According to most data, the average millennial woman marries at age 27 while the average millennial man marries at age 29. https://www.womenshealthmag.com/relationships/a19567270/average-age-of-marriage/

Likewise, most couples today date and live together for a number of years before tying the knot. According to this statistic the average couple today spends a total 3.5 years together before tying the knot. Other statistic I’ve seen peg it higher at 4.9 years.

https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.cosmopolitan.com/uk/love-sex/relationships/amp10333374/average-time-couples-together-before-marriage/

Another statistic I found claims that the average women will meet her “soul mate” at age 25. This age should be time according redpill theory most women are still sleeping around with alpha chads and not even thinking about settling down with their future beta husband yet.

https://www.brit.co/average-age-soulmate/

I am posting all this because I am wondering how it fits into red pill theory. Given that there seems to be this assertion that most women or at least a large minority of them sleep around in their twenties aka ride the “cock carousel.” However as soon as these women hit thirty or their late twenties they suddenly panic and try to grab up some poor beta snap to quickly marry them.

Given that all the available data we have seems point to that most women including millennial seem to couple up with their furture spouses before thirty does the red pill theory still hold? Very few couples rush into marriage these days, and seem to date and live together for a number of years before marrying. It would seem impossible to me that most women in this arrangement would be able to hide their apparent disappointment and disgust at having settle with their “beta bux.”

I am curious to see what you guys have to say.