https://www.nytimes.com/2023/02/11/style/therapy-speak-dating.html
The New York Times
How the Language of Therapy Took Over Dating
In a time when emotional maturity is highly desirable, almost everyone is “doing the work.”
By Dani Blum
Feb. 11, 2023
When Lauren Scott was bored, dating became a remedy. It could be draining, droning and repetitive. At wine bars and picnics and miniature golf courses and ice cream parlors, she churned out answers about her cybersecurity classes and her taste in music. Still, it was something to do. Ms. Scott, a 23-year-old graduate student in Tampa, Fla., slogged through roughly 34 first dates last year, sometimes stacking three in a week.
One, in particular, seemed like it could lead somewhere. The guy texted her incessantly. He said he missed her. He claimed that he told his family about her. But, after a night spent making pizza and half-watching a movie on Ms. Scott’s couch, he stopped replying to her text messages.
Ms. Scott vented about this on a phone call with her mother, who offered a diagnosis: The guy, she said, had “love bombed” her daughter.
Ms. Scott laughed. “I was like, how do you even know that word?” she said. Her mother heard the term, a description of narcissistic abuse, on the radio.
Dating comes with its own dictionary, a collection of buzzwords like “breadcrumbing,” “zombie-ing” and, of course, “ghosting.” But in recent years, psychology terms like “love bombing,” “gaslighting” and “trauma bonding” have also wedged their way into the lexicon. Hinge, a popular dating app, still lets users post sunglass-clad selfies and proclaim their love for espresso martinis. But now they can also respond to prompts like “Therapy recently taught me___,” “A boundary of mine is___” and “My therapist would say I___.”
Becca Love, a 40-year-old clothing designer and dance teacher in Montreal who uses the pronouns they and them, often asks dating app matches, What does connection look like to you? Around the third date, they initiate discussions about their prospective partner’s “attachment style,” a tidy summation of childhood trauma.
This terminology isn’t unusual. Therapy-related words and phrases have trickled into workplaces, surfaced at schools and galvanized people online. But the proliferation of these terms among daters represents a distinct shift. “In the ’50s, or even the ’80s, it would be hard to imagine that saying ‘I see my therapist regularly’ would have status,” said Eli Finkel, a psychology professor at Northwestern University and the author of “The All-or-Nothing Marriage.” But now, he said, taking care of one’s mental health carries social currency in some spheres.
Even before dating app matches meet in person, “You’re asking, ‘What’s your job, where are you from, what’s your love language?’” said Ianthe Humphries, a 24-year-old marketer in New York. But some skeptics think that the more people deploy these terms, the less they may actually mean. And therapeutic lingo may be just another tool daters use to try to distinguish themselves to prospective matches.
“This is part of the competitive advantage,” said Paul Eastwick, a psychology professor at the University of California, Davis, who researches romantic relationships. “Instead of being like, ‘I’m 5-11, and I can bench press some large amount,’ it’s like, ‘I have grappled with the challenges of my childhood, and I’ve thought deeply about my issues,’” he said.
‘Selling mental health’
For the last 12 years, Helen Fisher, a biological anthropologist, a senior research fellow at the Kinsey Institute and chief science adviser for Match.com, has led a study researching the behavior and attitudes of single people in the United States. The study, Singles in America, which is conducted by Match, surveys approximately 5,000 Americans (not Match members) every year. In 2022, Dr. Fisher was stunned by one finding. She asked participants to rank what they were looking for in a prospective partner, expecting the usual answers: sexual attractiveness, trustworthiness, humor and similar interests. This time, however, another characteristic made the top five list. Respondents wanted matches with emotional maturity, the ability to process and grapple with one’s feelings.
“I’m a baby boomer,” Dr. Fisher said. “In the ’60s and ’70s, this is not what we were trying to sell. We were trying to sell intelligence and being fun and being creative and being career oriented. Now they’re selling mental health.”
Selling has always been a part of courtship. People broadcast their assets — looks, humor, charm — in a de facto competition, one that was heightened, or at least clarified, by the arrival of dating apps. In the 2010s, when they began to take off, users flattened their interests to appeal to as many matches as possible, said Jess Carbino, a former sociologist for Tinder and Bumble. Many opted for generic, inoffensive tidbits, she said, calling them the “‘I love SoulCycle, brunch and my aunt’s dog’ profiles.”
In recent years, though, the signaling has switched. A growing number of people now broadcast intimate, specific details, including proclamations about their mental health, Dr. Carbino said. It’s a technique used both to signal your values and to weed people out, she said — if therapy is essential to you, for example, you might not want to date someone who’s never been.
Referencing therapy can also convey status in a more literal sense, Capri Campeau, a 23-year-old actor and content creator in Los Angeles, explained. It can serve as proof that you have financial means to receive care at a time when providers are in demand and that you can clear out the space and time, said Mx. Campeau, who uses both they and them and she and her pronouns.
Being transparent about therapy also imbues you with a certain cultural cachet, said Carolina Bandinelli, an associate professor at the University of Warwick in England who studies romance and digital culture. It suggests that you’ve done “the work.” In other words, you’re enlightened, the best version of yourself. “It’s part of this discourse of self-optimization,” Dr. Bandinelli said.
And for heterosexual men, in particular, the lingo of psychoanalysis has an added benefit: It can help dispute stereotypes about men avoiding their emotions, Dr. Bandinelli said.
“It seems to be a cheat code men are using,” said Jared Freid, 37, a comedian and podcast host in New York City, who’s combed through thousands of questions and stories from listeners in his 10 years of hosting podcasts about dating. “Men are writing ‘I go to therapy’ on dating apps only because it gets them more women,” he said. “It’s not because they love their therapist.”
Nonprofessionals can get it wrong
Videos and infographics about dating clog Kailah Chavis’s TikTok and Instagram feeds: instructions on how to avoid a love bomber, spot a narcissist or assert boundaries with romantic partners. “I’m always hearing about your ‘inner child,’ ‘healing your inner child,’” said Ms. Chavis, a 24-year-old in Los Angeles.
To Ms. Chavis, people repeat the language they learn from social media, where people, especially women, swap tips on how to recognize the signs of potential manipulation. Sometimes, these come from actual therapists; often, the advice is given by anyone with a front-facing camera.
Dr. Jessi Gold, a psychiatrist at Washington University in St. Louis and a member of the American Psychiatric Association’s Council on Communications, isn’t surprised that psychological language has trickled into everyday conversation. “In some ways, it’s always been the case that people are using the terms in ways that a clinician wouldn’t,” she said. Speaking about mental illness, in general, can help destigmatize conditions like anxiety and depression, she said, and good can come from being vulnerable with a new partner.
There are, however, clear downsides to learning a therapy term via TikTok video or meme, namely that nonprofessionals can get it wrong. The term “trauma bonded,” in particular, is tossed around to signify connecting with someone over shared struggles; the clinical definition of the term refers to a specific pattern of abuse.
This language can also provide a convenient excuse to write someone off. “I find a lot of the times, it gives people leverage,” said Edward Nyamenkum, a 29-year-old art director in Montreal. “It makes people feel OK when they ghost someone, like, ‘They’re obviously toxic,’ without giving them a chance.”
And when people misuse these words, deploying a weighty term like “gaslighting” to describe more banal, everyday turmoils that come with dating, those who actually experience abuse have less of a voice, Dr. Bandinelli said. This “explosion of diagnostic language,” as she called it, provides blanket, simple language for what are often complex and specific conundrums that come with modern dating.
“There’s this sense that using jargon that’s pseudoscientific somehow makes our argument stronger,” Dr. Bandinelli said. If someone acts like a jerk, she said, that may be just be one person’s opinion. “But if you’re ‘gaslighting me’ or ‘love bombing me,’ that makes it objective,” she said.
Mx. Campeau, the 23-year-old actor, saw the language of therapy surge while they were dating and has tried to temper the urge to overuse it in their relationship. When Mx. Campeau leaves a mound of dishes in the sink, for example, a behavior that they said reminded their girlfriend of a particularly messy ex, they avoid using words like “triggered.” Instead, they discuss why the dishes can make their girlfriend think about her ex.
“It’s been really helpful for us to try to use language to connect with each other,” Mx. Campeau said, “instead of just using words to judge.”
Hmmm. This is an interesting read, thanks for sharing. I do see a LOT more therapy-specific terms and framing in dating, as well as other spheres these days. And while I don’t think it’s wholly bad for people to go to therapy (sometimes it’s good and/or necessary!), a lot of men I know DO use therapy to virtue signal and avoid accountability. These men tend to be in therapy forever and yet never seem to make any progress. I avoid these men like the plague because you either BECOME their 24/7 therapist bangmaid or he ruins your reputation when he pathologizes why you left him when he was “Working On It™️ 🥺”. Ugh. Even talking about it gives me the ick haha.
I don't want to/care to hear about a man going to therapy and it doesn't sway me. (although, as I've shared before, I do believe they pretty much all need to be in therapy, with an actually effective therapist). I want to see the results in action. In his self awareness, self responsibility, regard for me , himself, others, life. etc. Talk is cheap and by now I hope we all know the BS posturing and virtue signaling that men, especially, partake in. There is some truth to this article, but I expect that FDS-ers can see way beyond this.
Talk is cheap. You don't talk about your values you embody them...
This "enlightened" crap has been happening for at least a decade. Unfortunately there are men who go for the "softboi" aesthetic and act like talking about their feelings makes them sensitive and deep. If a man uses therapized language to me, I would have at least a yellow flag up. "Sensitive" often is advertised as "attentive to your needs" but I have had the experience of "attentive to HIS needs at your expense." Exhibit #29474897 is Big Ed from 90DF. He is the perfect example of using "I'm in therapy" as a way to justify, manipulative, and excuse abuse toward Liz. He literally was staring up at the stage lights to make himself "cry." It was appalling and a good portion of me unfortunately thinks that display was real 😞
ETA: On the flip side, I know this type of language has been thrown in my face when asking others' opinions:
"Oh, you don't like men watching p*rn? Immature.. you need to ACCEPT it"
"He was texting you everyday, talking about how much he liked you, then pulled away suddenly? You must have said something to turn him off, or he must be busy. You're Anxiously attached. You need DBT because you are practically Cluster B for that."
"Well, it's not okay for you to say [insert atrocity against women in another country] is wrong because that is THEIR CULTURE" (woke cultural/moral relativism)
"Women are hypergamous and evil, and you need to take accountability for when men mistreat you"
"It's bad to tie love and sex together. That's not enlighted."
Etc etc etc
What a cesspit. No amount of "understanding" got me the love I wanted and deserved, when i kept having to suppress my intuition and values. No amount of graciousness and sustained attention to men who mistreat you will get them to have a flash of insight. A lot of internet opinions about dating are trash. Stay vigilant, ladies !!
I disagree heavily with some of this, specifically when it says therapy language gives you an “excuse” to write someone off without giving a chance. You don’t need an excuse.