Just in time for Valentine's Day, the world has found its anti-Cupid. Her name is Lori Gottlieb, and she's a pretty, 42-year-old single mom who will be on the Today Show tomorrow. So why is the blogosphere calling for her head!? She just wrote a book called "Marry Him: The Case for Settling for Mr. Good Enough," advising you to, among other things, give the online date with bad breath a second chance, and not ix-nay a guy over his unfortunate taste in denim.
In a word, she's urging you to settle, so as not to wind up alone like she did. And when I finished the book, I turned to my brand-new husband (I got married in September) and said: This is the smartest relationship book I've read in years.
I know, I know -- I can hear you going, "But, but, BUT!" I can hear my friend, who went on so many online dates she actually created a spreadsheet to keep track of them all, telling me at brunch on Sunday, "I don't like the word settle. I couldn't will myself to go out with someone again if there was no chemistry."
And she's right. The thing is, the most unsettling part of the book for me was the word "settle," because, despite the title, that's not exactly what Gottlieb's espousing. She's simply suggesting you not walk in the shoes of her younger self: A very particular girl who wrote guys off indiscriminately, for all the wrong reasons, for too long. And, when you are ready to settle down, look for someone who's going to be a good partner, rather than, say, a master sexter with bedroom eyes.
Though those are nice qualities in a guy too, and you needn't trade him in tomorrow.
That's the thing about this book: I think it's got a lot of truth to impart if you're nearing 30, and know that you want the whole enchilada -- marriage, kids, dirty diapers -- but consistently don't date the type of guy who's likely to change them with you.
I also think the message is timely: We're a generation that's been weaned on six seasons of "Sex and the City" and too many romantic comedies. I mean, I'm all for cute sundresses and brunch, but along with that dose of girl power, we've been fed some seriously messed up relationship messages. How long has Big been stringing Carrie along now? And breathless fans take this as proof that it's true love.
Truth is, it's far more acceptable to waltz around town swilling Cosmos in your tu-tu at 22 than 42, and if they're going to, the "Sex and the City" characters should have come with warning labels:
"In real life, Carrie is married with three kids."
Which brings us back to Gottlieb, who's been skewered on blog after blog for the book's following passage:
"It's kind of like the graphic anti-drunk driving public service announcements that show people crashing into poles and getting killed. If they just told you, 'Don't drink and drive,' you might think, 'Yeah, I know, but I can have a couple martinis, right?' It's not until you see people ending up brain-dead, lying in a coma in the hospital and surrounded by beeping monitors, that the message has an impact.
"In the same way, if you don't see how easily people can end up alone by making the dating mistakes I did, you won't be dissuaded from making the same mistakes yourself. I had to show the reality of being single at my age because I used to be like a teenager who thinks he's invulnerable to drunk driving accidents -- it's all in the abstract, something that happens to other people, but would never happen to me. It never occurred to me that I would become another dating casualty. I had to show, in grim detail, the accident that my dating life became so that you could make choices you wouldn't look back on later and regret."
How could she, bloggers spluttered. As one wrote, acidly: "Yes, she just compared being single to being brain-dead after a drunk-driving accident." No. The comparison Gottlieb made -- using as much hyperbole as possible, so people would (ahem) get the message -- is this: If you're not careful, you could wind up like me.
She isn't saying there's anything wrong with being single for the rest of your days, unless that's not how you want to spend them. What she is saying is that she wanted to get married, and have biological kids with a husband, but that's not how her life -- which is still okay, thank you very much -- panned out. And she's writing her book in the hopes that that won't happen to you.
In her twenties, Gottlieb was -- though she doesn't say this outright -- a catch, sure her Mr. Right was around the next corner. She spent the next two decades trying to find him, while, like the rest of us, juggling a career. Then, at 37, she decided to take a break, and instead of signing up for another online dating site, registered to find a sperm donor and have a baby while she still could. Now she has a young son she loves "ecstatically," she writes, but still no man she feels that way about.
What she realizes, too late, is that dating doesn't get easier as you get older. Think speed-dating is the devil now? Try it at 41, when, even if they try to police the age groups by decade, the only dudes who show up to date you are fresh off registering at the AARP. It's not a pretty picture. And that part of the book can be bleak. But I applaud her for telling the truth, and throwing herself under the bus for the rest of us.
Fact: It sounds like Gottlieb was pretty picky in her youth. Nobody's saying you can't blackball a guy for a lot of perfectly good reasons. Though those women with checklists are out there, too: I personally plan to loan my copy of "Marry Him" to my friend who refuses to date anyone with "recessive genes" -- by that she means blonds, redheads and any guy under 6'0.
Mind you, she's 35, and 5' 3."
But if you're 22 or 26, get back on the bar and keep dancing. I, too, dated in a big city for a decade, and there's a time when a guy should be judged by nothing more than his potential to make an excellent post-mortem brunch story.
Maybe, like eye cream, this book will be lost on you until the day you actually need it. And here's hoping you never will.
Until then, just keep this in mind. My friend from brunch, the one with the spreadsheet? She, like me, finally got engaged. At the time, we were both 33.
In my case, I'd finally kicked my twentysomething habit of falling hard for foreign accents and took up with a good guy who only speaks one tongue: English. But he also boasts a wicked sense of humor and the sort of devotion that doesn't need conjugating.
My friend, a film buff with a taste for subtitles and charismatic gay pseudo-boyfriends fell head-over-heels for an Arby's-loving sports nut who happens to think she's the best thing since powdered roast beef. Huh?
"I wouldn't have looked at him in my twenties," she laughed when we were out last Sunday. "I thought I wanted someone who was into foreign films."
I don't think either one of us thinks we've settled. It's more that we grew up. And I think all Gottlieb's urging you to do is use your perch on the bar to scan the room for nice guys you might otherwise overlook -- because you might find they grow on you when the time comes not to settle, but to settle down.
Agree? Disagree? Hate me and Lori Gottlieb, too? That's fine. Tell us why you would or wouldn't "settle."
More Good Stuff on the Web:
The scoop on Pro-Choice Superbowl parties (Tres Sugar)
Can you date somebody whose English is... eh... not so good? (The Frisky)
Redacted Guy: The Gay Man Who Made Me Believe in Love (Lemondrop)
Hilarious celeb lookalikes 











Comments:
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Thursday 04 February
By sngl35male
Dated, got knocked up, and ended up bitter and alone at forty would probably be a better title...
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Thursday 04 February
By cherry
I am a 50 year old women and divorced for 5 years. I agree with the author you have to settle. Face it all the good guys are married or in committed relationships. I also am not into looks, once you get to know someone looks go away and you start to love that person for who they are. Hey Nick, I'm 5'2' and I go out with plenty of guys your height or even shorter. Where do you Live!!!
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Thursday 04 February
By Me
Another marketer selling a book. You can spend time reading this trash or go out and meet people. Maybe this author will impregnate herself and grow her own husband. By the way...where's the tv shows that have a husband and wife that get married and stay together as life partners? Oh, real life is too boring for ratings...no drama....no controversy. Wake up people...and look at the rest of these garbage posts -- this is being promoted. duh.
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Thursday 04 February
By Melissa
My thoughts are what's wrong with being single? Married, done that, have a baby? yep that too. When the baby went to college I kicked good enough out and now I treasure MY LIFE. Selfish never felt so good. Men in the forties are all desperate, not the women!
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Thursday 04 February
By LQQking GOOD
Guys & Gals, just be happy and find someone who is semi compatable. As we age the beauty of our youth goes out the door! Learn to accept what you wouldnt in your 20's. Ive been married 25 yrs to the same woman, she was and still is a plain jane looking gal. I was just an average guy. Neither would be voted best looking in any contest, but thats not what makes our buddy marrige so unique! I work with a guy who is 59 yrs old and hes constantly coloring his grey hair, and trying to look like hes 30 ish.. I keep telling his to GROW UP. Guess what? hes been alone now for 12 straight years!! Trust me hes very lonely.. But he wants that young thang!! Good luck!!
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Thursday 04 February
By mr happy
women settle????are you kidding me. hey guys, read war and peace 'NEVER GET MARRIED UNTIL YOU ARE USEFUL FOR NO OTHER PURPOSE" quit being ashamed of yourselves. is it really your destiny to be a mule for someeone else's dream?
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Thursday 04 February
By Craig
When women are in their late teens-20's they want the bad guys. But that's not the type to marry. They discover this TOO late. By the time women grow up and figure it out, all the nice guys are married. What's left? The bad guys!...lol
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Thursday 04 February
By swimdude
Or the guys that are so tired of the games women play that they are no longer interested in dating them.
Thursday 04 February
By wise_s
Once again, women think they know everything about relationships. They should just break down and admit that they know nothing.
Reply
Thursday 04 February
By cultpop
Great advice from a lifelong anorexic whose body issues clearly make any reasonable assessment of long-term relationships impossible. We also remember the lies at Fox. And at Warners. An attention-seeking piece of garbage. DO NOT BUY.
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Thursday 04 February
By csulli
The book that changed my 15 year single status was "Getting to I Do" by Patricia Allen. I dated all the wrong men my entire life and when I read that book, I learned I didn't need to settle for Mr. Wrong or change me. I had to know who I was, and as soon as I figured it out, I met the man I've been very happily married to for 12 years. BTW, I was 45 when I read the book. For so many years I was Ms. Strong and Independent, when all I wanted was to feel secure that someone was watching my back. Is my husband perfect? No. For me, he is, but for you he might not be. So, first, figure out who you are, what is your language of love (mine is service. Don't buy me flowers, but do the dishes and I think you are king!), then read this book and you may find your bliss with the internet guy who had bad breath on the first date (that is why there is gum or breath mints.)
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Thursday 04 February
By Mark
Looking at the young women out today, I see that too many of them have this sense that they can do whatever they want (as opposed to men) and get whatever they want. There is this blown out sense of over entitlement. Many, I predict, should read this book because many are on their path to ending up alone. There is an old saying: The good ones are taken before 30 and that still seems to ring true.
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Thursday 04 February
By kismkat
@ 46 I could have wrote the book myself . I was married for 10 yrs . To the wrong man long and short he was what I thought I wanted in my 20's and not what I wanted in my 30s .An alcoholic . I do however kick myself over and over when I think about all the nice guys I dated and threw to the curb . I dated so many men that would have been a much better choice . Now in my late 40s I never thought I would be single .2 teenage daughters who are college bound . Pickings are slim for me .My advice much of the same to the girls in their 20s is pick one , dont write him off , does he have the potential to be successful , gracious and loving ? If you answer yes run to the alter the days slip by 2 fast and the pic becomes less . Truth after 40 your husband and her husband are much of the same in the looks deptment .But dependable , goes a long way . I was too picky @ 28 I wanted to have children settled for a man I knew was the wrong choice .Today when I think back on that nerd with out the zest I kick myself . Of all the men I dated how and why did you end up with him ? From chip and dales to ceos , actors famous musicians I ended up with useless . But that nerd with the glasses hes looking so much more practical to me now . When they drop off their kids , school shows , parties only he is married to some other hot over 40 women . When she boards their cesna , yacht , vacations ,on every school holiday , treats her like a queen , kids drive new cars . I kick myself ok so the drunk had a full head of hair moved like Gene Kelly on the dance floor had a golden tounge. But never could he fill the nice guys shoes .After 10 yrs I got a divorce and remain alone slim pickings and growing old alone . who would have thought ? not me after all I dated some of the greatest guys and I ended up alone . When they facebook me or hear about their successes and he looks so much more handsome to me today . I silently covert his wife and say how lucky is she .I could have had him and I did .What where you thinking idiot . Women this women is right on target and although my life is not bad ,it would be nice to have had someone dependable caring and gracious , all while making me his queen .
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Thursday 04 February
By Susan
Um, no. You couldn't have written this book yourself. You can't even compose as comment that makes sense.
Thursday 04 February
By Andrea
Screw marriage,,,,,incorporate! I am a 40 something lesbian and have the same problems....would rather be alone than with someone I don't love. That is a cruel thing to do....so make nice...choose boundaries and incorporate, Dissolution is easier than a divorce! (or adopt a pet and/or stop by a store somewhere and get a vibrator...not necessarily in that order!)
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Thursday 04 February
By r.
Way to go! I totally agree with the author, good luck with your book!
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Thursday 04 February
By John
There's no secret, no answer. You could settle, or not, and still have a 50-50 chance the relationship will make it or not make it. At one point, I settled. I thought, close enough, we'll start a life, buy a house, have a kid. And we did. And nine years into it I got home one day and she and her stuff were gone.
Poof. Settling wasn't the answer.
I answered personal classifieds. Came close a couple of times to getting married. Things went wrong. Then I met a woman who was fantastic! No settling! The real deal. We're in our 12th year of marriage, and continually pledge our renewed committment to each other.
Settling, as a relationship strategy, will not guarantee a lasting relationship, nor is there any such thing as "Mr. or Ms. Right." Any more I agree with Woody Allen regarding relationships, it's largely matter of luck. I would also add both partners have to set staying together as a goal, and be willing to work on the relationship towards that end.
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Thursday 04 February
By Heidi
I never settled. I dated many and left. I married 3 times and divorced twice. It was easy. I am 44 with no children and very happy with my relationship now. He is not "mr good enough" i rather be single (sorry to hear about people who are affraid of it) than be with someone who is not my ideal match. I'm lucky he found me and I would not settle for less than the one ive been with for 7 years now. He treats me like a queen and he gets all the respect and love he deserves for it. He is romantic, affectionate, an amazing business partner and a very fun, and funny best friend. I was never affraid to be single. If you are, of course settle, but if you have a busy life, career and fun friends, I never saw the need to.
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Thursday 04 February
By L Hatcher
I see the authors point and applaud her adament rants. It's a wake up call for anyone who is seeking a spouse. I don't believe she is saying just find ANYONE; she is saying use your head AND your heart when looking for that someone special. If your too busy looking at your fantasy laundry list you will likely miss Mr. Right because there is NO Mr. Perfect (just like there is no Ms. Perfect). So many times I've seen a woman have this laundry list of what he should be (tall, handsome, rich or educated with a great career, witty, devoted, athletic, loves kids, etc....), and by contrast she is an average looking fat woman who works a mundane job, has little interests other than the television, can't cook, won't exercise, and thinks Bologna is only something you eat and couldn't possibly be a region in France as well. I purposely didn't put my first name.
You don't know if I'm a man or a woman, you don't know my background, education, or what I look like. I'm just a person with a point. Before you go judging people, including the author, take time to reassess what you need. Get your head out of the Cinderella story, stop pretending real life is the fantasy you have rolling around in your head, and go find someone your compatable with that you will love and adore.
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Thursday 04 February
By Wendy
I figured that one out a long time ago and met my husband 2 months before my 30th birthday. Now as my daughter enters her 20s I try to impart the same message. The problem is that there is always a dream couple, the girl that marries the rich handsome doctor (in my day), and women think they need to aspire to that...but life doesn't end with a wedding day. Lets see how Prince Charming is in 15 years, does he still look at his wife the same way? Who knows? Women need to realize that if they have goals for marriage and children, they need to find a man that will always be there for her, not just bring the envy of their peers.
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