Millennials: Why aren’t they married yet?

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“So did you have a special Valentine’s date this year?”  That question drives a stake through the heart of most single adults born after 1980.  “Any wedding bells in your future?”  That is the question that keeps most young adults from visiting relatives.   They sit in the car both dreading and rehearsing answers to this question before they come in for Thanksgiving dinner.  It is a crushing question, but it is an interesting one, is it not?

According to research from Dr. Susan Whitbourne and Dr. Jeffrey Arnett on studies of college students and how they grow up, there are historically four indicators of adulthood: having a job, buying a home, getting married, and having a child.  What is interesting is that over the last fifty years the average age when someone completes each of these has risen by nearly ten years.  In 1965 the average age that someone had a job, bought a home, got married, and had a child was 21.  That age is now 30.   That is an increase of 9 years in less than two generations.  So why is that?

<read here for the answer…it might surprise you>

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Able to start a conversation with a phone pole. Adaptive extrovert, Disruptive thinker, Intuitive philosopher, Perceptive influencer, Idea futurist, Believer, and hater of labels. 😉 Follower of Jesus cleverly disguised as a husband, father, student, and friend.

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