Psychological differences between generations are especially pronounced in the interpersonal domain - romantic relationships and narratives about them. The aim was to find differences between narratives about romantic relationship of generations X (1967-1984), Y (1985-1999) and Z (born in 1999 and later). We assume that generational narratives associated with individual values (X), group values (Y), external conformity (Z) according to Howe - Strauss theory. The study involved 24 female participants aged 18 to 54 years. We used narrative interview, narrative analysis NOI (D. Hiles, I. Čermák), discourse analysis (J. Potter, M. Weatherell) and non-verbal association method. For three generations we found differences between cores of narratives (“finding myself” - X, “giving myself” -Y and “searching for “we” - Z), “storyline” (“Road” - X, Z, “Thorns” - Y), and models of romantic relationships (“individual” - X; “effective” - Y; “role-playing” - Z). Discourse of love was similar for generations X and Z (“emotional” and “humanistic”) and specific for generation Y (“rational”, “constructive”). Results are consistent with ideas of N. Howe - W. Strauss and partially consistent with A. Giddens’s transformation of intimacy. Our findings provide evidence that narratives change in a generational cycle: the concept of romantic love (X) is replaced by the idea of confluent love (Y, Z). We also discuss socio-psychological view on generational features comparing to developmental psychology