Hey #TheJoshCast Fam, Welcome back to our wonderful discussion on Millennial ❤️ Love ! Our Host of #TheJoshCast wasn’t done with the wide topic. According to surveys conducted in 2020, The millennial cohort is roughly defined as those who were born in the 1980s to the early 2000s — although there is some debate about the boundaries. Millennials, due in part to their digital savvy, already are credited with significant changes in how we live, work and interact.But what is particularly striking is how quickly the cohort has rewritten the rules for courtship, sex and marriage. In 2018, the median age of first marriage was approaching 30 (29.8 for men and 27.8 for women). That’s more than a five-year delay in marriage compared to 1980, when the median age was 24.7 for men and 22 for women.A 2017 study in the Archives of Sexual Behavior found that many younger millennials in their early 20s aren’t having sex, and are more than twice as likely to be sexually inactive than the previous generation. Another study found that American couples ages 25 to 34 spend an average of six and a half years together before marrying, compared with an average of five years for all other age groups.Critics say digital saturation has made millennials more socially isolated, restless and entitled, which could explain why they are having less sex than earlier generations. And when millennials do have sex, it’s often viewed as less meaningful because they engage in “hookups” or sexual relationships described as “friends with benefits.” Dr. Fisher, author of “Anatomy of Love: A Natural History of Mating, Marriage, and Why We Stray,” has devoted her career to studying love and relationships. Most recently she has collected data on more than 30,000 people related to current courtship and marriage trends. Dr. Fisher believes that instead of criticizing and judging millennials, perhaps we should be paying more attention. It’s possible, she said, that today’s singles are carving a more successful path to lasting love than previous generations. “We can all learn from people who don’t want to waste a lot of time doing things that are going nowhere,” said Dr. Fisher, the co-author of a chapter on “slow love” in the 2019 anthology “The New Psychology of Love,” published by Cambridge University Press. She notes that people who date three years or more before marrying are 39 percent less likely to divorce than people who rush into marriage. “This is a real extended period of the pre-commitment stage,” said Dr. Fisher. “With slow love, maybe by the time people walk down the aisle they know who they’ve got, and they think they can keep who they’ve got.”Ask millennials and they will tell you that there is nothing casual about their approach to sex, dating and romance. Let’s go on a journey and listen in closely to our Host of
#TheJoshCast , Joshua Sherron as He wrestles with the tension and ease of the Hot 🥵 button topic of Millennial Love!
#TheJoshCast #Podcastlife #Podcaster #NewYorkPodcast #lovepodcast #Lustpodcast #newepisodes #Fireanddesire #Realtalkpodcast #alllovematters #RatedR #SexSells #LustyDesires #Theuglytruth #RawandHard #GrownandNasty #SingleLife #Grownfolkstalk #Singlemanpodcast #Singlelifepodcast #TheLadiesmanpodcast #RealLovePodcast #SexPodcast #Liespodcast #culturepodcast #BlackLovepodcast #GossipPodcast #RelationshipGoalsPodcast #DirtyLaudryPodcast #UglyTruthPodcast #NewSeries #NewPodcast #NewLove #Entanglements #Sidechickpodcast #Mainchickpodcast