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Dare to Ask: Teens have a dating obsession

By PHILLIP MILANO

Question

Why are younger teenagers so obsessed with “who likes whom” and going out with people, and call sensible people who don’t care about anything like that gay or geeky?

Brandon, 13, Jacksonville

Replies

Once hormones kick in, all you want to do is make out with people. Then it comes down to reputation: Even if the person is a total moron, if he’s a great kisser, you’ve got to date him.

Claire, 15, Fernandina Beach

Teenagers in America go from being treated like little kids straight to being “grown-ups,” so dating is a way for them to feel more grown up. Or, it could be there isn’t anything on TV, and they’re bored.

Stephanie S., Washington, D.C.

Kids your age are . . . trying to work out their status in the pack, and trying to get a handle on urges and feelings none of you really had as recently as a year or two prior. Labeling outsiders is a defense mechanism.

Ann, 40, Missouri

It all has to do with the beliefs subtly taught by American society: 1) In order to be happy, you have to have a partner; 2) You’re not “complete” until you’ve found your “better half;” and 3) If you wait too long, you may never find them and die a lonely old man or woman.

Shelly, Pennsylvania

You’re in for a lot worse in your latter teens, so enjoy this relatively innocuous “who likes whom” stuff while you still can.

Craig, 21, Duncan, Canada

Expert says

Of course teens are the only ones obsessed with who’s dating whom. Adults don’t give a hoot – that’s why you never see Web sites, magazines, TV tabloid shows and Page 2 “Celebrity Watch” items in mid-size daily newspapers constantly feature tryst gossip about Madonna, Diddy, Vanessa, Zac, Hayden, Milo, Halle, George, Lindsay, Samantha and that guy from the fourth season of Supernanny Pimps My Farm Machinery.

For younger teens (mainly girls), fixation on dating arises because sexual attraction is growing at the same time they’re looking for love and approval, said teen expert Barbara McRae, founder of TeenFrontier.com and author of Coach Your Teen to Success. Amid increasing social pressures juiced up on networking sites such as MySpace, if Mom and Dad are being overly critical or detached, dating – and talking about dating – can fill the void.

Name-calling and bullying to “fit in” may follow if no one monitors the situation, she said.

Research shows that girls start thinking about dating earlier, McRae noted.

“They stare at boys, have crushes, daydream . . . they’re looking at their self-worth through the eyes of others.”

So, is it all “sensible”?

“We don’t know what stage of development this boy [Brandon] is at,” she said. “Everyone wakes up to the opposite sex at different times; maybe he doesn’t understand all the hoopla yet, so he’s making it sound like he’s the sensible one. And as adults, sure, we know at 13 they don’t have the interpersonal skills yet for a dating situation . . . so we take it as sensible [not to date when young].”

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