One of the rarest gifts any single person could have (meaning me) is having single friends. Friends are rare in themselves, but finding someone who is willing to invest in the friendship even while they could spent time hunting for a new relationship is something I have always valued. Mainly because there are little idiosyncrasies, feelings and habits that I can openly express around someone else who is single because they going through the same thing, unlike married or seriously involved friends who give me that blank stare and say they don’t understand. So last week I went to see one of my friends, who is a friend and is single. We went out for pho because he’s never had it before, and since it takes so long to eat it properly, as opposed to slurping it, it would give us plenty of time to catch up.
It was obvious that we needed to talk about the respective changes each of us has made, since he’s grown out a goatee and has started dressing better. I’m sure he’s trying to gain some confidence when it comes to talking to women, but this entire appearance screamed Party Boy, which he is not. Anyway, it turns out that he has become a fan of David deAngelo, a leader in the seduction community. Apparently, this community teaches men how to flirt with women and build attraction. I was a big fan of the pick up artist when it was on VH1 and I have mixed feelings about the seduction community. While I think it’s nice that this gives men confidence to approach women, and teaches them how to flirt, I have a problem with the way it’s taught. It gives guys the impression that cocky and funny is the way to go, that arrogance shows women who’s boss and by getting her email instead of her phone number, by having her cook for you instead of dating her, and by demanding that she be single although the guy may have a harem going around, I think this darker side teaches men that dating is about quantity and control more than it is about trying to have a relationship, opening and sharing.
There’s also the problem of what kind of women would positively respond to these techniques, which my friend lamented on. “I’ve been meeting a lot of women, but these aren’t the kind of women I’d be attracted to. There’s no substance or depth to them,” he said while rolling his eyes. Of course there’s some serious lackluster in this technique. He’s been able to meet more and women who are attracted to him, but the problem is that these are not the kind of women he’d like to date long term. I told him that while I applaud his efforts to get out there and meet more women, his problem could be that he’s not being authentic. So naturally he’s going to attract women Party Guy him would like, but not the real him when he’s around his friends.
But what does that say about me? I’ve been perpetually single forever and the reasons change over time — because I was too focused on school, because I didn’t know what I wanted, because I had to spend time healing myself from other mishaps. And like my friend, I’d like to date, but I don’t know how. A few weeks ago I removed all of my online profiles, because I just had too many bad experiences with them recently. I was having a hard time telling if the person who contacted me was actually available, and I should not have to decipher that on a first date, or at least while communicating with someone. My non single friends all think I am crazy, that I must be doing something wrong in order to attract all these people who aren’t right for me, but my single friends concurred with having similar bad experiences. I don’t drink and I think it’s obvious that the bad boy bar scene type would not be interested in me. As one guy who fit that profile said, emotionally I’m too high maintenance. And I could be.
So I took the advice of a volunteer, who suggested I go to a matchmaking service. He said I don’t seem like the type of girl to meet someone in the traditional ways people my age meet, and it would be a great way to expand my social circle. So I called one and set up an appointment. They wouldn’t tell me the price over the phone and since they accept only 50% of their applicants, they’d have to screen me first in order to see if they could even find a suitable match within their clientele. I figured it was only an hour and I don’t have to pay for it, so I agreed to the consultation. But the whole time in between I was nervous. What if they told me exactly what was wrong with me? Was I clingy? Did I come off as stiff? Was I no fun?
I walked into their small office and filled out a five page questionare about what I was looking for with their services and I basically told them the truth. I don’t need a relationship, but I would like one because it would enrich my already busy life. I’d like someone to share with, and have deep conversations and also be down to act silly with me every once in a while, who liked to do a lot of activities…yada yada yada. You know the drill. I had to write this down without fear, which meant leaving out the obvious that has already gotten me in trouble. Should I tell them I’d like someone who’s single, meaning not married or already in a relationship, who doesn’t drink heavily, do drugs, who’ll like me and is under 50? See. I feel like I just eliminated my entire market with that previous sentence. The director informed me that what the real me was looking for, without fear, was out there, and what I wanted wasn’t that different from everyone else. I was expecting her to give me a litany of all the things wrong with me, and you know what she said was wrong with me? NOTHING. Maybe I just love confessions of a matchmaker too much, but I couldn’t believe that NOTHING is wrong with me. She said that she thought I was darling and I’d make an ideal girlfriend, and that she’d like for me to join.
Then we had to talk about the price. Yikes. It’s expensive, and it’s a two year contract. I don’t have money for this, and I may not for another six months, so we left it at that. I look at it as an investment, as something that I am doing for my emotional well being, and it may take awhile before I am able to earn in monetarily, but they aren’t going anywhere. So when I get a better paying job, which should be in three months, I’ll start to save toward this goal.
I’m sure you’re wondering where the quirkyalone is coming in, and I’ll explain it. Last year, a girl I dated said I seemed like a quirkyalone, which is this new movement of people who are socioable, outgoing and who are into romance but don’t date simply for the sake of dating, as opposed to diving from relationship to relationship because you don’t want to be alone. I would say that I ascribe to this philosophy except for two things: while seeing lovey-dovey couples is occasionally annoying, I don’t outright hate them. And two, sometimes I feel like being single is a nuetral state. Some days, like last weekend, I like that I have no one else to answer to. I liked that my time was mine, and with that I went to the botanical gardens, met new people and read. There are moments when I just want to watch “Sex and the City” reruns while folding my laundry, and not being involved gives me a freedom that I know I wouldn’t normally have. On the other hand, there are moments, when it sucks, and I can’t explain where the bad feeling comes from. It happens in small moments, like when I heard that eveyone else in my office is going on vacation with their loved ones, while I cannot, mainly because I am too poor and I just have myself to vacation with. The only thing I am putting off while I am single is having children. Intentionally becoming a single mother isn’t for me. But there are definitely those times when I miss the connection and intimacy that’s sorely lacking from my life.
So the average perfect quirkyalone (is that an oxymoron?) would just be happy taking classes, finding new things and new friends and one day a romantic obsession will just find them and fall in love with them. While I like this idea, it’s too idealistic. How in the world are you going to find the dating relationship for you if you don’t start…dating? That’s the part I can’t reconcile, and that’s the part where my friend and I are having difficulty. He’s trying to change his approach, while I’m trying to change my venue. Maybe we both need to change. Maybe it’s the setting.
The reason I went to see the matchmaker is because I don’t want to continue doing the same thing — liking someone who may not like me, and wake up five years, ten years, fifteen years…and realize I’ve done the same thing without the results I’m looking for. So I need to be more proactive, and get as serious about my emotional well being as I am about my career (more about that). I can’t speak for my friend, but often I wonder, am I trying too hard to hire Cupid, or should I take the quirkyalone approach and just let things happen…even if they don’t happen for a couple of years? Ten years? Fifteen years?