You know what really sucks for us guys? When we slip up and accidentally imagine being a single woman. Not because being a woman or being single is terrible, mind you. But because occasionally we remember that, as men, we don't have to explain why we're alone with the sheer maddening regularly that you all do. This thought has occurred to me at various points in my life but was made crystalline while at dinner this past weekend with my close friend, S.
S and I are both unmarried, uncoupled and in our 30s. Now, this makes sense for me. I'm slightly unhinged and haven't been on a third date since there were only two "Shrek" movies. There are only a few things I know with utter certainty: Grape Nuts contain neither grapes nor nuts, unicorns are real, and I'm only good at strange, psycho-sexual affairs that end in mutually assured isolation. But my friend S? She's gorgeous, smart, successful and funny.
I found myself wondering, Wait a damn minute, why is she single?
Then it hit me. Why is the sheer fact that she's a beautiful charming woman who's alone worthy of questioning? Why am I not asking why my charming and attractive friends are in relationships (or why my less attractive, less charming friends are)? There's a huge world out there of interesting people who shouldn't have to condemn themselves to a two-person chain gang digging trenches in their conjoining manacles so people don't wonder what's wrong with them.
Of course S wants to meet someone special. Relationships exist because being we want to love and be loved. We want someone to care about us, and we want to care for someone in a way no one else on Earth does. It's all as human as treating airport employees as if they have some providence over your delayed flight: "But the weather's fine -- why is it saying we don't take off until nine?"
Maybe You Haven't Met the Right Guy Because I'm What's Out There
Sure, you do get used to being alone after awhile, and sometimes in a good way. S and I talked about how our protracted singledom made the thought of actually having to date someone seem as strange and confusing as the choices my stupid cell phone's predictive text makes. (I'm trying to say "cool," you idiot phone, not "jazz." Why would I respond to my friend's text about getting a huge promotion with "hey, jazz!"?)
But while in my case, the problem may lie with me, I firmly believe that S just hasn't met anybody who does it for her. She has a great job and she's well adjusted and doesn't "need" someone to complete her. Me? I'm a huge mess, but my friends and family regard my single status as proof of my intelligence, patience and independence. I'm a man, and I don't have elephantiasis or a soul patch, so clearly I'm single by choice.
But S? She can count on being perceived as being too picky, too difficult, too proud. She can count on people asking if she's considered Match.com and if not, why not? And even worse, she can count on the news of her single status being met with the shock that usually attends the visage of the Virgin Mary appearing in a shrimp basket at Long John Silver's. Two things here: There should be no such thing as quick-service seafood, and my friend shouldn't have to take the time to explain herself to disbelieving mouth-breathers who refuse to live in a world where stunning blondes aren't rolling their eyes at their fat husbands.
Picky vs. Unwilling to Settle
Although she gets sad and feels lonely occasionally, and although she wants a family one day, she won't fake-laugh her way through life with a genuinely unfunny man because he's pretty swell otherwise and it's time. Disabusing someone of why a charming and smart woman like herself is still single shouldn't require the time it takes to explain string theory, yet S is constantly required to explain herself. (I would guess this goes for millions of single women out there as well.) This is such bullsh**.
S has remained single due to not settling for the cavalcade of men she's had in her life who weren't right and because she hasn't let the pressure of society, family and friends constantly asking her "Why are you still single?" get to her. She won't choose Mr. Good Enough, no matter what Lori Gottlieb says in her book about settling, because she's acutely aware of the epic chasm between Good Enough and Truly Good.
Speaking of that book, let me get this straight, Ms. Gottlieb: A woman no longer in her 20s should apparently deign to cohabitate with someone she's not really into because a single women in their 30s and beyond who want a relationship based on real love and true friendship and intellectual compatibility are unrealistic?

No offense Lori Gottlieb, but F you. Thank God you're not a playwright and weren't alive in the 16th century and that your existence didn't cancel out Shakespeare's, because I'm pretty sure "Some Guy and Juliet" wouldn't have had the same emotional resonance.
Advantage: Dudes
As a man I'm entitled to a certain idea in my head of the kind of woman I want to be with, and -- poof! -- I'm a romantic. As a woman in her 30s, S has a certain kind of idea in her head of the kind of man she wants, and -- voila! -- she's unreasonable.
In truth: S is the romantic. It's really the thing that turns people like her off from online dating. There is truly nothing wrong with it; it's a medium to meet people and as good a way to do so as any out there, probably better than most. But it's undeniably unromantic and increasingly specialized, involving algorithms and long questionnaires and has all the charm of being set up by that robot Jinx from "Space Camp." Where's the mystery? Where's the unimprovable feeling of something akin to fate having a hand? "If I hadn't stopped to tie my shoe, if I hadn't decided I needed to buy a cantaloupe, if I hadn't contracted acute paralysis of the liver in Ecuador and ended up hospitalized next to so-and-so ..."
Perhaps S needs to "put herself out there" more, as she's often told. Perhaps when push comes to shove she'll have to online date, or pick up some hobby that puts her in contact with different people, or learn how to animate yarn into a handsome prince. I really have no idea. All I know is she's great and she's single and, for the most part, she's happy. We all get lonely. People in couples are not immune. Some would argue there's nothing worse than being lonely in another person's company. Ask anyone who's ever dated someone they didn't really love or spent time on a New York subway.
The next time someone asks S why she's single, I hope she responds, "Because I haven't been lobotomized yet, you miserable bastard."
Even if it's her mom.
[Redacted] Guy is Lemondrop's anonymous single guy writer. He likes Steak-Ums, gardening on his roof deck and corresponding with serial killers. You can send him hate mail and love letters here, and follow him on Twitter.













Comments:
Add a comment
Sunday 25 July
By saichanya
I only WISH I had stayed single into my thirties. I was engaged at 19 to a man who promised family and financial stability, but he was physically abusive and kept me from having friends. A couple years later, I married Mr. Handsome and Charming, and put my career aside to have the baby he wanted to have. Then, when the baby actually came he offered no help of the time and cheated on me with teenage girls while I was busy caring for our son. I am tired of men (and some women) saying that men want young women because of their hotness. Not always true! At 29 and recently divorced I look and weigh the same as I did at 19 (and FYI, that's a size 2, so skinny women have relationships that fail, too, y 'know). Just as equally men want to marry women young before they get the chance to have confidence, experience, etc., to voice their own minds.
Reply
Monday 26 July
By toyen
I do have to say, at 29 I met my soon-to-be-husband online.
"Where's the mystery of online dating? Where's the unimprovable feeling of something akin to fate having a hand?"
In our case, the first glances were conveyed through photos, instead of bumping into each other out in the world. A big grin in his, artsy composition in mine, that drew us together.
Then later, we got to figure out all the myriad times in the same town for many years that we didn't quite meet. The coffee shop he worked at, I frequented. The concert we both attended. The college program we were both in.
There is magic to it, and maybe the interwebs just helped two shy folks along. Don't discount it...
Reply
Tuesday 27 July
By laurenjames
Thanks for this. I myself am only 22... and I have gotten to the point that I just lie about my relationship status. I hate, hate, hate being asked, "So, do you have a boyfriend?" because, once I say no, the next question is unfailingly, "Why not?"
"I don't know why not."
And then comes the sympathy pep-talk.
Worse than being single, I loathe and detest the sympathy pep-talk. "But you're so beautiful! You're so talented! You're so intelligent! You're so nice!" Yeah, I know I'm all those things (I mean, no point in being modest, that just makes the pep-talk last longer) but obviously being beautiful and brilliant isn't working for me?? I mean, how do you respond to that??
What really bothers me about the expectation of a woman to find a man (at any age, not just in her 30s,) is that anything else I'm passionate about, aside from a man, marks me as pathetic. I am a very devoted student - I start graduate school this year at the school of my dreams on a full ride, and I'm passionate about my subject of study. It seems like people think that the only reason I love what I do is because I don't have a man. I tend to think that, right now, I don't have a man because I love what I do and it eats all my free time, and am totally okay with that for the time being... Ugh. I just wish people would mind their own beeswax.
So, I lie. "Well, I just broke up with someone not too long ago... I don't want to talk about it." Works like a charm.
Reply
Tuesday 27 July
By Hardcore
S is already past her prime. Her sexual market value (i.e, replication value) is rapidly spiraling downwards to nil. Best she can hope for is a divorced man in his 40s or 50s....or a beta loser in his 30s who she doesn't respect or want to have sex with. American/Western women in urban enclaves are becoming troublingly delusional. Blame the feminzai movement of the 60s, the you-go-girl talk show circuit, and Sex and The City. Does anyone really believe that a rich alpha male like Mr Big would MARRY a dessicated shrew in her 40s? Wake up and get over yourself. And you wonder why American men are marrying foreign women in increasing numbers....
Reply
Friday 30 July
By Rah-Rah
Great piece! I too am in my 30s and single, and I too get the questions and looks as to "what's wrong with you?". Fabulous to read this from a man's perspective and not accepting to settle!
Kudos!
Reply
Saturday 31 July
By JJ
I saw a cartoon that amused me. It depicted a human skeleton dressed in female clothing and covered in cobwebs sitting dejectedly on a park bench. The caption: "Waiting for Mr. Right."
Reply
Saturday 31 July
By sa_rose
Sexism is about as dead as racism. Women are still the main housekeepers, chld rearers, husband supporters, ego protecting "little women" they have always been. Now she is just expected to bring home a paycheck as well. And don't be fooled. If I meet a guy in his mid 30's who's never been married, I wonder what's wrong with him. Is he picky? A romantic looking for his true love? Or a creep, a psycho, a commitment phobe who only wants notches in his sexual belt. It goes both ways, though I believe society in GENERAL, expects women to marry.
Reply
Tuesday 03 August
By John B
Frankly I wonder if this article was written by a guy or a woman pretending to be a guy. The gratuitous (first person) male bashing is one indicator. Also as an unmarried male in my late forties, I've been fending off the "why aren't you married?" question for two and a half decades and so have my peers. Strange that "his" experience is so different.
Reply
Friday 06 August
By Natalia
BRILLIANT
Reply
Monday 09 August
By Dat_Truth_Hurts
Mr. Right doesn't give a flying F%&%& about your career and accomplishments. Mr. Right is having sex with a younger girl. Youth is what men really want in a women, youthful looks, youthful energy and spirit - feminine. Degree and job title - not so much. Women like those.
George Clooney dated a waitress for awhile. Because she was young and hot.
Go ahead and wait ladies. You're squandering your only bargaining chip to get a great man each passing day.
Reply
Saturday 28 August
By LizC
I am so jealous of any woman who gets to date you. She is sooooo lucky. Of course as men only want young and hot I imagine you won't date her much past, what? Age 25? Then you'll dump her for the next 20 year old? I sure hope you look like George Clooney because that's the only way you'll keep getting the young and hot. Assuming you already are. Which I doubt.
Thursday 09 September
By Mo
Yes it's perfectly fine for men to be single in their 30's but single women these days will throw their temper tantrums and will make some BS up about this and call this sexist or they will try to flip it and say in some form of fashion that this is some kind of "sexual harassment". SHUT UP!! Women these days want to be this bachelorette for life and then they get all pissy and pissed off when their parents and grandparents bug the hell out of them asking them when they are going to get married. Well it's a fact ladies yes men can stay single longer simple because we don’t have biological clocks. It's a pure and simple fact women have the biological clock and they HAVE TO START SERIOUSLY THINK ABOUT MARRIAGE IN THEIR LATE 20'S TO VERY EARLY 30'S!! PLAIN and SIMPLE!! Yes it is too risky to try and start the "family" when you are in your 40's you have to start having babies when you are 35 (even that's kind of late and risky) but the very latest like 37. The media tries to tell women about how some of these celebs have their babies later in life around 40's but you know how rare that is?? That's just not REALITY and that's like one or two couple out of millions upon millions that were purely lucky to have children that late in life. Also single women just please do us a favor and drop your obsession with your heightism 5'8", 5'9", 5'10" is not short just GET OVER IT!!
Reply