Question for Happy Singles

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TheIndianGirl

Guest
#1
This question is for happy singles who are not actively seeking a relationship (not online dating, etc). What keeps you happy despite being single? I would like to know more meaningful reasons, such as you are helping others etc not because you have the option of eating cereal for dinner and not worry about cooking.
 

Magenta

Senior Member
Jul 3, 2015
55,971
26,101
113
#2
I found the last part of your last sentence funny, do please excuse me for laughing :D

My understanding of happiness is that it is dependent upon temporal circumstances, happenstance.

Although in the Bible, on the famous sermon on the mount discourse, when Jesus says all those "Blessed is he who... " - one interpretation of "blessed" is "happy." I think what we are to aim for more than happiness is contentment with our lot in life, so to speak. To do otherwise is to chase after things that are perhaps not meant for us or even not in our best interests. Certainly if God has other plans for us than the ones we make for ourselves that are not aligned with His, we may find ourselves more miserable than we were before when things do not work out as hoped/planned. Even so, if we learn from our mistakes along the way, we benefit immensely as we continue to keep moving forward despite perceived setbacks, and become clearer within ourselves as to what works, and what does not. God does have a plan for each of us, and He does know us, and what is good for us, better than we do :D "The joy of the Lord is my strength." :)

 

Going_Nowhere

Well-known member
Nov 10, 2019
1,710
927
113
#3
Does there have to be a reason? Maybe I just like being alone. What, I can't be happy if I'm single? Come on now. :p
 

Lanolin

Well-known member
Dec 15, 2018
23,460
7,177
113
#4
The joy of the Lord of course. Isnt this a christian forum??? Who else would it be.
 

Lynx

Folksy yet erudite
Aug 13, 2014
24,925
8,172
113
#5
The joy of the Lord of course. Isnt this a christian forum??? Who else would it be.
I think we can explain it a bit more completely than that. This IS a Christian forum after all.

WARNING: Long post ahead!

What keeps you happy despite being single? I would like to know more meaningful reasons, such as you are helping others etc not because you have the option of eating cereal for dinner and not worry about cooking.
It's not a matter of being happy DESPITE being single, as though being single is an obstacle I have to get around before I can be happy. It's not a problem or deficit that I have to ignore in order to make myself believe my life is okay. Being single or married doesn't factor into happiness. The people I know who are unhappy with life as single people are generally unhappy when they get married... IF they get married, if they can find somebody who can put up with their constant unhappiness... and the people I know who are happy as single people are generally happy when they are married (unless they marry a very wrong person who makes them unhappy.)

It's also not a matter of being happy BECAUSE I'm single. (Although there are certain people I have to be around on the job... they make me very glad I am single, because when I clock out I can leave all their drama behind and go to my nice, peaceful home. But I am not happy specifically because I am single, just because I am not married to people like them.) :p I know some people who are almost militant about remaining single, adamantly denying there can ever be any good in marriage. They believe married people are living a lie if they claim to be happy. I understand why they feel that way - they have been through bad marriages, or know people who have endured them. But I'm not happy because I'm single any more than I am happy despite being single.

I am happy because I'm alive and life can be good. (It can also downright suck sometimes, no use denying it, but on the balance it's mostly good.) Whether I'm single or married, life is here to live and experience.

With all of life to live, focusing on one thing I lack - a spouse - and making that my excuse for being unhappy, is like a king having a large kingdom, but not being able to sleep at night because of this one little village high in an easily defended mountain that will not submit to his rule. Like this king who will send many troops to a needless death to satisfy his "need" for one small thing that doesn't really matter, many people will throw all their resources into desperately trying to secure a spouse... just for the sake of checking off that box in their list of "things one should do with a life." We are told we should get married in order to be happy and content and have a complete life, and we are told a person who does NOT find a spouse is not really living a complete life yet. Life ain't a shopping list and marriage is not something you absolutely have to have in order to be successful at living.

I am happy because there is a lot of life to live, and I live it better if I'm happy. You can choose to be content - that's why the Bible tells us repeatedly to be content. You aren't born being content or unsatisfied. You are not made content by things that happen to you or things you have. You have to decide to be content or not.

I have all I need, almost everything I want... and the things I might want that I don't have are not going to ruin my enjoyment of what I do have. I'd have to be a fool, or at least very ungrateful, to gripe about not having a spouse.

Now when I do find a lady and we eventually get married, I suppose I will also be happy then... if I picked the right kind of lady. I'm not going to rush it though, and just run after any kind of woman just for the sake of being able to claim "Okay, I have won the game, I am now officially married." I'm way too happy with my life as it is to risk ruining it so rashly.
 

seoulsearch

OutWrite Trouble
May 23, 2009
14,943
4,586
113
#6
This question is for happy singles who are not actively seeking a relationship (not online dating, etc). What keeps you happy despite being single? I would like to know more meaningful reasons, such as you are helping others etc not because you have the option of eating cereal for dinner and not worry about cooking.
Hello there, I.G. :)

Please forgive me but I smiled as well at the last part of your post. Yes, I'm one of THOSE singles who appreciates being able to grab cereal for dinner or not cooking at all (in fact, tonight's "dinner" was brownies because I've been eating chicken and vegetables all week.) But please allow me to explain WHY I've learned to appreciate those things.

I think Magenta hit the nail on the head when she mentioned contentedness. For whatever reasons (sometimes due to my own bad decisions,) the vast majority of my experiences with dating and relationships have been negative, so in what will seem like the most cynical answer ever, I have learned to be single simply because for me, my state of singleness is truly the lesser of other known evils.

Why do I appreciate being able to choose not to cook or just grab cereal? Because I was in a relationship in which I would be exhausted after work but would have to check on my then-boyfriend's kids and spend half the evening trying to find and prepare something for them. And if one said they didn't like this or the other didn't want to eat that, I had to try my best to work around what I actually could get them to eat because I didn't know if their father had been coherent enough during the day to remember to feed them.

Why do I sometimes appreciate being alone? Because I don't think singles often realize how much work it really is and how complicated it can be to coordinate your life with another person. The last time I was trying to do so, we each realized the incredible amount of work and expense it would take. Since it was long distance, it would have cost at least $3000 a year to be able to spend regular times together, and even when we got to see each other, the other person would most likely be working. And because we often worked opposite hours, I didn't want to trouble him by bringing up anything that was bothering me when I knew he'd only be getting 4 hours of sleep. I'd tell myself, "I'll tell him this weekend," but he'd be working a double shift, so I either just wouldn't tell him or would just figure things out on my own. I felt more alone trying to figure out a life with someone than I did when I was actually alone.

Why do we all think we want a significant other? Because we long for someone to be there with us, to talk to about what's on our mind, to be our date on holidays and birthdays and at family events... But from what I found, even if it isn't a long-distance situation, I would still often find myself alone, whether due to distance, opposite working schedules, other obligations (family members who need us, etc.,) or maybe he just didn't want to go (for example, to a family funeral I attended.) I started to ask myself, "WHY am I putting all this work into trying to be with someone when in reality, I'm STILL alone during all of life's major events?"

In other words, there were many, many times when I was supposedly "with someone", but was actually MUCH more lonely or alone than I am now.

Single life at least gives me choices (if even to do nothing at all) that I didn't have when I was in relationships. If I want to do something or go somewhere, I don't have to wait on someone else's schedule or permission as to whether or not I can spend the money -- I can just go -- and I don't have to feel any disappointment if someone can't/chooses not to go with me.

I don't have to worry about whether or not I'm keeping someone's attention or if they're talking to someone else; I don't have to deal with finding images or pictures on someone's phone or computer; I don't have to feel like I'm competing with every other woman out there. I can just be me, and I can make friends without pressure or expectation.

And just to throw in a bit of realness here -- so I know another question many singles are going to ask is, "Well what about sex? The only way we can Biblically have sex is to get married, and I don't want to go my whole life without sex!"

I totally understand this and I think it's a struggle that everyone goes through. But can I be honest for a minute?

I'm the type of person who will ask people what their lives are REALLY like if they'll let me, because I want to know what's happening behind the facades. I try to be as respectful as possible and only have conversations within their boundaries. Over the years, I've been fortunate enough to have a few married people talk to me honestly about what married life is like. And do you know what I've found? There are a whole lot of married people who found out that marriage wasn't what they thought it was.

Marriage didn't cure their porn addiction or soothe their insecurities. It didn't fulfill all their fantasies or perceived needs. It didn't heal their past abuse. And a lot of couples have stopped having sex for whatever reasons, or are in situations in which one wants to but the other one doesn't, and it's a constant source of friction and resentment between them. I've met a lot of people who are married... and extremely lonely.

I'll be honest in that sometimes, the only thing that keeps me going is the hope that maybe, just maybe, someday my situation might change, and I even have some control over choices that might bring about that change. But for those who are married and in unhappy situations, they have no other option than to hope things will change with their spouse, or to accept God's grace to live with the way things are.

Part of what keeps me happy in my single life is knowing that it may not be permanent. And if it is? That's for God to decide, and He's molding me to accept whatever happens as time goes on. If you would have asked me 10 or even 5 years ago, I would have told you I was miserable and needed to find and marry someone as soon as possible, so you can see how much He's changed me.

I'm certainly not trying to disrespect marriage in any way. I have nothing but the utmost respect for those who make their marriages work and are raising families, whether single or married.

But when you ask me how I can be happy even though I'm single, I have to say that I was, in a way, blessed to have my own personal "rainbows and sunshine" views about romantic love shattered to dust, and somewhere in the midst of several years passing by and all the broken pieces, God brought me to a place where I can appreciate the simplicity of facing life with a more realistic perspective.

God bless you, I.G., and thanks for the excellent post!
 

Lynx

Folksy yet erudite
Aug 13, 2014
24,925
8,172
113
#7
In the meantime I'm taking a page from Hobbes' playbook.

CALVIN: "If we're just going to die, what's the point of living?"
HOBBES: "Well there's seafood..."
CALVIN: "I don't know why I even TALK to you before dinner."

(link to the comic in question) https://www.gocomics.com/calvinandhobbes/1986/10/16

There's seafood, and fruits of all kinds, and roasted corn, and jumping on a trampoline, and driving my car around the curves of a back road, and scratching my dog behind the ears, and don't even get me started about ice cream! And that's not even scratching the surface of all the things to be happy about in life.
 

cinder

Senior Member
Mar 26, 2014
4,328
2,361
113
#8
So to summarize what I would say as others have already written essays similar to what I would have written. I'm a happy single because I choose to be as happy and positive as I can be, and I have yet to meet anyone who both convinced me that my life could or would be happier if I spent the rest of it with him and wanted to try to make that a reality.
 

Dino246

Senior Member
Jun 30, 2015
24,703
13,385
113
#9
I'm just here 'cause someone mentioned cereal.

As long as it's real cereal, not some choco-frosted sugar bomb c**p.

(With apologies to Bill Watterson)
 
Jul 20, 2019
1,228
882
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#11
Freedom, the sense of self, no burdens, no compromises or arguments, authenticity, not having to appease another person, and yes, the fact I can veg out and sit here in front of the computer all day eating potato chips and not feel the slightest guilt in doing so. I know the garden needs weeding, I know the house and car both need cleaning, but here I am!
 
T

TheIndianGirl

Guest
#12
Thank you all for your honest and wonderful responses. I admit being single allows for a lot of freedom to do whatever we want including the small things like eating whatever we want whereas with a family you'd want to provide "proper" meals, putting off laundry because you want to do something else, etc. I would also prefer to spend Christmas/other holidays with my own parents rather than split up vacation time with in-laws (but I realize/accept that is the reality of life). A lot of people would feel sorry for someone walking into an empty apartment/house (I've heard people say this), but I enjoy being able to "veg out." I'm an only child so I know very well how to spend alone time. I'm usually fine being alone but sometimes, snap, I would like company but it seems people are busy, so it is sometimes difficult to feel positive. I sometimes miss my friendships from my 20s where I had friends to hang out with on quick notice. Now, people are involved with their boyfriends/spouses or kids. I guess I started this post because sometimes I feel "stuck" being single, and that doesn't create positive feelings. Part of this is my own doing in that I do not seek relationships, since I'm cautious of marriage based on my own observations. Nevertheless, I still have not "fallen in love" (that was reciprocal) so I guess I have great expectations on that. I remind myself that Jesus was single, and probably also women Martha, Mary, Mary Magdalene, etc. were single so I feel better. I also remind myself that God has great plans for me.

I have also broadened my view of marriage, that I do not feel a sense of urgency to get married (but sometimes I do) and that it is fine to get married later in life which is becoming more acceptable.
 

Lynx

Folksy yet erudite
Aug 13, 2014
24,925
8,172
113
#13
I have also broadened my view of marriage, that I do not feel a sense of urgency to get married (but sometimes I do) and that it is fine to get married later in life which is becoming more acceptable.
A lot of people feel there is an urgency in finding a spouse, either because we want to get started having kids before we are too old to raise them, or because we feel there will not be any good spouses left because everybody else has already taken the good ones.

If you have an interest in raising a family, there can be cause for a sense of urgency. If you are just afraid all the good ones will be taken... well...



The full analysis is of course much more complicated, but I can't stick around to discuss it because I have to get ready for a date. :cool:
 

Lynx

Folksy yet erudite
Aug 13, 2014
24,925
8,172
113
#14
An observation about happy single people... not to be confused with Happy Shiny People.

If two happy single people pair off, they have a happy life to share with each other.

If a happy single person pairs off with a grumpy single person, the happy one won't be able to be happy enough to make the grumpy one happy. This does not have to be a problem... a happy person and a grumpy person can coexist... but it usually becomes a problem when the grumpy one believes the happy one should be making the grumpy one happy too.

If two grumpy single people pair off... Look out!
 

kinda

Senior Member
Jun 26, 2013
3,679
1,435
113
#15
Thank you all for your honest and wonderful responses. I admit being single allows for a lot of freedom to do whatever we want including the small things like eating whatever we want whereas with a family you'd want to provide "proper" meals, putting off laundry because you want to do something else, etc. I would also prefer to spend Christmas/other holidays with my own parents rather than split up vacation time with in-laws (but I realize/accept that is the reality of life). A lot of people would feel sorry for someone walking into an empty apartment/house (I've heard people say this), but I enjoy being able to "veg out." I'm an only child so I know very well how to spend alone time. I'm usually fine being alone but sometimes, snap, I would like company but it seems people are busy, so it is sometimes difficult to feel positive. I sometimes miss my friendships from my 20s where I had friends to hang out with on quick notice. Now, people are involved with their boyfriends/spouses or kids. I guess I started this post because sometimes I feel "stuck" being single, and that doesn't create positive feelings. Part of this is my own doing in that I do not seek relationships, since I'm cautious of marriage based on my own observations. Nevertheless, I still have not "fallen in love" (that was reciprocal) so I guess I have great expectations on that. I remind myself that Jesus was single, and probably also women Martha, Mary, Mary Magdalene, etc. were single so I feel better. I also remind myself that God has great plans for me.

I have also broadened my view of marriage, that I do not feel a sense of urgency to get married (but sometimes I do) and that it is fine to get married later in life which is becoming more acceptable.

If you ever feel bummed out about being single again, just have some samosas and pakoras, than thank God for such a wonderful meal.

If your still down, watch a Christian Bible Teaching, and take a nap after.

If you still need encouragement, try to help someone out, you will be glad you did.

If all else fails, pray about it, than pray some more.

If you tried all these proven ways to be at peace and they are not working, start a marriage thread in the singles forum. Those are always so much fun. Marriage threads are the best. Why can't we have more marriage threads? If there isn't a new marriage thread every day, I will be so disappointed. (joking)

If you can make samosas and pakoras, I will be your friend. So tasty! I love Indian food!
 

Lanolin

Well-known member
Dec 15, 2018
23,460
7,177
113
#16
naps are good cos nobody disturbs you when you having a nap and are single.
can you imagine all the rigmarole if you were not single, and wanted to take a nap. it would have to be scheduled with your partner and everyone else.
 

Tinkerbell725

Senior Member
Jul 19, 2014
4,216
1,179
113
Philippines Age 40
#18
Knowing that God loves me deeply keeps me grateful and happy whether in good times and bad times. Whether there will be a spouse in the enigmatic future or not, God is already there so everything is fine.

Other things that bring happiness to me: the world that is generally evil can be a happy place too

Food
My dogs
My job
Photography
Plants
Swimming
Hiking
Cooking
Funny videos, movies, etc
Waterfalls
Ocean
Nice places
And many more
 
Jul 6, 2020
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#19
I love God. Its a joy in the morning to great him. It is a comfort at night to trust him with my day. He has my back and listens to my hopes and dreams and struggles and wants my best and is always on my side.
Also he does not talk that much, mostly lets me talk and puts me in my place if I get out of line.
I rely on it when I go forward doing whatever it is on my heart to do.

I have had that damaged in a bad relationship before.
Why would I want anything that would not make it better but worse

Seriously seek first the kingdom of God and all his righteousness ... you should know the rest.

Focus on adorning your self on the inside becoming pleasing God through faith and obedience rejecting fearful thinking. fixing every bit of your hope on Him.
 
Jul 6, 2020
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#20
Jesus takes a nap in the storm...Luke 8:23
I totally love the storms!
I would be like Jesus come check his out, its amazing!
Right up to the point where i would be, ok that is amazing enough, your turn to steer.
There is the lake in south america where there are hundreds of lightening strikes each night.
I totally want to go there.