When Singleness
Kicks Into Survival Mode
Christa Farris Contributing Writer
"So, have you met someone
special yet?"
While this seemingly innocent question is always asked with the best
of intentions in the most polite manner possible, it's still the question dreaded by anyone who's single. Your palms become
sweaty, your heart starts to race, and if your answer is indeed "no," you begin searching for the best and most clever answer.
When
responding, you almost become your own publicist of sorts, touting your most convincing pitch in precise press release form.
"No, I guess it's just not the right time. I'm just taking some time out for me right now and focusing on work, hobbies et
el." And after you've said that-usually very unconvincingly-you think "Gee, I really get tired of giving this sorry answer.
I wish something would just change or that people would simply quit asking." After all, it wouldn't always seem so bad to
be single if we weren't constantly being prodded and reminded of this unorthodox, undesirable status.
But is being
single really as undesirable as we think? Can our "press release" answers to family and friends really come from an authentic
place of contentment in going solo until the right person comes along? I've been pondering this question a lot lately. Sure,
when Sunday morning rolls around, and I end up going to church by myself in a sea of happily married couples with adorable
children, I really feel it. Or when I'm out on a Friday night with my girlfriends among the hand-holding, kissing-each-other
in-public couples, I feel it. But for the most part, life without dating isn't really that bad. And in some cases, it's more
drama-free than when I am dating.
While it feels like a pat answer when I'm feeling particularly lonely, being single
is a time for figuring out who you are, what you like and who God wants you to be. When I think about how I was when attending
a Christian university and wanting more than anything to be married at 20 like everyone else, I thank God for his foresight
in not giving me what I thought I wanted at that moment. There's no way I was ready for it. No excuses there, just honesty.
Instead
of the more well-rounded person (and I don't mean weight-wise, mind you) I am now -- the person who spontaneously moved from
Minneapolis to Nashville to achieve my career dream of writing for CCM Magazine -- I would've been exactly like Julia
Roberts' character in Runaway Bride. Something that always stood out to me about the movie is that women are often
a lot like Maggie Carpenter. Even I was someone whose likes and dislikes often mirrored whatever man I was interested in at
the moment-whether that was true to myself or not. And ultimately by story's end, she even realized she had to figure out
what she liked and didn't like and pursue her personal and professional dreams to effectively function on her own before being
ready for a healthy marriage relationship. So while I still get frustrated at those nosy types who ask
me the dreaded "So have you met someone special yet?" question, I'm beginning to understand that for the most part, they're
just trying to make conversation. I'm still young but am at society's "right" age to get married, so of course they're going
to ask. And one day, I know the answer will be a different one.
But in the meantime, I have the unique opportunity
to grow and accomplish the dreams that God's put in my heart before all the joys and hassles of having a permanent roommate
begin. And that's a press release statement I don't have to cringe about making.
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