The single life is great, but not always

Posted on June 30, 2009. Filed under: Gracie Cleavage |

For the most part, I enjoy being on my own. I love the sanctity of the mornings, when I sit with my paper and my homemade latte, anticipating the day. And I love the way I can exit into the world, for parties and dates, and then come back into my place, with only myself for company.

Certainly, as we age, we get to know ourselves well, and when we do, there is a certain calm. You learn to honour yourself, for having come this far, for having survived, for still standing in mid-life. Especially, after divorce – which is one of life’s most harrowing experiences – a little calm after the storm is welcome.

But there are times when it is not so great. When you are sick, for example, which happened to me this past weekend. A terrible bout of food poisoning sent me to hospital. Luckily, a son was at home. He was able to call 911. But if he had not been here? I was about the pass out.  I couldn’t get off the floor. What would I have done?

And other times. A friend of mine, single and divorced, in her mid-forties, called me the other day to say that she had had a difficult day. She had to get her son to a soccer practice. Her ex was away. After she dropped her son off at the field, on her way back home, her tire went flat. “It sucks to be single at times like this,” she moaned. She had to figure it out – call the garage, all that. Which is not impossible. But a girl gets tired of being wonderful, of being competent all the time. That’s the thing. When you have a spouse, or a committed boyfriend, there is someone who is always there to help. You can drop the Super Woman thing, at least for an hour, a day, perhaps, and be taken care of; be needy.

Oh, yes, needy! Because that is the very thing we try so hard not to be when we are on our own. You know, most of the time, I am so self-contained, I feel like an egg, with a lovely, smooth shell that no one can crack. I clean up my own emotional spills. I rarely emote to people – not like I did, when I was married at a young age. My ex-husband was a sponge, who would soak up all my emotional outpourings, and make me feel better. Now? I make myself feel better. I cajole myself out of funks. I take myself to movies and to a spa. I praise myself, when I need to, and I tell myself not to worry at night sometimes when I am awake, alone in my bed.

It is okay. Really.

But I also think that a problem – or attitude – we develop when we are single, and have been for a while, is that we convince ourselves – like I just did in the previous paragraph – that everything is just dandy and why would you want a husband again anyway? We rationalize away the romance that doesn’t exist. We say it is over-rated or that it never works out anyway, so why not just have fun with as many people as possible. We ditch the fantasy of finding love.

“I’m through with all that stuff,” I have heard many older women and men say about the search for the perfect partner.

But then….you meet someone, you have a fling, and even if it doesn’t work out, you are reminded of how lovely the whole business of romance is. Someone wants to know about your day. Someone sucks you up with his attention like a milkshake through a straw. Someone finds your every thought a revelation. And you find yourself looking at him with a kind of divine fascination – the way his hair curls, the way he smiles, the way he likes to eat.

“I think that as much as we have been burned in previous relationships, and therefore talk about how we can live without them, we need them,” said a friend of mine on our weekly walk on Sunday. She was just in the process of ending a relationship with a man, who had swept into her life, and given her exactly what she needed – while it lasted. “I have my work,” she explained. “I have the kids. I have my life. But this – being in love or lust or whatever it is – is a big, important part of what I want. And I am not going to sit around and think that I don’t need it. Because I do.”

When she met the man who became her husband all those years ago – and who is now her ex – she was the passive one, she said. “Men always came to me, even this latest guy,” she said. “But now, I am going to be more aggressive. I am going to go out there and look. Because now I know what I really want, and I deserve to be happy. I am going to get what I want.”

I have often thought that love is what we are here for. As humans, that is what we all want. It’s what we say to each other on our death bed. And from my experience with my children, I know that love works like a potent magic. It can fix things. It can produce great accomplishments. It can heal.

And as single people, unfortunately, we sometimes talk ourselves out of it – we find it elsewhere, of course, in friends and children – but we are often shy, scared, about putting our hearts out to the world in a random, vulnerable way. And that is a shame.

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7 Responses to “The single life is great, but not always”

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Amen!!! I am that woman. My life has come to full blossom, yet is missing two vital petals… romance & love.

What you have written here, is the way I have felt for, well, way too many years, if I’m being honest. Thank you for sharing this. It was absolutely beautiful.

it’s like your words are my own thank you

I read your comments with interest, particularly the part where you mention how one can experience the healing magical powers of love in our relationships with our children. I have recently experienced a relationship where I fell ‘in love’ too quickly. Having been without intimacy for quite some time, my entire body was aching for attention, and responded accordingly. Yes, I was vulnerable, but now in hindsight in the future I have a set of guidelines for myself that perhaps I can share with others. It’s called the 6 date approach. In this internet dating environment one cannot possibly know an individual in anyway that they should be having sex, making love within a couple of dates. Woman have to establish a stron sense of self worth, high self esteem, set boundaries, and determine your needs in a relationship. Often I have been too maliable in the past ‘letting them take the lead’, if we are truly going to be women in this 21st century we must learn how to manage this situation up front better. Of course this has to be managed and communicated in a loving, clear, assertive, but not agressive way. Woman are inherently nurturing beings and can very quickly move into a loving relationship when the attraction is there. Men’s response is often not the same initially even though the attraction is there they are fearful, cannot respond to somthing as deep as a woman can initially. Therefore we must take them through the process. Let’s not give away our power. And don’t think men have the answers to my earlier questions. History has proven that in the world of male/female pursuits nothing has really changed fron our grandmother times in the role of building a solid loving relationship.

It’s the same old tired ass stuff…women have to over think everything. Thank your self improvement best selling paperback for leading you into murky waters…..

I would love you to Blog at babyboomersare.com

As I was reading your blog, I thought I was reading about myself and how I have felt for so long. I have been divorced for 16 yrs (after a 20 yr marriage) when back to school got a RN degree, raised my four children, each finishing college, and now all out on there own. I eat, slept and drank my life as there mother, because it was important to me for them to have something stable. Now, they are all on there own, and I have had time to realize I am so lonely, and I hate it. I miss not having someone love and take care of me. I need and want someone to give me their time, attention, affection and companionship. I am not shy, work in the medical field around a variety of men, but no one ever shows an interest. I try dating services online, with no results, and now I’ve recently signed up for this lavalifeprime…..we’ll see! If I hear one more person say, “when you least expect it, someone will just walk into your life”……when?


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    Blogging about life as a midlife woman with one ex, three grown children, and an empty bed.

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