married couples had lived in the same building before they got married.1 Maybe this trend of marrying locally held in big cities but not elsewhere? Well, a lot of sociologists in the 1930s and 1940s were wondering that same thing, and they reported their findings in the leading social science journals of the time. Yep, their findings were remarkably similar to Bossard's in Philadelphia, with a few variations. For instance, people in smaller towns also married neighbors when they were available. But when they weren't, because the pool was too small, people expanded their horizons--but only as far as was necessary. As the Yale sociologist John Ellsworth Jr. said after a study of marriage patterns in Simsbury, Connecticut (population 3,941): "People will go as far as they have to to find a mate, but no farther."2 Things are obviously very different today. I found out sociologists don't even do these sorts of studies on the geography of marriage at the city level anymore. Personally, I can't think of even one friend who married someone from their neighborhood, and hardly anyone who married a person from their home city. For the most part my friends married people they'd met during their postcollege years, when they were exposed to folks from all over the country and in some cases all over the world. Think about where you grew up as a kid, your apartment building or your neighborhood. Could you imagine being married to one of those clowns? EMERGING ADULTHOOD: WHEN GROWN-UPS GROW UP One reason it's so hard to imagine marrying the people we grew up with is that these days we marry much later than people in previous generations. For the generation of people I interviewed in the New York City retirement community, the average age of marriage was around twenty for women and twenty-three for men. Today the average age of first marriage is about twenty-seven for women and twenty-nine for men, and it's around thirty for both men and women in big cities like New York and Philadelphia. Why has this age of first marriage increased so dramatically in the past few decades? For the young people who got married in the 1950s, getting married was the first step in adulthood. After high school or college, you got married and you left the house. For today's folks, marriage is usually one of the later stages in adulthood. Now most young people spend their twenties and thirties in another stage of life, where they go to university, start a career, and experience being an adult outside of their parents' home before marriage. This period isn't all about finding a mate and getting married. You have other priorities as well: getting educated, trying out different jobs, having a few relationships, and, with luck, becoming a more fully developed person. Sociologists even have a name for this new stage of life: emerging adulthood. During this stage we also wind up greatly expanding our pool of romantic options. Instead of staying in the neighborhood or our building, we move to new cities, spend years meeting people in college and workplaces, and--in the biggest game changer--have the infinite possibilities provided by online dating and other similar technologies. Besides the effects it has on marriage, emerging adulthood also offers young people an exciting, fun period of independence from their parents when they get to enjoy the pleasures of adulthood--before becoming husbands and wives and starting a family. If you're like me, you couldn't imagine getting married without going through all this. When I was twenty-three, I knew nothing about what I was going to be as an adult. I was a business and biology major at NYU. Would I have married some girl who lived a few blocks from me in Bennettsville, South Carolina, where I grew up? What was this mysterious "biology business" I planned on setting up, anyway? I have no clue. I was an idiot who definitely wasn't ready for such huge life decisions.* The seniors we spoke with simply did not have such a life stage, and many seemed to regret the lack of it. This was especially true for the women, who didn't have much chance to pursue higher education and start careers of their own. Before the 1960s, in most parts of the United States, single women simply didn't live alone, and many families frowned upon their daughters moving into shared housing for "working girls." Until they got married, these women were pretty much stuck at home under fairly strict adult supervision and lacked basic adult autonomy. They always had to let their parents know their whereabouts and plans. Even dating had heavy parental involvement: The parents would either have to approve the boy or accompany them on the date. At one point during a focus group with older women, I asked them straight out whether a lot of women their age got married just to get out of the house. Every single woman there nodded. For women in this era, it seemed that marriage was the easiest way of acquiring the basic freedoms of adulthood. Things weren't a breeze after that, though. Marriage, most women quickly discovered, liberated them from their parents but made them dependent on a man who might or might not treat them well and then saddled them with the responsibilities of homemaking and child rearing. It gave women of this era what was described at the time by Betty Friedan in her best-selling book The Feminine Mystique as "the problem that has no name."* Once women gained access to the labor market and won the right to divorce, the divorce rate skyrocketed. Some of the older women I met in our focus groups had left their husbands during the height of the divorce revolution, and they told me that they'd always resented missing out on something singular and special: the experience of being a young, unencumbered, single woman. They wanted emerging adulthood. "I think I missed a stage in my life, the stage where you go out with friends," a woman named Amelia wistfully told us. "I was never allowed to go out with friends. My father wouldn't allow it. He was that strict. So I tell my granddaughters, 'Enjoy yourself. Enjoy yourself. Then get married.'" Hopefully this doesn't lead to Amelia's granddaughters doing a ton of ecstasy and then telling their mom, "Grandma told me to enjoy myself! Leave me alone!!" This sentiment was widely shared. Everyone, including the women who said they were happily married, said they wanted their daughters and granddaughters to approach marriage differently from how they had. They wanted the young women they knew to date a lot of men and experience different relationships before they took a husband. "My daughter, I told her go out, get an education, get a car, enjoy yourself," said Amelia. "Then, at the end, choose someone." Even Victoria, who had been married for forty-eight years to the man who grew up in the apartment above her, agreed. She emphasized that she loved her husband dearly but hinted that, given another chance, she might have done something else. "My husband and I, we understand each other," she said. "But we're very different. Sometimes I wonder, if I had married someone who had the same interests as me . . ." She trailed off. Maybe she was interested in doughnuts and was thinking about a life with Alfredo? THE LUXURY OF HAPPINESS: FROM COMPANIONATE TO SOUL MATE MARRIAGE The shift in when we look for love and marriage has been accompanied by a change in what we look for in a marriage partner. When the older folks I interviewed described the reasons that they dated, got engaged to, and then married their eventual spouses, they'd say things like "He seemed like a pretty good guy," "She was a nice girl," "He had a good job," and "She had access to doughnuts and I like doughnuts."* When you ask people today why they married someone, the answers are much more dramatic and loving. You hear things along the lines of "She is my other half," "I can't imagine experiencing the joys of life without him by my side," or "Every time I touch her hair, I get a huge boner." On our subreddit we asked people: If you've been married or in a long-term relationship, how did you decide that the person was (or still is) the right person for you? What made this person different from others? The responses were strikingly unlike the ones we got from the older people we met at the senior center. Many were filled with stories that illustrated a very deep connection between the two people that made them feel like they'd found someone unique, not just someone who was pleasant to start a family with. One woman wrote: The first moment I truly remember falling in love with my boyfriend was when I was singing Whitney Houston's "Greatest Love of All" under my breath to myself while we were studying near each other and then he started singing it at the top of his lungs. And we sang the whole song just laughing and dancing around the room. Moments like those where I feel so free and goofy and loved make me know he is the right person. Also I feel like since we've been together, I have become the best version of myself. I push myself to try different things and keep learning even though I'm out of school. It's so much for myself but having his support in my corner has made all the difference. Another woman wrote: He makes me laugh, and if I don't feel like laughing, he stops and takes the time to find out why. He makes me feel beautiful and loved in my most ugly and unlovable moments. We also share the same faith, morals, work ethic, love of movies and music, and the desire to travel. And one said: He's different from everyone because: He's a one-of-a-kind human being. There is no one in this world like him. He is stunning, and I am amazed by him every single day. He's made me a better person for having known and loved him. 5 years going strong and I'm still obsessed with him. He is my best friend. All of these people had found someone truly special. From the way they described things, it seemed like their bar for committing to someone was much higher than it had been for the older folks who settled down just a few generations ago. To figure out why people today use such exalted terms when they explain why they committed to their romantic partner, I spoke with Andrew Cherlin, the eminent sociologist of the family and author of the book The Marriage-Go-Round . Up until about fifty years ago, Cherlin said, most people were satisfied with what he calls a "companionate marriage." In this type of marriage each partner had clearly defined roles. A man was the head of his household and the chief breadwinner, while a woman stayed home, took care of the house, and had kids. Most of the satisfaction you gained in the marriage depended on how well you fulfilled this assigned role. As a man, if you brought home the bacon, you could feel like you were a good husband. As a woman, if you kept a clean house and popped out 2.5 kids, you were a good wife. You loved your spouse, maybe, but not in an "every time I see his mustache, my heart flutters like a butterfly" type of way. You didn't marry each other because you were madly in love; you married because you could make a family together. While some people said they were getting married for love, the pressure to get married and start a family was such that not every match could be a love match, so instead we had the "good enough marriage." Waiting for true love was a luxury that many, especially women, could not afford. In the early 1960s, a full 76 percent of women admitted they would be willing to marry someone they didn't love. However, only 35 percent of the men said they would do the same.3 If you were a woman, you had far less time to find a man. True love? This guy has a job and a decent mustache. Lock it down, girl.  • • •  This gets into a fundamental change in how marriage is viewed. Today we see getting married as finding a life partner. Someone we love. But this whole idea of marrying for happiness and love is relatively new. For most of the history of our species, courtship and marriage weren't really about two individuals finding love and fulfillment. According to the historian Stephanie Coontz, author of Marriage, a History , until recently a marital union was primarily important for establishing a bond between two families. It was about achieving security--financial, social, and personal. It was about creating conditions that made it possible to survive and reproduce. This is not ancient history. Until the Industrial Revolution, most Americans and Europeans lived on farms, and everybody in the household needed to work. Considerations about whom to marry were primarily practical. Excerpted from Modern Romance: An Investigation by Aziz Ansari, Eric Klinenberg All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.