BuzzFeed is great. Clever and to the point, itβs accessible to our generation, and itβs clear that we, as late teens and early 20-somethings, are its target. Information and entertainment are presented in lists or as condensed paragraphs, making it easy to digest in our ever-busy lives. And, normally, I love it. Who doesnβt want to take a quiz to find out who your inner Disney princess is, or grab a nugget of information about pop culture?
Yet, scrolling through the webpage this past weekend, I stumbled across a video that I wasnβt expectingβor at least, I wasnβt expecting my reaction. Entitled “11 Signs Youβre Ready To Say ‘I Love You,’β it was a typical BuzzFeed publication, targeted directly at our generation. And the video was cuteβan adorable couple experiencing the β11 signsβ that prove, to themselves and to others, that they were ready to say those three big words. But waitβsince when is there a checklist for love?
First, lets jump back to the video: The 11 things included being able to plan for your future, being comfortable around each other, and being able to have a conversation with the otherβs family. Nothing out of the norm was proposed, I thought. But in that exact thought lies the problem. I was creating a norm for relationships, for the intimate experiences that should be between only the people involved, and I was an outsider. I failed to remember that every love is differentβit arises out of unique circumstances, is composed of different people, and exists in completely dissimilar contexts. Who was I, or anyone else for that matter, to judge such a thing by any standard?
Still, according to BuzzFeed, our generationβs understanding of love has been reduced to a list of qualifications that are considered the norm. Why and how have we reached this point of depersonalization, you ask? Technology. Through constant Instagramming, Facebook checking, and communication, the Millennials have created what experts call a βgroup mentality.β The desire to fit a norm is not new, yet the obsession we as a generation have is, ironically, certainly not normal. While there are benefits of highly socialized lives, such as networking and the ability to stay connected with those far away, there are also drawbacks. Namely, we feel we must be on the same page as and constantly on par with our peers. There is a constant pressure to be average, to not have oddities that could ostracize us from the group of which we so desperately feel the need to be a part. And so we normalizeβwe normalize what is βhealthy,β even if everybody is different; we normalize being a certain gender, limiting both; and apparently, we normalize even the most personal of things: love.
Thus, through technology, we have created a culture devoid of personal moments. Iβm not talking about the need to share everything you do via social media, though that in itself is its own concern, but rather the fact that we feel the need to measure relationships on a scale that is determined by our peers. We strip away personal aspects, aiming simply to meet the prescribed benchmarks. Have you gone out to dinner together? Youβre dating. Have you been together for a few months? You can call her your girlfriend. Have you met your significant otherβs parents? You can say βI love you.β
The sad truth is that BuzzFeed made a checklist for love because our generation felt it needed one. We cannot determine relationships and their meaning in our lives for ourselves because we have to make sure we are experiencing the same thing as those around us before we can label it. But what about just knowing, simply looking at the other and knowing?
Of course, Iβm not saying I donβt suffer from the plague our generation has specifically designed (unintentionally, of course) to hinder only ourselves. Yet, if I too am afflicted by βgroup mentality,β I need to understand it. So I pondered how else it was affecting my own relationships and those of my peers. And then it hit meβthe group mentality is perpetuating the game. Iβm referring to the βwait a few hours to text back, three days to contact, and under no circumstance show too much interestβ game. Fun for no party involved, the game thrives because we allow it to thrive. Now βgroup mentalityβ cannot be faulted for creating the game, as that is rooted in our fear of rejection, but it certainly perpetuates it. The game feeds off of our desire to be similar to those around us. It gives us βguidelinesβ to follow when entering a relationship, as terrible as they may be.
But wait, what if I AM interested, and I WANT to get to know someone? Well, the game tells me itβs not appropriate and that Iβll come off as creepy if I act too interested. So, I partake in the group mentality. I check in with my friends to make sure Iβm not over-zealous, I try to act casual and I show little, if any, interest. As if reading from an instruction manual, I am forced to play the game.
Breaking away from the norm is not easy. In fact, Iβm not even sure it is always possible. But maybe, in some cases, the difficulty is worth it. So, from now on I refuse to let others tell me how to act in my relationships, and I refuse to play the game. I invite you to do the same. Love is not normal, it is extraordinary, complicated, beautiful, and a completely unique experience for everyone. It doesnβt deserve to be reduced to a checklist, to be normalized. So, when should you tell that special someone you love him or her? Whenever youβre damn ready.
Featured Image by Jordan PentaleriΒ / Heights Editor