Sunday, September 30, 2012

The sad reality of the single life

Being single can be a lot of fun...true story. I can spend my money however I want, hang out with whoever I want...essentially, I can do whatever I want without having to check in with someone else. In spite of this, there are certain aspects about being single that I really hate. My biggest sorrow is forming friendships with people just to watch them leave my life forever...well, maybe not forever. There are definitely friendships that I have made that continue to this day and probably will last forever, but usually when people move on, regular contact ceases, except of course to congratulate them on their engagement, pregnancy, and yearly birthday wishes (all made possible by facebook, of course). This is not due to lack of caring or negligence on anyone's part...you can just only have so many really close friends. Maintaining a close friendship with everyone you ever form any relationship with would be extremely time consuming. All the same, it is a sad reality, and it is even worse with guy friends, I think. Close friendships with girls, I have found, really can last through marriages, pregnancies, and almost anything, because I am also a girl. With guys, I have a hard time maintaining a friendship when they become involved with someone, particularly when they get married. Maybe this is just me, but I don't feel like I can hang out or even have a meaningful relationship with a guy when he is with another girl, regardless of whether or not I am secretly in love with him. That really is irrelevant...what matters is that this girl he is with will now slowly, but almost surely (especially in Mormon culture, we don't like to waste time), become the single most important person to him, as she should be really. I just feel incredibly awkward trying to have even a platonic friendship with them (and I think that really is just my own neurosis, I know several girls who do not have a problem with this).

I guess the best thing I can hope for is that everyone I meet and grow to love has been in my life at a specific time for a specific reason, to teach me something. This past week, someone actually asked me what it means when people say "Everything happens for a reason." He felt that it was a weird phrase and thought it was ridiculous that we would assume there is a specific reason for everything that happens. I told him that it is a phrase people like to tell themselves to make themselves feel better when something bad happens because maybe out of that bad thing, something good happened. Whether or not this is true, it helps everyone maintain some level of sanity to assume that life isn't random. So maybe I am just trying to make myself feel better, but I cannot believe that life is random. I believe that everyone I can call my friend has had an immeasurable amount of influence on the person I am and will become. I cannot wait to find a friendship that will last for eternity, a friend who will never leave my life...ever (all you single mormon kids know what I'm talking about). I like to think that maybe when this life is over, we will be able to see everyone we ever cared for and it will be one big, amazing reunion. Until then, I am so grateful for everyone who has been a part of my journey. I know I have gained something I would have never received without your presence in my life.

Monday, September 24, 2012

The unspoken rule of relief society sisters

What is the unspoken rule of relief society sisterdome? You do NOT go after the same guy! Women I think are born with the instinct to loathe all other women who are even potentially going after the same guy as them. Different girls have different ways of going about this...they may give the cold shoulder, talk badly about the other girl behind her back, or even become her best friend (keep your enemies closer, right?). Unfortunately, this basic instinct goes against what we as sisters in Zion stand for, and that is to love our relief society sisters. How can you love someone your biology dictates you should hate?

Why is this such a hot topic of singles ward drama? I really believe that it is often due to the lack of available guys. Most of the guys either make the girls feel uncomfortable or they hang out in their own little bubble of guy friends and don't talk to girls. This leaves a limited number of available, not scary, guys who actually talk to girls. I don't think guys realize that impressing a girl is not that hard...really you just need to talk to them. Do not act so interested as to scare them, but in general, if a guy will just talk to girls, inevitably at least a few will become interested. It is in this way that a man becomes the hot commodity, the scarce resource, the carcass being fought over by a herd of lionesses...and really, what guy does not kind of enjoy that?

Sunday, September 23, 2012

But if I miss this activity, maybe I will miss my chance!

Maybe I am just crazy, but is anyone else motivated to go to activities out of the sheer fear that maybe your magic moment was scheduled to happen tonight, and that if you don't go, you will miss it and be single forever? Of course this has happened for me pretty much zero times. I think I've only ever been asked out at an activity a handful of times...like once a year or so this will happen...but it is probably not even necessarily because I went to THAT fhe or THAT ward prayer (or maybe it is, who knows). In any case, none of those dates amounted to much.

So why do we convince ourselves that we will meet our future spouse based on the events of one activity? I blame the media! In the musical West Side Story, Tony and Maria meet at that dance. What if one of them was sick and didn't go? Then the greatest love story of all time would have never happened! What if Jack did not win his Titanic ticket in the poker game...or did, but on his run to the boat was tripped and missed the boat pulling away? Sure, he would have probably lived longer, but once again the greatest love story of all time would have never happened! I really think this is what motivates me (and motivates someone else, too, hopefully, or else I will probably feel like a crazy person) to go to activities...this off-chance that maybe at a munch and mingle, my eyes will lock with my very own Jack or Tony over a heaping pile of Hawaiian Haystacks and the greatest love of all time will be born!

"Oldie but goodie singles wards"

Oldie but goodie singles wards...this is the affectionate term I've heard a couple of my good friends use to describe the wards singles over the age of 31 are put in. These are basically ultra intense singles wards. For the Utah County area that a few of my over 31 years of age single friends reside in, only a certain, equal number of men and women are allowed in. Men usually have no trouble getting in, but women are often put on a waiting list to be admitted into this ward. You must have a current temple recommend, attend regularly, date regularly, and even sign a contract agreeing to several terms in order to be a member of this ward. That's not to say that going to the temple regularly or dating regularly is a bad thing. Still, this ward means business as far as getting people married.

Question...how do LDS kids even get to this age unmarried? Girls, I do believe, have a little less control over this. All of my girl friends who are at this stage are some of the most delightful people I know! Even the guys I know who are at this stage are NOT bad or weird guys. Girls want to be with them, so why don't they want to be with any of these girls? Maybe girls have been horrible to them in the past and they are afraid? I imagine the reason is different for everyone. I like to think that there is a reason for this, a good reason. The reason cannot possibly be that they are undesirable. I have seen plenty of undesirable people get married (for real, just watch an episode of Bridezillas), and that is not the case for any 31+ person that I know. Perhaps they have a greater purpose in this life, something they need to do. I like to think that the best relationships will be reserved for those who have waited faithfully and patiently for those blessings.