Monday, 21 September 2015

Single

I came out when I was 18, and at university, though I'd known since I was 11.  Those seven years weren't the easiest, but in terms of relationships I was reasonably okay with the fact that nothing was likely to happen until I got to uni: that was the place where I would finally have the opportunity to be myself, and meet someone.  So it was with a lot of expectation that I headed off in 2002, leaving behind a lot of myself.  Or so I thought.

University proved to be an incredibly hard place for me, particularly with regards to dating, and it was in my second year there that I fell into a deep depression.  Save short spells of respite, that would last for a further seven years.  My single status would last a lot longer.  In fact, I'm still in it now.

The word single, for most people, is relatively judgement free.  That's because it's considered either short term and transitory, or something picked out of choice.  The idea of a single life is often associated with freedom, the opportunity for sexual proclivity, and an easy life without suffering anyone else's expectations.

Or is it?  Singledom is still deeply gendered: the confirmed bachelor (positive, male) and the miserable spinster (negative, female). Stupidly this speaks more of entrenched patriarchal fears of women gaining social and economic power, rather than any true historical fact. There are as many single men as there are women. There have to be, because mathematically speaking there are roughly equal numbers of men as there are women, and even taking into account that not everyone is a heterosexual, and that women are nowadays living longer than men, it takes one plus one to equal two. Even amongst gay men and gay women, where it is widely accepted that gay men are more prone to short term relationships, and gay women to longer term ones, by the sheer mathematical equation of it all, you will still have broadly the same numbers of gay men and gay women who are single at any one time.

So from the outside we have two notions of what it is to be single.  One a choice that reaps huge benefits; one a curse that delivers huge miseries.  But what is the reality from the inside?

There are a number of men and women, who are single and happy to be so.  Yet most who are single are looking for love in one way or another.  And even those happiest of bachelors and bachelorettes will on occasion find a spasm of doubt and perhaps melancholy when they find themselves waking up alone.  It takes a very strong person to find true contentment in absolute solitude.

With depression on the rise, more people living alone, loneliness being counted one of the greatest risks particularly to the elderly, and growing suicide rates, particularly amongst men, we are in a state of crisis.

It is not enough to throw out meaningless platitudes to someone who comes to you feeling rejected, and sad about being single.  It is never okay to try and make them feel bad for feeling bad.  I would argue that truly understanding what it is like to be single for a decade is one of the hardest things for most people, who drift in and out of relationships, to imagine, let alone truly feel and understand.  There needs to be an education.

And before there is an education in what it is to be single, there needs to be a dialogue, and that dialogue requires a whole new language to be established.  Socially all of our ideas about being single relate back to its temporary nature leading up to being in a relationship.  Similar to the negative ways that disability has long been seen as something defined by the ways that it is not 100% able, being single is one of the many 'others' in our society that is abused to make the dominant culture feel better.

It is my intention to find a way to make single people, like myself, feel better about themselves, and their lives.  And if you don't understand why that needs to happen (beyond just telling them to cheer up, or that they should be grateful for all the free time), then I think you could probably do with a bit of educating on the subject too.


Sunday, 19 January 2014

Breaking up is hard to do

Saying you will never meet anyone seems petulant and childish to most people. When I used to say it at the age of 20 it was considered ridiculous, or worse, a self fulfilling prophesy: if I was alone it would be my own fault because I was putting all this negative energy out there, which my potential boyfriends would pick up on and run a mile.

I'm nearly 30 now and haven't had a meaningful relationship in that time. But that's not because I'd closeted myself off 10 years ago. In fact I've been as persistent in the search for someone as anyone could be. 

Of course people would tell me that looking is a sure fire way to never find him. "It'll come along when you're not looking". Just how I always find my keys/underwear/remote when I'm not looking? 

I understand the logic in both conclusions. Undoubtedly if every time I'm on a date I tell the guy I'm going to die alone he's going to get mixed messages, and possibly see me as harder work than he'd like: why should he have to convince me we're together?  And we probably do find our keys when we're not looking, and also miss things right under our nose when we're frantically, fanatically ripping apart the sofa (I've never heard of anyone actually throwing a baby out with the bath water, but you get the point).


But they're both easy platitudes that get tossed out when people want to say something to help, and the reality is that they come across as sounding superior.  Being on your own can make you feel lonely, and ultimately lead you to feel a lack of worth.  Continual rejection from dates tends to exacerbate those feelings, and also do irreparable damage to your confidence and ability to put yourself out there again.  Eventually one can find oneself treading down the path towards depression, which is a difficult place to leave.

We need to find compassion for one another, and respect the feelings of pain that being single and being rejected can bring.  It may be better to tell someone you understand, and that you're there for them, rather than try to offer advice.

So in giving up on love, it is no surprise that the first step will be hard, because it will be a compounding of many of these emotions, and feel like opening a large void.  But the step is one of compassion for oneself; it is realising that all the pain over all those years has been hard, and you are making a positive choice to look after yourself.

You are saying goodbye to a wish for someone else to come with love, and hello to loving yourself.

Become love, and you will never be without it again.

Tuesday, 14 January 2014

By way of an introduction...

As one who has spent many unhappy years trying to find a relationship, I am well acquainted with the miseries of dating, and the continual slog of 'putting yourself out there'.  Wherever there is.

And while I have repeatedly tried to be okay on my own, it has been extremely difficult, and often quite distressful, because at no point have I really chosen to be on my own.  I had a friend some years back who said he was happy on his own, and in many respects preferred it.  However, that was never my situation, and so I am entirely understanding of those who find singledom a deeply depressing place.



For those that watched Ally McBeal in the late 1990s, you will be aware of the concept of a "theme song", something that plays in your head to lift you out of a difficult mood or circumstance.  I eventually settled some years back on The Carpenters' Goodbye To Love.  An unusual choice perhaps, but one that I have found empowering in moments of inner crisis.

The reason why it may seem odd is the assumption that the song is an absolutist adieu to amore.  On the contrary, it's more an acceptance of a current loveless state, along with all the associated woes, allowing that a love may present itself in the future, but that future being some time away, the protagonist will right now choose to live without the suffering of a consuming yearning.


Many out there are unaware of what it is to really feel that loneliness day after day, and by that I mean actually feel it, as though it were a piece of unpleasant food to be painfully digested repeatedly.  Undoubtedly I will talk more on that in due course.


For now I will simply introduce those of you who don't know it to the song, and wish you all the greatest success in finding your own singular happiness.


Carpenters – Goodbye To Love Lyrics

I'll say goodbye to love
No one ever cared if I should live or die
Time and time again the chance for love has passed me by
And all I know of love is how to live without it
I just can't seem to find it

So I've made my mind up
I must live my life alone
And though it's not the easy way
I guess I've always known
I'd say goodbye to love

There are no tomorrows for this heart of mine
Surely time will lose these bitter memories
And I'll find that there is someone to believe in
And to live for
Something I could live for

All the years of useless search
Have finally reached an end
Loneliness and empty days will be my only friend
From this day love is forgotten
I'll go on as best I can

What lies in the future
Is a mystery to us all
No one can predict the wheel of fortune as it falls
There may come a time when I will see that
I've been wrong
But for now this is my song

And it's goodbye to love

I'll say goodbye to love