3 Dangerous Ways Social Media Is Rewriting Love, Dating, and Relationship Expectations

Urban City Podcast Group
Young couple sitting apart on phones, symbolizing how social media influences modern love, dating expectations, and emotional disconnection among teenagers and young adults
Social media is reshaping how young people define love, dating, and relationships—often promoting unrealistic expectations. This op-ed explores how online influence is creating a generation prepared to judge relationships, but not equipped to build them.
Urban City Podcast Group
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Table of Contents

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Portrait of Felicia Kelly-Brookins, African American woman and Op-Ed contributor, smiling confidently while seated at a desk with a microphone and papers, symbolizing thoughtful journalism and editorial expertise.
Photo Credit: Felicia Brookins

Major Takeaways

  • Social media is replacing real-life relationship guidance, shaping how young people define love, value, and partnership.
  • Unqualified voices are setting unrealistic expectations, promoting performance over authenticity and independence without accountability.
  • A generation is being trained to evaluate relationships instead of build them, expecting perfection instead of embracing growth and process.
 

LOVE, LIKES & LIES: PART THREE

How social media Is Rewriting Dating Expectations for a Generation Still Learning What Love Means

Op-Editorial By Felicia Kelly-Brookins• 4 min read There is a quiet curriculum shaping how teenagers and young adults understand love, and it isn’t being taught in classrooms, homes, or even places of worship. It is being taught on screens. Scroll long enough and you’ll find it: curated relationships, luxury dates, viral “soft life” expectations, and commentary that reduces love to transactions, performance, and proof. What once developed through conversation, guidance, and lived experience is now formed through clips, captions, and commentary, consumed in seconds, internalized for years. And what young people are seeing online is shaping what they believe they should be receiving offline. But increasingly, it is not just shaping adults. It is training the next generation. Today’s teenage girls and boys are being introduced to relationships not through mentorship or moral grounding, but through algorithms. They are learning what to expect from men and women based on trends, not truth. Young girls are being taught subtly and repeatedly, that their value is tied to attention, appearance, and desirability. The more visible they are, the more valuable they must be. Young boys, on the other hand, are being conditioned to believe that manhood is measured by provision, control, or emotional detachment. Strength is often presented without softness. Leadership without accountability. And much of this messaging is not coming from strangers. It is coming from adults. From grown women offering relationship advice rooted in unresolved hurt rather than healing. From men projecting performance-based expectations instead of purpose- driven leadership. This is not harmless influence, it is generational imprinting. According to Common Sense Media, teenagers spend an average of over seven hours a day consuming media, with social platforms playing a dominant role in shaping identity, behavior, and relational expectations. That means the loudest voices are not always the wisest ones. And when the loudest voices are irresponsible, the consequences are not temporary, they are generational. Social media has created a new category of influence: ‘unqualified authority.’ Scroll through any platform and you’ll find no shortage of relationship directives: “Don’t settle.” “Make him prove it.” “If he can’t provide, leave.” “Keep your options open.” While these statements may sound empowering, they are often incomplete, and in many cases, misleading. They promote strategy without substance, independence without accountability, and expectation without self-examination. What’s missing is responsibility. Because advice that is not rooted in truth creates standards that no healthy relationship can sustain. Our teenagers and young adults are not just listening, they are watching. They are observing how adults live, how they love, how they leave. And when what they see is performative instead of principled, they begin to build expectations that are emotionally reactive rather than spiritually grounded. Somewhere in the scroll, dating shifted. It moved from discovery to demand. From partnership to performance. From growth to guarantee. Young people are now entering relationships with fully formed expectations for someone who is still in formation. The pressure is no longer: Who are we becoming together? It is: Who are you already when I meet you? Social media has normalized the idea that love should arrive polished, financially stable, emotionally perfect, aesthetically appealing, and immediately aligned with every expectation. But real relationships are not built at the top. They are built on the way up. The danger in expecting a finished product is that it removes the possibility of partnership. It eliminates work. It dismisses the process. It replaces commitment with convenience. And in doing so, it creates a generation that is prepared to evaluate, but not equipped to build.
Urban City Podcast Group
United States Real Estate Investor® Property Profit Powerhouse
Urban City Podcast Group

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Urban City Podcast Group
Urban City Podcast Group
United States Real Estate Investor® Property Profit Powerhouse
Urban City Podcast Group
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