Today I heard of two 15 year old girls eloping. It got me thinking.
There can be many reasons why two 15-year-old girls would run away together and talk about “getting married,” and it’s important not to jump immediately to one explanation. At that age, emotions, identity, attachment, fear, fantasy, rebellion, and the need for safety can all become very intense. Often, the girls themselves may not fully understand what they are feeling.
A wider perspective includes several possibilities happening at once.
Adolescence is emotionally intense
At 15, the brain is still developing especially areas linked to judgment, long-term planning, and impulse control. But emotional bonding and the desire for independence become extremely strong.
Teenagers can feel:
• “No one understands us except each other.”
• “We will stay together forever.”
• “Home is controlling.”
• “Adults don’t listen.”
So decisions that adults see as unrealistic can feel absolutely real and urgent to them.
“Marriage” may symbolise escape, not actual adult marriage
When teenagers say “we want to get married,” sometimes they literally mean romantic partnership.
But sometimes “marriage” is symbolic language for:
• permanent companionship
• loyalty
• emotional safety
• escaping family pressure
• building a life away from conflict
To them, marriage may simply mean:
“We choose each other over everyone else.”
That does not necessarily mean they understand the realities of adult marriage:
• finances
• responsibility
• compatibility
• sexuality
• legal/social consequences
• emotional maturity
Most 15-year-olds do not fully grasp those things yet, regardless of gender.
They may or may not be lesbians
It’s possible they are romantically attracted to each other. Some girls discover same-sex attraction during adolescence. But close emotional intensity between teenage girls can also exist without stable adult sexual orientation.
At that age, relationships can involve:
• emotional dependence
• admiration
• identity exploration
• deep friendship
• experimentation
• romantic fantasy
• confusion between emotional intimacy and lifelong partnership
So:
• They might be lesbians.
• They might be bisexual.
• They might simply feel emotionally fused and safe together.
• They themselves may not yet know clearly.
Human identity at 15 is often still unfolding.
Safety and trust can play a major role
Some girls at that age:
• fear harassment from boys
• distrust men due to experiences or stories
• feel emotionally safer with girls
• feel more understood by female friends
• fear forced marriage or strict family expectations
A close female friendship can become a psychological “safe world.”
Especially if:
• There is family conflict
• strict control at home
• emotional neglect
• abuse
• pressure around studies or marriage
• loneliness
Social media and storytelling influence teenagers heavily
Movies, Instagram, reels, fandom culture, and online communities often romanticise:
• “running away together.”
• “us against the world.”
• soulmate friendships
• rebellion
• dramatic loyalty
Teenagers sometimes imitate emotional narratives before understanding consequences.
At 15, intensity itself can feel meaningful.
Sometimes eloping is more about home than about romance
A key question is often:
“What were they running from?”
Not just:
“Who were they running to?”
Possible reasons:
• strict parenting
• fear of punishment
• academic pressure
• lack of emotional connection
• feeling unheard
• abuse or violence
• restrictions on freedom
• identity struggles
Two teenagers may reinforce each other emotionally:
“Let’s leave. We only have each other.”
That can create a powerful, closed emotional bubble
Teen friendships can become emotionally absolute
At 15, friendships can feel larger than life.
Adults often underestimate this.
Teenagers may genuinely believe:
• “This person is my entire world.”
• “We will never change.”
• “No one else matters.”
But personalities, identities, and desires often evolve dramatically between 15 and 25.
That’s why many adolescent “forever” bonds later transform into:
• friendship
• distance
• different identities
• mature understanding
The important thing is not to shame them
If adults react only with:
• anger
• humiliation
• moral panic
• accusations
• violence
Then, teenagers often become more secretive and emotionally extreme.
What usually helps more:
• safety first
• calm conversation
• listening without immediate judgment
• counselling if needed
• understanding family dynamics
• giving them emotional space while maintaining boundaries
It’s also important not to romanticise it
At the same time, running away at 15 is risky:
• exploitation
• trafficking
• abuse
• financial vulnerability
• emotional instability
• inability to survive independently
So while their emotions may be genuine, adults still need to protect them.
Both truths can exist together:
• their feelings are real
• their decisions may still be unsafe or immature.
In many such cases, what looks like “marriage” from the outside is actually a complex mix of:
• emotional attachment
• identity exploration
• adolescent intensity
• desire for freedom
• need for safety
• rebellion
• fear
• loneliness
• idealism
Human relationships during adolescence are rarely simple or neatly categorised.
