đ€ Dating Feels Like a Second Job Now - And Weâre All Tired
Why Gen Z Is Emotionally Exhausted from Swiping, Ghosting, and "Situationships"

Iâm not looking for love. Iâm just trying not to get hurt again.
Thatâs what my friend told me after her sixth Hinge date in a month ended in confusion and a text that read, âYouâre amazing, but Iâm not ready for anything serious.â
Sound familiar?
If youâre in your 20s or early 30s and actively dating, chances are youâve felt it too - the exhaustion, the detachment, the weird emotional numbness that follows a streak of almosts.
Weâre not heartless.
Weâre just tired.
The New Rules of Modern Dating (That No One Agreed To)
Once upon a time, dating meant flirting, dinners, and butterflies. Now?
It means swiping until your thumb aches, pretending youâre okay with casual when you're craving connection, and decoding texts like theyâre ancient prophecies.
Weâve all read the unspoken rules:
- Donât double-text.
- Donât care more.
- Be chill.
- Never actually ask what we are.
Gen Z didnât break love - we just inherited it in a digitally diluted, emotionally unavailable, commitment-phobic form.
Why Are We So Emotionally Burnt Out?
1. Choice overload.
There are too many options and not enough effort. Weâve gamified romance and turned potential soulmates into profiles we judge in 0.5 seconds.
2. Emotional unavailability disguised as freedom.
âLetâs see where this goesâ is the new way of saying I want connection without responsibility. And weâre afraid to admit we want more.
3. Ghosting, bread-crumbing, and love bombing.
These arenât just dating trends - theyâre emotional warfare. No wonder weâre walking around with walls sky-high.
4. Hyper-independence is killing vulnerability.
Weâre healing from trauma, chasing careers, and learning to love ourselves. But somewhere in the mix, we forgot how to let someone in.
The Rise of the Situationship Generation
Ask any Gen Zâer if theyâre dating, and chances are the answer sounds like:
âItâs⊠complicated.â
Weâre stuck in this grey area where things feel real, but arenât defined. We're afraid to label, because labels bring expectations, and expectations bring risk.
But hereâs the truth:
Being casual doesnât protect you from heartbreak. It just makes the heartbreak harder to explain.
We Still Want Love. Weâre Just Scared to Want It.
We joke about being dead inside.
We laugh off ghosting.
We convince ourselves we donât care.
But deep down, we want something real. We want safe spaces to be soft. We want to be chosen without having to compete. We want to be seen - beyond the filter, the swipe, and the performance.
And thatâs not embarrassing.
Itâs brave.
So What Do We Do Now?
Maybe itâs not about quitting dating apps or giving up altogether.
Maybe itâs about reclaiming our right to be intentional, vulnerable, and yes - romantic.
đ€ Start saying what you mean.
đ€ Set boundaries and standards.
đ€ Stop settling for someone whoâs unsure about you.
đ€ And most importantly, stop treating love like a side quest.
Weâre Not Too Much. Weâre Just Tired of Not Being Enough for the Wrong People.
If dating feels like a second job, youâre not crazy - it kind of is.
But love shouldnât feel like work all the time. It should feel like rest, too. Safety. Home.
So hereâs a thought:
What if we stopped playing the game and started creating connections that actually feed us?
đŹ Letâs talk about it in the comments:
Have you felt dating burnout too? Whatâs one boundary youâve set that changed the way you date? Or - whatâs one thing you wish people understood about love in 2025?
About the Creator
Lily
My name is Lily, and I've faced many challenges in life. People have often taken advantage of me, using me for their own gain. Now, I'm sharing the captivating stories and mysteries from my life, both personal and with those around me.


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