The federalist

Situationships’ aren’t sweet, despite corporate candymakers’ attempts to convince you otherwise


On or before Valentine’s Day, ​American ​consumers spend tens of billions of dollars ​to ‍commemorate the annual holiday of ‍love with gifts like fine⁣ jewelry, provocative lingerie, fine chocolates, or cheap candy. The latter options are pragmatic — who doesn’t ⁢want to ​treat their sweetheart to something … well … sweet?

Among the aisles of seasonal pickings are Sweethearts’ conversation hearts: those iconic, chalky candies that read “For Ever,” “Be Mine,” or “XOXO.” But oftentimes, you’ll pull out a heart expecting a cute phrase and instead see a smudgy, illegible message. ⁤Say hello ‍to Sweethearts’ new marketing scheme of taking ⁣manufacturing⁤ rejects‌ and calling them “Sweethearts⁤ Situationships,” which ⁢the⁤ company proudly touts as displaying “messages as blurry as your relationship.”

Sweethearts​ found a way to capitalize on an already mediocre product⁢ by repackaging it using euphemistic millennial​ bait: the “situationship.” A situationship is slang for relationships of an undefined nature. They ⁣solve ‍some animalistic need for intimacy or companionship with potentially‍ zero strings attached.

Psychologically speaking, situationships may be captivating because these unfulfilling relationships fill an innate desire for intermittent reinforcement or delivery ⁣of rewards at irregular intervals. Does this sound familiar to you?⁣ They’re not reinventing the wheel. Bluntly⁢ put, ‌a “situationship” is a modern ⁤rebrand of “friends with benefits.”

Ultimately, what message is Sweethearts selling here? Ditch the commitment and instead romanticize shallow, casual relationships, which will ‍give you short-term ⁤satisfaction at best, and stunted attachment ​styles at worst!

“Sweethearts Situationships” are ⁤only available online, so you can feel a bit more at ease ‌knowing they’re not ​being sold in stores ‍and then accidentally given as gifts at grade school Valentine exchanges. Still, ‌that doesn’t change‍ how ⁢this⁢ household brand’s novelty product sadly serves as a testament to society’s degradation of love post-sexual revolution.

Some of us millennials ​or Gen Z are better‍ than others‍ at compartmentalizing depravity.⁤ Chart-topping rappers and singers like Cardi B, Megan Thee Stallion, or The Weeknd infiltrate our brainwaves⁢ with debased ‍lyrics as though it’s some form of hypnotic suggestion. At ‌this point, some⁤ of us ⁣are numb to perverse behavior from growing up both post-sexual revolution and terminally ‍online. Others follow the leader and don’t bat an eyelash over the potential psychological​ ramifications of accumulating higher body counts.

Often, body count discourse boils down⁢ to judgment on the woman’s part, but hookup culture hurts men too. Studies suggest that nearly three-quarters of undergrad men regret casual sex. Ultimately, both sexes post-hookup report lower self-esteem, increased symptoms of depression and distress, and decreased ⁣life satisfaction, and they may even feel they’ve “damaged their soul.”

We’ve cheapened sexuality by erasing the mystery of promiscuity and destigmatizing what​ was once a normal dose of taboo and shame. ⁢Similar⁢ to how politically divided our ⁤nation is, we’ve puzzlingly developed both ⁤hyper- and hypo-sexual cultures.

Those with uncontrollable sexual desires ingest, inject, or⁢ insert chemical contraceptives to decouple the act of sex from its intended result of babymaking, and those with zapped libidos observe what Camille Paglia calls the “current ‍surplus of exposed flesh in the public realm”⁢ with total repulsion.

This ⁢is how a progressively⁤ perverse America has given carte blanche to the “sex recession,” and we won’t get off scot-free when our birth rate is falling​ under repopulation levels. To make matters worse, modern love isn’t solely broken by nymphomania — a surge of young people are simultaneously disgusted by healthy levels of sexuality.

In the past, some laughed ​off “incels” as an internet anomaly, but today it’s ‌not so surprising to see legacy media cover young people totally​ swearing off sex and entering into their “celibacy ​era.”

It’s not just sex that ⁢Gen Z is taking‍ off the table, however. Young people just aren’t as interested⁢ in establishing committed relationships⁢ either. My generation is more‍ inclined ⁢to put romance ‌on the back burner while they instead pursue political advocacy ⁣and financial ​ stability, as though being a fully formed ⁣person​ is a prerequisite for dating.

America is consequently in its “insecure-attachment era,” as‌ discomfort with ⁣intimacy ‍has steadily been on the ⁢ rise. We can’t disconnect from technology, we ruminate in toxic comparisons on social media, and our political division worsens trust. The secure attachment style that we’re supposed to develop when early caregivers model healthy ways to regulate emotions, manage conflict, and seek support stands in stark ⁣contrast to the trendy “situationship.”

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