You may have forgotten that single life is not constant partying and casual sex.
"If I were still
single..." my friend says as he stares at a woman from across the bar.
He loves his girlfriend, I think he's just had a few too many drinks — a
suspicion that's confirmed when he launches into an unprompted story
about "club chicks." People in long-term relationships tell stories
about their weirdest hookups or their craziest nights out the same way
an old man would sit on a porch and tell stories of how he could've
played college ball if he didn't blow out his knee senior year. A friend
rolls their eyes when their partner texts because they know they'll
have to end their night early. "You're so lucky," they tell our single
friends as they close out their tab. Or the classic, "If I had Tinder
when I was single..." Hell, lots of taken people still have Tinder. It's uncomfortable. But the real problem is, the whole thing is total bullshit.
There's nothing
wrong with being single. It's great, and you should do whatever makes
you happy.
This isn't an argument about whether being single or in a
relationship is better; you can't even compare the two. But if you're in
a relationship, you damn well better believe it's better, or you should
probably break up with your partner and stop complaining about it.
Either
you have minor complaints that you can work on (or accept), or you're
better off single. If you're just pining for the life of a
bachelor(ette) because you've been in the same relationship for four
years, there's no real excuse. Sure, when you were single, the sex never
got boring (when you had it).
Yeah, you didn't have anyone to answer to
and could come home whenever you wanted. But seeing it that way means
you're forgetting all the times you were lonely or felt left out or
wished you were in a relationship. It means you're negating the love and
support you're getting in a relationship. It means you're putting the
value of some independence above everything your partner brings to the
table. In reality, you don't miss being single. You just miss being
selfish.
Being single is hard as
hell. I can't even count the number of times single friends have
mentioned fears that they'll "be single forever" or complain about how
they're the third (or fifth or seventh) wheel when we go out. James, 26,
says he's irrationally worried about the dating pool shrinking.
"There's
a legit fear that the longer I'm out there dating, the less likely I'm
ever going to actually find someone, and eventually I'm just going to be
'that single guy,'" he says. Bisi, 28, says that she's wingwomanned
for a recently single friend who was out of the dating game for a while.
"She was like, 'Now what?'" Bisi says, "I just took her to a few bars
and got her to make a Tinder profile. She just kept expecting something
else to happen. As if guys were just going to be running at her
constantly on the street or something, or there was some kind of secret
handshake."
For every
crazy jealousy-inducing casual sex story, they have five more awkward or
downright unbearable dates. Or, you'll run into them and they'll say,
"Oh, I'm not dating that person anymore. I thought it was going
somewhere, but they just stopped answering my texts." Brutal.
But
being on the Internet 24/7 easily counters the IRL complaints we hear
from single friends. I'm constantly reading studies about how single
people are supposedly in better physical shape. Or how they have less debt and more friends. Even when studies show the benefits of marriage,
it's presented as somehow shocking. It's a "grass is always greener and
everyone is having crazy amounts of casual sex on that grass" type
deal. We romanticize the single life. Hell, some people are
still pining for it. Henry, 27, tried to explain it as "it's not like I
want to be single. I just want days where I can ... I don't know, just
punch out, I guess."
If
you're still really unsure whether you're missing something that never
existed or are actually miserable (but hopefully, you can tell when
you're miserable), just go have a night out with your friends. If you
feel like it's out of your system, you're fine. If it's the happiest
you've been in years, gather up your balls/ovaries and prepare your
breakup speech. There is a distinction between wishing you had a little
more freedom and secretly hoping your partner will dump you first so
you're not the bad guy.
So
don't sit there and pine for single life. Make a choice and own
it. Your single friends, the ones you're so jealous of? They're dating
because they want to have the thing you have. That's literally what you
miss. You miss the act of trying to have the thing you already have.
You're lucky. Deal with it.

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