This post is the first in a series of articles about social atomization in the US.
“Fasten
your own oxygen mask before assisting others,” they tell you on airplanes. If
you black out for lack of air, the logic goes, you won’t be able to help anyone
at all, so look out for yourself first. Theoretically, the oxygen benefits should
sort of trickle down—the instructions are rational—but I find it hard to
imagine a mother who would not strap the lifesaver to her child’s face first.
The
self-centered oxygen-mask instructions have become the standard approach to
life and relationships in the US today. Accumulate a stable income of your own
before starting a family. Put education and career before friendships and
dates. If you do pursue relationships, make sure that they stand up to a
cost-benefit analysis. Prioritize individual responsibilities over politics and
causes.
It
is a time when many people, of all economic classes, are struggling for air. From
the Occupy Wall Street protesters who want jobs and places to live to Ivy
Leaguers whose ideas of being situated involve university tenure, law-firm
partnerships, establishment in top hospitals, etc., it seems as if everyone wants
to move up; nobody is settled. It’s as if life has become a permanent state of
emergency to which people respond by focusing on themselves. Not helping the
situation is the tendency toward the collection of data on everything from SAT
points earned to steps walked and stairs climbed; these empirical leanings place
quantifiable personal achievements over imponderables of great importance,
including such fuzzy abstractions as morals and ideals.
Taking
care of oneself has become the cause and the struggle.
The Turn Toward Independence: A Shifting Cost-Benefit Analysis
Being
independent is more important than it once was. In the past, women largely
depended on men for financial support. A relationship was key to a woman’s
stability. Now, at least in the Western world, unless the relationship leads to
marriage, it risks undermining a woman’s individual stability by stealing her
away from school and work. What
once was key to security is now a threat.
In
the much-discussed New York Times article about “hookup culture,” or casual
sex, among college students, reporter Kate
Taylor described young women at the University of Pennsylvania as regarding “building
their résumés, not finding boyfriends (never mind husbands), as their main job
at Penn.”
“We are very aware of cost-benefit issues and trading up and
trading down,” Taylor quoted one student, “A,” as saying of relationships, “so
no one wants to be too tied to someone that, you know, may not be the person
they want to be with in a couple of months.” Another interviewed student saw
her plans to go to law school as a blockade to starting a relationship in
college.
I’m not interested in the sexual
preferences of college students, nor do I think that one can extrapolate from
news stories about the dating styles of women at Ivy League schools to US women
in general. What interests me about the hookup culture articles is that they
are an example of the way people prioritize individual achievements over
relationships.
Young people not only defer dating;
they also postpone marriage and childbirth. At the time of a 2009 Pew Research
Center survey, 21 percent of Millennials (people who came of age
around the millennium and were 18 to 29 at the time of the survey) were married,
as compared to 29 percent of people of Generation X and 42 percent of Baby
Boomers at the equivalent age, according to a Pew report on Milliennials. People
also have children later and more often resort to assisted reproductive
technologies, whose use doubled in the last decade, according to the CDC.
In delaying childbirth to establish
themselves financially and professionally, parents subject reproduction to a
cost-benefit analysis. A woman weighs the costs of declining fertility with the
benefits of the career advances and savings that another full year at work
could provide. Childbearing becomes a deliberate, rational act, as opposed to
sex itself, which, despite whatever rational conversations about children may
have taken place between partners, is in the moment, a sensual, intuitive
thing. I certainly don’t say this to encourage unprotected sex and unplanned
pregnancies; rather, I want to make the connection between rationalism and
having children later in life.
Granted, weighing the costs and
benefits of relationships is not a new thing but an old idea leftover from the
days of marriages arranged to keep money in the family. The difference today is
that the conclusion of the cost-benefit analysis is not "marry someone
else" but “stay single.” New or
not, the problem with these cost-benefit analyses is that they discount what
can’t be measured, things like warmth of feeling and love, things that require
a certain faith or reliance on intuition. Maybe relationships don’t make total
sense. But do they need to?
Independently
Poor
The employer-employee relationship has also weakened
and turned to its own version of hooking up: part-time employment. Hiring a
cohort of part-time employees gives a company the benefits of having employees they
are needed without the cost and commitment of responsibilities like paying for
health insurance or contributing to retirement funds. Part-time work, often
without benefits, is on the rise
according to The New York Times
Economix blog and other sources (though the rise described has to do with the
Great Recession and not necessarily with a longer-term trend), and many of
those who work part time do so not by choice but because they cannot find
full-time work.
More generally and beyond the most recent recession,
with the widening gap between rich and poor and the decline of middle-income
jobs, people can depend less on their employers for economic security.
Globalization did away with the idea of US factory work (à la Ford Motor
Company) that paid a living wage. Downton
Abbey-style live-in help (though of course Downton Abbey doesn’t represent the US or reality), in which
families of servants counted on employment and room and board from wealthy
families, is relegated to television and the homes of the unusually rich. Call
it the employer-employee relationship or call it the relationships among the economic
classes: the relationship between the rich and poor is dysfunctional. The weakening of class distinctions may
give some people a chance at the American dream; it may also make life harder
for those who remain on the lower rungs of the workforce.
***
On both individual and societal levels, we are
failing to cooperate and work together. Much of this probably has to do with
the Great Recession and scarcity of resources—in case of an emergency, fasten
your own mask first. But as I’ll discuss in a subsequent post, there was a time
when altruism, or helping another at one’s own expense, was an ideal to which
even the elite college students were encouraged to aspire, whether or not doing
so made sense. A state of emergency was a time not to hunker down but to stick
out one’s neck and demonstrate one’s chivalry. In this time of too much
independence, the ideals of chivalry and altruism have weakened.
There’s
a cost to this tendency toward independence. Less dovetailing of lives.
Loneliness. A sense that everything important depends on what happens to you
and the resulting anxiety. Independent striving alone doesn’t account for
anomie and similar complaints, as I’ll discuss in a subsequent article.
Post-modernism, cynicism, and a preference for hard truths over ideals also
contribute to the way things are, and no list of factors will ever fully
capture culture.
I have no prescription for changing the way we live and certainly don’t want to return to a previous era. My only exhortation is that people not discount the immeasurable benefits that relationships of all kinds can bring to
our lives.
1 comment:
As a thoroughly atomized blogger who never married I know isolation - i.e. lack of a relationship or ships sufficient to fill enough emotional support space - is hard to live with; but as a motive this is easily outweighed by Fear of Dependence.
How bracing to admit that Fear is motive number one! But there it is.
So humans used to pick up relationships easily as they moved through static role frames over time, and now it's all free-lance bargaining. It can still be done tho the emphasis on cost/benefit as KC says is much greater. I think the problem many people exhibit there is either OVER-counting or UNDER-counting their own points, or both at once, based on some built-in love of misinformation........ Obviously KC will blast this claim to smithereens in essay(s) to come.
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