Married women seemed so smug.
Sure, they’d say things like, “marriage is tough” and “I get so mad at my husband when he…”
But it just sounded patronizing especially when all they could ask me about was my relationship status and give me that dumpy sad face when my answer was that I was still single.
Add a wedding and things got even uglier.
At my little sister’s wedding, which I went to stag, nearly every married woman there took it upon themselves to console me and say things like, “This must be the hardest day of your life!” or “Don’t worry, it will happen for you too!”
A few of them actually cried on me. It was humiliating.
Perhaps these ladies thought they were comforting me and I’m sure this was their intention.
But they failed. I continued to be anxious about getting married all the while believing some really destructive lies about what marriage was.
Of course, I am married now–to a man I in no way deserve–and together we are continuing to work our way to a clearer more honest understanding of the sacrament of marriage.
Even though it felt like it, I was not the last woman on Earth to get married.
Several of my friends are still single, still waiting to find him.
And I’ve realized that as a married woman it is hard to know what to say to my single friends, hard to know what to say across this married/single divide that is both honest and loving.
Perhaps this is why all of those married women got it so wrong during my single days.
But, when I say things like, “It will happen for you, I’m sure!” or “As soon as you stop looking it will happen” I’ve become another condescending married twit.
I don’t know that it will happen, or when or how.
I think I have pretty effectively proven that I don’t know much, about anything, at all. I’m a moron.
And then I think, well maybe if I complain about my married-with-kids life they won’t feel so bad about being single.
So I show up with my 3 kids 4 and under and gripe about the antics of toddlers.
But everyone can see these little monsters are really just little blessings covered in watermelon juice and ketchup and that by complaining about them I’m just being a jerk.
But, what to say? Because let’s be real, Nancy’s always gotta say something.
And these ladies are my friends.
And I love them.
After a lot of thought here’s what I’ve come up with:
Seriously, we’re morons.
Don’t let romantic comedies deceive you into thinking that marriage is the eternal happy ending.
It isn’t. But, most importantly, don’t let the quiet moments of single life scare you.
Quiet is good.
Very good.
I only figured this out after the quiet was gone…
She is still single and hoping to get married at some point, but in recent months has decided to put the dating sites and single mixers on hold.
Instead, she is taking advantage of being single.
She is traveling, volunteering, changing jobs, living simply, giving herself to her church, and doing a million other things that make me so jealous.
There, I said it.
Even though I love my husband, even though I feel SO blessed to be the mother of 3 wonderful kids, I am jealous of a single person.
I am jealous that my brother, still single, gets to do community theater and help my parents in a tangible way.
Jealous of single people that get to spend an hour in silent adoration each week or go to daily mass.
I am jealous of my friend that gets to plan last-minute trips or volunteer in the inner-city and train for a marathon.
Basically, I’m jealous of anyone that gets to eat a burger with 2 hands.
Really, being single can be so good–if you let it be.
You have the freedom to serve THE WORLD.
Have the freedom to give yourself to every person you meet, to get a spontaneous cup of coffee with a grieving friend, or talk for hours on the phone with a college friend.
You have the freedom to travel and spread joy to parts of the world so far out of my reach.
Not saying I WISH I was single.
I’m not saying that life is better than mine.
So I’m just saying that the single life is good. Let it be good.
And married ladies lay off!
We married folks don’t have the market cornered on happiness, don’t pretend as we do.
Don’t assume your life is better than your single friend’s life.
We live in a world, it seems, where if one thing is good we assume the other is bad.
If being single is good, then being married is bad, right?
No!
If being married is good then being single is bad, then?
No!
Marriage is intended to create families, the absolute building block of society.
A married couple, through God’s help, can create children and raise those children together in love and faith.
A single person has the ability to care for that society, through good work, travel, and general getting-out-of-the-house-ness that we moms of littles can not.
We need each other.
If we both/all lived out these vocations like we actually liked them, like we actually understood them, there would be no jealousy of other’s marriages or other’s freedom.
We’d both understand that we have the opportunity to live incredible lives, whether single or married.
And that is what I want to say to all of my friends, married or single.
You are incredible.
Live your life and your vocation in an incredible way.
Let go of the lies, the expectations, judgment, and fairy tales.
Because life isn’t a fairy tale–it’s better.
And married ladies, stop sucking and be good to your single friends.
Married, single, or otherwise, you are incredible.
You are enough.
Nancy
I thank God.For your testimony.There’s a lot of times.I come home from work.or were ever . And talk to me lady .I realize ,I’m alone.
I have a lot of faith.I keep telling myself that my God sayed, He has a Godly woman for me .Just wait.Obedience is first.Don’t ask me about going to church.My past includes a church. And yes the Devil go there too.
So what I’m trying to say. Thanks again.
I’m going to wait for God.
I’m 55. I been waiting for.about 30years
I will wait for him Thanks
I’ve had these same thoughts. I used to cringe watching married women say these kinds of things. Now that I’ve been married for 15 years, I cringe even more. There are 2 things I do. First, I don’t bring it up as a point of comparison to begin with. It’s not like a lady’s entire job is to get married and she is “failing” as a woman if she is single. Countless incredibly important people — men and women both, and Jesus included — never married; many remained virgins their whole life. So obviously God made humankind for more than just physical procreation. Second, I don’t do the “someday it will happen for you,” but I do tell them one truth from my life. A lot of people married late in my family. So don’t let anyone tell you there’s a magic age you pass and then you’re just plain out of luck. My grandmother married at 18; after her husband’s early death from cancer, she remarried at 40. She lived for decades with this man and untimately outlived him, marrying again at 70. All were great marriages. There is no “window” you have to meet.
Well especially the women that now have their careers today are the worst of all because of their greed and selfishness that is everywhere now unfortunately. And most of them are the biggest cheaters of them all as well.