Does True Love Wait?
A new research says that “Age of First Sexual Experience
Predicts Romantic Outcomes in Adulthood” It's a common lament among parents:
Kids are growing up too fast these days. Parents worry about their kids getting
involved in all kinds of risky behavior, but they worry especially about their
kids' forays into sexual relationships. And research suggests that there may be
cause for concern, as timing of sexual development can have significant
immediate consequences for adolescents' physical and mental health.
But what about long-term outcomes? How might early sexual
initiation affect romantic relationships in adulthood?
Psychological scientist Paige Harden of the University of
Texas at Austin wanted to investigate whether the timing of sexual initiation
in adolescence might predict romantic outcomes -- such as whether people get
married or live with their partners, how many romantic partners they've had,
and whether they're satisfied with their relationship -- later in adulthood.
To answer this question, Harden used data from the
National Longitudinal Study on Adolescent Health to look at 1659 same-sex
sibling pairs who were followed from adolescence (around 16) to young adulthood
(around 29). Each sibling was classified as having an Early (younger than 15),
On-Time (age 15-19), or Late (older than 19) first experience with sexual
intercourse. Her findings are reported in a new research article published in
Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.
As expected, later timing of first sexual experience was
associated with higher educational attainment and higher household income in
adulthood when compared with the Early and On-Time groups. Individuals who had
a later first sexual experience were also less likely to be married and they
had fewer romantic partners in adulthood.
Among the participants who were married or living with a
partner, later sexual initiation was associated with significantly lower levels
of relationship dissatisfaction in adulthood. The association held up even
after taking genetic and environmental factors into account and could not be
explained by differences in adult educational attainment, income, or
religiousness, or by adolescent differences in dating involvement, body mass
index, or attractiveness.
These results suggest that the timing of first experience
with sexual intercourse predicts the quality and stability of romantic
relationships in young adulthood.
Although research has often focused on the consequences
of early sexual activity, the Early and On-Time participants in this study were
largely indistinguishable. The data suggest that early initiation is not a
"risk" factor so much as late initiation is a "protective"
factor in shaping romantic outcomes.
According to Harden, there are several possible
mechanisms that might explain this relationship.
It's possible, for example, that people who have their
first sexual encounter later also have certain characteristics (e.g., secure
attachment style) that have downstream effects on both sexual delay and on
relationship quality. They could be pickier in choosing romantic and sexual
partners, resulting in a reluctance to enter into intimate relationships unless
they are very satisfying.
It's also possible, however, that people who have their
first sexual encounter later have different experiences, avoiding early
encounters with relational aggression or victimization that would otherwise
have detrimental effects on later romantic outcomes.
Finally, Harden explains that it's possible that
"individuals who first navigate intimate relationships in young adulthood,
after they have accrued cognitive and emotional maturity, may learn more
effective relationship skills than individuals who first learn scripts for
intimate relationships while they are still teenagers."
Future research can help to tease apart which of these
mechanisms may actually be at work in driving the association between timing of
first sexual intercourse and later romantic outcomes.
In previous studies, Harden and her colleagues have found
that earlier sexual intercourse isn't always associated with negative outcomes.
For example, using the same sample from the National Longitudinal Study of
Adolescent Health, she found that teenagers who experienced their first sexual
intercourse earlier, particularly those who had sex in a romantic dating
relationship, had lower levels of delinquent behavior problems. She explains,
"We are just beginning to understand how adolescents' sexual experiences
influence their future development and relationships."
Image Source: http://www.sxc.hu/photo/1413986
Image Source: http://www.sxc.hu/photo/1413986
Post a Comment