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Singleton society (Single Life In The U.K.)
Spiked ^ | 11 October 2002 | Frank Furedi

Posted on 10/22/2002 9:53:22 AM PDT by shrinkermd

Forget marital breakdown, high rates of divorce, and the number of children born outside of marriage. Endless discussions about the 'crisis' facing the family distract attention from trends that are likely to have a far greater impact on how we live. The truth is that adults are not only finding it difficult to sustain marriage, but just about all forms of intimate relationships.

According to a study conducted by the UK Future Foundation for Abbey National in January 2002, for the first time more people are living alone or in one-parent households than in a traditional family unit - or as one article summed it up, 'Living alone is now the norm in the UK' (1). The rise of the adult singleton suggests that we are experiencing, not so much a crisis of the family, but a profound difficulty in handling close and personal relationships.

The rising number of singletons seems to be an all-pervasive global phenomenon, impacting on industrial societies throughout the world. In 1950, about three percent of the population of Europe and the USA lived alone. Today in the UK, seven million adults live alone - three times as many as 40 years ago. The UK statistics bible Social Trends estimates that by 2020, one-person households will make up 40 percent of total households.

In France, the number of people living on their own has more than doubled since 1968, and about 40 percent of Swedes now live alone. The shift towards solo living is most pronounced in the big urban centres of the West - with over 50 percent of households in Munich, Frankfurt and Paris containing just one person, while in London nearly four in 10 people live on their own. The growth in single-person households is mainly a result of an increasing number of 25- to 45-year-olds opting to live alone. Since 1960, the number of German 25s to 45s living on their own has risen by 500 percent.

These shifts represent not merely a demographic but also a cultural phenomenon. The growth of the new singles lifestyle - especially in large urban environments - indicates that conventional forms of adult relationships have lost some of their appeal.

There are no doubt some positive reasons why people should choose to live alone. Individuals might be too focused on demanding and exciting careers, too absorbed by life, to have much time to devote to another person. There are times when the aspiration for freedom dictates the course of individual experimentation - and sometimes we don't want to compromise, regarding living with others as a trap.

But the home-alone phenomenon is underwritten by profound social and cultural forces. The real issue is not what individuals choose to do, but the strong cultural pressures that have weakened the foundation for durable relationships. The fact that so many people in their twenties, thirties and forties have opted for the single life indicates that there must be a problem with traditional ways of relating to one another.

In one sense, the rise of the single life represents the continuation of an historic trend of individuation. But recent developments are more than the contemporary manifestation of a two-century-old phenomenon. For example, until recently hardline bachelors and spinsters were seen as odd and eccentric - while today they have become mainstream, even positive figures. These kind of changes express an important alteration to the experience of intimacy.

On balance, recent changes in how people live represent a positive recognition of individual choice. In the past, commitments were often experienced as an obligation to be endured - and the flight from commitment sometimes represented a quest for freedom. The problem today is that we often seem unsure of how best to use this freedom to cooperate intimately, as adults.

Most surveys show that although people value their independence, they yearn for some kind of emotional commitment. Although singletons invariably claim to be happy on their own - that they positively opted for independent living - reality is a bit more complicated. A survey commissioned by Match.com in 2001 claimed that more than 50 percent of singletons surveyed were openly or secretly looking for a partner while pretending to be content with solitude.

Often, the cynicism with which single people dismiss romantic commitment suggests that they fear pain and disappointment. The anticipation of disappointment is a result of a culture that finds it difficult to endow intimate relationships with any intrinsic meaning. Today, the age-old tension between the aspiration for self-realisation and commitment is difficult to resolve. In the past this tension could be contained through the widespread influence of the ideology of romantic love - which celebrated the value of self-realisation through an intimate encounter with another person. The synthesis of autonomy and commitment helped diffuse conflicts of interests, at least for a brief period of time.

But the ideology of romantic love could only effectively contain conflicts of interests because women were expected to renounce their desire for autonomy in favour of maintaining the relationship. Since the 1970s, this one-sided arrangement has come unstuck. At a time when women seek to develop themselves no less than men, love ceases to provide the focus for an ideology that can sustain durable commitment.

It is not just the changing position of women that called into question the viability of traditional forms of intimate relations. The 1980s Thatcherite dictum that there is no such thing as society gave expression to powerful forces that helped consolidate a profound orientation towards the self. Paradoxically, the cultural focus on the self was not simply the work of free-market crusaders, but also sprung from the therapeutic ethos of the 1960s that exhorted people to do what feels right for them. Put bluntly, the self-oriented idea that 'if it feels right, do it' cannot sustain permanent intimate relationships. Individuals who are free to do what they feel is right have a permanent exit strategy from any commitment - which is why the problem of commitment is not confined to the sphere of family affairs.

The single lifestyle does not simply mean disengagement from family life. Commitment to workmates and friends also acquires a diminished significance.

Advocates of the single life often claim that people now get intimacy and support through friendship networks, rather than from the family. But the idea that singles enjoy intense intimate relations with friends is not borne out by research. Since 1986, the proportion of British singles who see a best friend on a weekly basis has been falling - and surveys show that thirtysomethings today have about half the number of friends that their counterparts would have had 30 or 40 years ago.

The cultivation of the self, continually fostered by contemporary culture, has a destructive impact on the experience of commitment. It isn't that individuals have become selfish people, devoid of interest in others' welfare. Rather, today's individuated culture finds it hard to provide men and women with both the meaning and the focus for their commitment. This failure to situate intimate relationships within a wider, culturally sanctioned web of meaning is most striking in relation to the contemporary narrative of love.

Love today finds it difficult to say anything plausible about attachment, self-sacrifice or lifelong commitment. The story of love is about me - finding my self, self-actualisation, autonomy and personal growth. Ultimately, the orientation towards the self erodes the foundation for intimate relationships. Self-interest that remains unmediated by wider cultural meanings encourages a withdrawal from the pursuit of intimacy.

Intimacy cannot thrive at a time when relationships lack shared meaning, clarity and context. Without any obvious answers to the question what are the aims and purposes of a relationship, its conduct becomes arbitrary. With no external point of reference, commitment simply can't stand up to the pressures of everyday life.

The difficulties people experience in finding a focus for their emotional commitment ends up consolidating anxieties about intimate relationships - and people often approach their private relations with a heightened sense of emotional risk. One strategy for dealing with such risks is to distance the self from the potential source of disappointment, to detach from others as a way of avoiding emotional pain. Today, a number of tactics - from prenuptial agreements to cultivating the virtues of solo living - are used to manage the perceived risks of self-fulfilment.

The reinterpretation of personal commitment as a risk comes across as a health warning to anybody foolish enough to desire passionate engagement. So often we are told not to have 'unrealistic' expectations of intimate relationships. 'Be careful, you might get hurt', new couples are often told.

This view of commitment lowers society's expectations of relationships. Backed by government policies, the entire relationship industry is devoted to cooling passions and advising people not to expect that their personal bonds will last for life. Such advice might be well meant, but it has the predictable outcome of turning people off. Without passion and spontaneity, personal relations will turn into the pragmatic transactions that dominate the marketplace. And who would want to commit his or her life to such a banal and unrewarding affair?

It isn't surprising that so many intelligent men and women seem to have renounced passionate commitment, opting instead for the single life. If passion comes with a health warning, the single life at least promises to be risk-free.

So are intimate commitments possible? The answer is a hesitant yes. Despite today's cynicism towards engagement with others, many people continue to express their humanity through rewarding relations with others. But as long as society fails to endow intimate relations with any meaning that transcends self-realisation we will all be singles - whether we are in a relationship or not.

The problem is not solo living. Single society is only a problem when it becomes a substitute for constructing cooperative relationships and for sharing experience with others. Finding meaning in our relationships within the wider context of change is the project ahead of us now. Neither the nostalgia of the traditionalist nor the instrumentalist ethos of political correctness helps us in this quest. The loss of old certainties can be turned into an opportunity if we dare to define and spell out what intimate relationships are for our times.

Frank Furedi is professor of sociology at the University of Kent at Canterbury. His books include Culture of Fear: Risk-Taking and the Morality of Low Expectation (Continuum, 2002) (buy this book from Amazon (UK) or Amazon (USA)) and Paranoid Parenting: Why Ignoring the Experts May Be Best for Your Child (Chicago Review Press, 2002) (buy this book from Amazon (UK) or Amazon (USA))

(1) Living alone is 'the norm', BBC News, 11 January 2002


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Philosophy; Unclassified; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: alienation; committment; failure; intimate; narcissism; relationships; singles
"Paradoxically, the cultural focus on the self was not simply the work of free-market crusaders, but also sprung from the therapeutic ethos of the 1960s that exhorted people to do what feels right for them. Put bluntly, the self-oriented idea that 'if it feels right, do it' cannot sustain permanent intimate relationships. Individuals who are free to do what they feel is right have a permanent exit strategy from any commitment - which is why the problem of commitment is not confined to the sphere of family affairs."

The almost universal acceptance of " the therapeutic ethos" by the public intellectuals proved to be a disaster for the public at large.

1 posted on 10/22/2002 9:53:22 AM PDT by shrinkermd
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To: shrinkermd
Food for thought.
2 posted on 10/22/2002 10:04:50 AM PDT by Ciexyz
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To: shrinkermd
Along the same lines:

Canadian family portrait changing
By DARREN YOURK
Globe and Mail

The Canadian family portrait has undergone significant change in four years, the latest census numbers from Statistics Canada show.

Information from the 2001 report shows the proportion of traditional families — mom, dad and the kids — continues to decline in Canada while the number of childless families is on the rise.

As of May 15, 2001, Canada had 8,371,000 families, up from almost 7,838,000 in 1996.

Married or common-law couples with children aged 24 and under living at home represented only 44 per cent of all families. These accounted for 49 per cent of all families in 1991, and represented more than one-half in 1981 (55 per cent).

Couples who had no children under 25 living at home accounted for 41 per cent of all families in 2001, up from 38 per cent in 1991. In 1981, this family type accounted for barely 34 per cent.

The 2001 census showed that an increasing proportion of couples are living common-law. Married couples accounted for 70 per cent of all families in 2001, down from 83 per cent in 1981. At the same time, the proportion of common-law couples rose from 6 per cent to 14 per cent.

In 2001, the census counted 5,901,400 married couples, 1,158,400 common-law couples and 1,311,200 lone-parent families.

The trend toward common-law relationships was again strongest in Quebec, where the 508,500 common-law families accounted for 30 per cent of all couple families. Almost 29 per cent of children were living with common-law parents in Quebec, more than double the national average.

The number of common-law couples in Canada with children under the age of 25 is also increasing. In 2001, they accounted for 7 per cent of all couples in Canada, compared with only 2 per cent two decades earlier.

The census counted almost 11,563,000 households in Canada in 2001, up 6.9 per cent from 1996. The increase of smaller households was the biggest contributor to the growth of private households.

"The size of households has dropped in the last two decades, as fewer people live in large households and more people live alone," the report said. "In 2001, there were about as many one-person households as there were households with four or more people."

Households consisting of four or more people accounted for only one-quarter of all households in 2001; two decades earlier, they accounted for one-third.

Highlights of 2001 census data


3 posted on 10/22/2002 10:06:48 AM PDT by Lorenb420
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To: Lorenb420
I've forwarded this thread to a number of single friends.
4 posted on 10/22/2002 10:12:59 AM PDT by Ciexyz
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To: shrinkermd
I guess I fit the profile rogue male singleton, yet I would love to be a married man (with the right woman, of course.) It's just that it's better to be single than to be married to the wrong person. I'd like to get married, but only once and NOT go through divorce. If I can't do it that way, I don't want to do it. I grew up watching multiple family members go through multiple marriages and divorces and have the half and step siblings to go with it. What a mess.

Sometimes it's best to break the pattern rather than repeat it.

5 posted on 10/22/2002 10:17:12 AM PDT by GBA
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To: Ciexyz
Most of the time this is strongly related to either basic selfishness (not wanting to give up or inconvenience career, hobbies, etc. to make room for someone else's needs) or a fear of intimacy (fear that no one can love them unconditionally).

People from broken homes also are afraid to end up being a statistic.

Here's an interesting commentary from the Atlanta Journal: Younger generation shuns divorce By LAUREN HARPER

When I drive home to Atlanta from the University of Georgia in Athens, I have a landmark that I use to judge when my drive will be over -- a billboard on I-85 offering legal advice in uncontested divorces.

When I see that lawyer's smiling face, I know I'll be home in about 15 minutes.

As I drive by the sign, I feel so lucky that my parents married years ago and are still together. But the face reminds me that young people my age lived through an era in which about 50 percent of their parents -- your generation -- split and created monumental emotional difficulty for children.

What will my generation offer the future? More divorce? More heartbreak?

I don't think so. I think we have learned from today's parents what not to do, and we won't handle marriage as they did.

Talking with my classmates, I find family values that, almost unbelievably, we learned in a time of 50 percent divorce rates.

Most of my friends are from single-parent families. I watched them survive their parents' divorces and vow, with heart-rending emotion, that they will never get divorced.

My friends want to find their soulmate and get married. They want a family and a career. And, they do not want a divorce lawyer.

I am not saying that my generation is immune to the statistics of previous generations, but through your mistakes, we have been equipped with the knowledge and the ability not to repeat history.

I think my generation has more traditional values than our parents. Our values are more in line with the World War II generation -- our grandparents' generation.

We regret and will fight against much of what you lived through. We are dismayed that the traditional Norman Rockwell picture of the family has disappeared.

We don't want to continue the current trend of divorce and single-parent families. Thank you for being great parents, but don't be surprised if we do things a little bit differently.

I hope the lawyers of my generation will not advertise divorce on highway billboards, and my children will grow up in a two-parent family.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Lauren Harper is a University of Georgia senior from Atlanta.

6 posted on 10/22/2002 10:21:46 AM PDT by webstersII
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To: shrinkermd
"This is the dawning of the age of aquarius...."

So it is. Ain't it wonderful? Everybody free to do whatever, whenever etc,etc etc.

One thing Furedi fails entirely to address is the situations brought on by an out-of-control judicial system in all "liberal" countries.

Who, indeed, wants to enter into a legal bond when the blood-sucking lawyers and judges put them through a gestapo experience of reducing them to homelessness and penury at any moment?

Like a guy comes home, finds himself locked out, all his property sold off, all his accounts confiscated, and facing divorce totally without recourse. It could happen at any instant without warning.

Can't really blame someone a wee bit hesitant about getting married in the first place.

7 posted on 10/22/2002 11:01:44 AM PDT by nightdriver
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To: shrinkermd
>>The rising number of singletons seems to be an all-pervasive global phenomenon<

If by "the globe", he means North America and Western Europe, this is correct.

If he means the whole earth, it is a ludicrous falsehood.

8 posted on 10/22/2002 11:24:21 AM PDT by Jim Noble
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To: nightdriver
Its an interesting article.

You're right, the thought of a messy divorce does keep men from marrying. On the other hand, since its not hard to find a willing female to sleep or even live with you, why get married unless you're religious and don't want to live in sin? Guys know (or should know) they have all the time in the world (and the more financialy successful the more options they have).

Finally, I think both sexes have very high physical standards. Blame the media I guess, but if men go through life thinking that young women look like Brittany Spears, they will be disappointed if they can only attract the interest of someone who looks like gosh, who's a girl's next door looking actress Sandra Bullock-- ok she's an order of magnitude too cute, but you know what I mean.

Consequently the don't pay attention to someone they could be very happy once they just got past the merely physical (and I admit I'm as shallow as the next guy).

I imagine women do the same things (though perhaps the criteria isn't looks).
9 posted on 10/22/2002 11:42:24 AM PDT by Maximum Leader
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To: MadIvan
Hmmm...you will have to redress the balance ;-)
10 posted on 10/22/2002 11:44:01 AM PDT by Happygal
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To: shrinkermd
"Show me a man who doesn't lie and I'll show you a man who's dead." ~Misty

Oh wait - even when he's dead, he's lying!!

11 posted on 10/22/2002 11:54:59 AM PDT by Misty Memory
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To: Ciexyz
It's a pretty good article on an important subject, but my BS meter's needle jumps at some of the numbers. Suppose an apartment building has two suites, one housing a family with mother, father, and four children, and the other housing a retired widow. Seven people live in the building. Only one of them is a "singleton". However, single people could be said to make up 50% of the "households". In the reporting of sociologists and journalists, this is how the statistics work. If the four children leave home to go to college and live in a dorm, they now form four new singleton households. If the mother or father dies, the surviving spouse is now a "singleton", a category which in reality includes a lot of elderly women. As one of the article's own stats went, there are seven million single-person households in Britain. Yes, and there are over 60 million people in Britain. Ya gotta crunch the numbers hard.
12 posted on 10/22/2002 12:27:59 PM PDT by TheMole
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To: shrinkermd
If marriage is to be considered merely a "contract", why can't I set the terms of contract acceptance? I can see two forms of marriage contracts developing: 1) maintain the status quo - no fault divorce and 2) a return to the days when one of the two needed a compelling reason to divorce.

I could opt for either of the two depending on my desires/needs and enter into marriage with a like minded partner. Sounds romantic huh?
13 posted on 10/22/2002 1:28:24 PM PDT by Tin Cup
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To: GBA
" 100% Fully Concur " Bump!!!
14 posted on 10/22/2002 2:49:09 PM PDT by Pagey
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To: TheMole
All of what you said is true, and one could break down the categories further. Regardless of whether one does, however, in a stable society the processes you describe result in the same number of households (the four children that formed single households one year used to marry almost at once and contribute to the disappearance of single households at the same rate, for instance).

So, you do not have to cruch the numbers representing the subcategories to see the trend.

15 posted on 10/22/2002 6:06:34 PM PDT by TopQuark
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To: Jim Noble
When people say "global" this usually mean "widespread." No one in his right mind ever uses it as a synonim for "universal."
16 posted on 10/22/2002 6:10:45 PM PDT by TopQuark
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