This is one of those moments of self-discovery,
where I have thought that I have been pretty good about not caring what people
think of me, and I am starting to have doubts.
I guess the reason I felt like I was okay is that
I do not need people to like me. One thing I have found with my sisters and I
is that there are often people who don’t “get” us, but usually these are people
whom we don’t like anyway, and the people that we like and admire tend to enjoy
us a lot, so we felt fine with that. Related to this, I thought that if I did
not feel a need for approval from others, or to be conventional when the
convention was stupid, that I was good to go. I appear to be wrong.
For one thing, the other night I was talking to
a friend who has some interest in fixing me up with someone, and one of the
things she said about him is that he lives with his parents. Okay, I do not
live with my mother; my mother and sisters live with me. It’s my mortgage. I
have lived on my own, and one thing that has shown me is that I probably don’t
want to live completely alone and that finding good roommates is difficult, so
if the four of us have found an arrangement that works with us there is no
shame in that. I may have some sensitivity on this issue.
Also, for practical purposes, I would need
someone who has his own place, or could get his own place, because I think
bringing a husband into the mix would be awkward, and I certainly can’t evict
my family, so that’s not a selling point. I guess the point I want to be clear
on is that I am a fully-functioning adult in terms of my living arrangements.
If I am embarrassed about anything it’s not driving. Eek! There’s another one.
(But you know, Ray Bradbury never drove either.)
There has also been another one lately, in that
Julie and I are on a committee where due to illness, vacation, and schedule
conflicts, we have missed the last three meetings and activities. I do feel bad
about this. I guess part of it is that even if I might not care about the opinion
of the other people involved, I do care about fulfilling responsibilities, and
so it is frustrating on that level. Maybe it is worse when the perceived
conflict goes against my values, which kind of explains the first section,
because staying in a state of perpetual adolescence depending upon others would
be a value conflict for me.
I think that might be why the one issue, which I
thought was all I had to write about, bugs me so much, and that is about having
the right attitude as someone who is single and childless.
I remember once giving a lesson about not
putting off your joy, and since I was with a group of single women I did focus
on the family aspect of it, and enjoying what we have now. Most of the women
appreciated it, but there was one there who did not look at me or say anything
the entire time, and this was not surprising because she had a real problem
with being single. (She was also very much dependent on the admiration of
others, so I know that made things harder for her.) Anyway, I know people like
that, who cannot feel like anything is good until someone marries them, and I
don’t want to be like that.
At the same time, I know people who glory in
being single for the selfish reasons. Their money is theirs. Their time is
theirs, and they don’t have to deal with runny noses and teething and homework
and all of the nuisances that can come with family life, like having to
consider the needs of others. I am really not like this.
I always wanted marriage and children. I still
do, actually. I realize they would not be perfect, but single life isn’t
exactly perfect either—it’s just different. This is what I have, so I am trying
to enjoy it and do good things with it. I know being single gives me different
options. I had posted something about writing and a few friends mentioned
wishing they had time to write, and someday they probably will, but right now
they have jobs, and they are attentive mothers, and they have all of these
responsibilities that I don’t, which comes with a lot of frustration but also a
lot of joy. I know.
And yet it is something I worry about, giving
the impression that I am bitter and depressed (not usually), or selfish and
disdainful of children (not at all). It should be enough for me to believe that
my values are good, and that my choices are reasonable, and when a depression
spell comes along to just deal with it, but no, here I do worry about what
people think. And I wonder if that’s really that I worry about them, or that I
am not as fully reconciled to being single as I think, but seeing as I still
have these sensitivities about driving, household arrangements, and missing
meetings, and not even going into my occasional discomfort with how much I love
My Chemical Romance, maybe I really am just more insecure than I realized.
I guess I still have a lot of growing up to do.
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