Thread: Purgatory: God witholding marriage from the single person Board: Limbo / Ship of Fools.


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Posted by nouwen (# 3103) on :
 
A friend of my recently cried all over me (and with tears runnning down her face) said "I am a married women, living in a single person's life".

This set me thinking about marriage and God's hand in it. As a post-evangelical / charasmatic, I've been brought up with a view of 'name it and claim it' or God will give us the desire of out hearts etc, etc, etc.

However, where does marriage for my friend fit in? What if she fails to find fulfilment in 'single' life but is never married. What if, deep within she knowns that her life needs ot be joined with another, but that 'other' never comes along. What theology helps this?

[ 21. October 2005, 07:37: Message edited by: Alan Cresswell ]
 
Posted by Paul W. (# 1450) on :
 
I find the theology of swearing at God and telling him where to stick his "gift of singleness" helps quite a bit. It's theraputic anyway.

Paul W
 
Posted by Emma. (# 3571) on :
 
maybe if she desperately *needs* another she needs to look at her reasons why and work on herself a bit first.....

desperation never really looks good.
 
Posted by Joyfulsoul (# 4652) on :
 
...As most of my friends are getting married, getting engaged, some have kids...

...it is easier for me to deal my single lot just knowing that the gift of life is currently enough for me. Nothing in this is life is certain not health, wealth, personal appearance, or relationships. I can be unhappy about many things or I can look at the many good things I do have, like my two eyeballs and two hands...etc.

None of this I guess has to do with God. Sometimes being a previous atheist helps. You don't blame God because there is no god to blame.
 
Posted by Emma. (# 3571) on :
 
Also...

marriage doesnt bring fulfillmennt, and can be as lonely as the "single life" at times...

Still, I do grant a nice cuddle, and someone there at the end of the day would be nice.
 
Posted by nouwen (# 3103) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Emma.:
marriage doesnt bring fulfillmennt, and can be as lonely as the "single life" at times...

Thank you for the obvious, we would never have guessed [brick wall]

My friend (and many who I know are single) do not tend to have a 'grass is greener' idea; rather their view is why am I stuck in this single life when I long go be connected.
 
Posted by hatless (# 3365) on :
 
What if I long to be a celebrity, but find myself condemned to non-entityhood? What if I am a rich man leading a poor man's life? What if, deep down, I know I am meant to be brilliant and witty, but can't break out of my dull and predictable personality? What if my true calling is to be single, but I find myself stuck in a marriage, connected to someone else, and surrounded by c/h/i/l/d/r/e/n emotional leeches?

I suppose I'm attacking the self pity of the single, and I'm married so have no business to. I don't know what it's like. I have heard people speak with great feeling about their hurt at unchosen singleness. I don't want to make light of it. But. There's plenty of muck to go round in life. And part of the problems of many of us is a foolish sense of being hard done by. As if it was someone's fault that we can't get married, or have bad teeth, or too many kids, or a dreary job, or a chronic illness, or such dreadful neighbours. We'd get on better if we didn't dwell on the unfairness. It shouldn't be like this, but it is, so ...
 
Posted by Laura (# 10) on :
 
She should get some hobbies and stop thinking about it so much. And she should figure out how to enjoy life alone. Tough love, maybe, but what's the alternative? She can't forcibly change her marital status. All she can change is herself.
 
Posted by Freddy (# 365) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by nouwen:
What if, deep within she knowns that her life needs ot be joined with another, but that 'other' never comes along. What theology helps this?

This is an important theme in the theology of my denomination. Here is a statement often taken to heart by people like your friend:
quote:
For people who desire true love, the Lord provides it, and if it is not found on earth, He provides it in heaven. This results from the fact that all true love and all true marriages are provided by the Lord.
I don't know how helpful it is to say that if you don't find someone on earth you will find them in heaven. I do think that it is true.

I like the idea that conjugial pairs are born and guided by divine providence towards each other throughout their lives. But this idea does raise a number of theological problems. [Paranoid]

[ 09. September 2005, 00:09: Message edited by: Freddy ]
 
Posted by Duo Seraphim* (# 3251) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Laura:
She should get some hobbies and stop thinking about it so much. And she should figure out how to enjoy life alone. Tough love, maybe, but what's the alternative? She can't forcibly change her marital status. All she can change is herself.

Everyone should have a hobby - something that engages them and which isn't work or sleeping. Having a full life is certainly better than staring at the walls and obsessing about how alone you are. Lots of friends and activities, a sense of engagement in the life of others - the fuller meaning of love in the "caritas" or "agape" sense. All of us single folk have to confront being alone and it certainly doesn't do to stare at the walls, bemoaning your fate.

But however full your life, if you feel the need to connect with and share your life with someone else in the marriage or partnership sense, then that need is not met, however many friends and actitivities you have.

I understand nouwen's friend to be feeling that particular lack, that there is a good that God has bestowed on others - someone to be their partner and to share their life - that He has denied her. And then it is reasonable to ask why.

The "why" is to do with the will of God, which I can only ever understand imperfectly. Is it some sort of Divine compliment: you are strong enough to live the life I intend for you, without a partner. Is it a question of releasing that person from the obligation to tend one relationship to use their talents to love on a wider basis say to love a community rather than simply one other person. Is it that you have not yet become the person you should be to participate fully in marriage? Is it simple bad luck or that God does not micromanage our lives? Did we fail to seize the oportunity God sent us? Did we try to form a partnership with someone who would have been wrong for us, so that God subtly intervened to prevent us from hurting ourselves or from being damaged?

I suppose I'm saying that it would be nice to be given the chance to try, even if it doesn't work out. Not having that chance, when society is so oriented towards coupledom - that's hard.
 
Posted by josephine (# 3899) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Duo Seraphim*:
I understand nouwen's friend to be feeling that particular lack, that there is a good that God has bestowed on others - someone to be their partner and to share their life - that He has denied her. And then it is reasonable to ask why.

Is it? Does nouwen's friend also want to know why God has bestowed good things on her that other people lack? Does she cry all over her friends because God has unfairly granted her good health, because she never goes hungry, because her home is dry and the power is on and fresh pure water comes out of the tap at the touch of a faucet?

Why do we act as if God owes us an explanation when we don't get what we want, but accept the things we want without a second thought?

Solomon said that the fastest person doesn't always win the race, that the wisest person may not have enough to eat, but time and chance happen to all of us. Sometimes there isn't a reason for our difficulties, beyond the fact that we live in a fallen world.

Maybe nouwen's friend would benefit from reading The Road Less Travelled by M. Scott Peck. Not exactly a Christian book, but it could help her figure out how to deal with her pain.
 
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on :
 
Paul W. writes:
quote:
I find the theology of swearing at God and telling him where to stick his "gift of singleness" helps quite a bit. It's theraputic anyway.

It works for me too. (I can hear God now: " Oy veh, it's Paul and LutheranChik again! Enough with the whining already!")

I find it interesting that a poster seems to equate having a mutually committed, loving, respectful life partnership with "getting a hobby." I've also had people tell me to just hang out with my platonic friends more. Ironically, these helpful hints for happiness all come from...ahem... happily married people.

When married people start lecturing me on how I should feel or what I should do to revel in my singlehood...as an old German acquaintance of mine used to say, "So viel Blah-blah-blah." What. Ever.
 
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on :
 
And, BTW, I have a multitude of interests, do caregiving for an elder parent, am taking classes, am multitasking all day long, have a delightful assortment of platonic friends and acquaintances...and I still get weary of being single.
 
Posted by ecumaniac (# 376) on :
 
Just because one of my hobbies is whinging about being single:

quote:
Originally posted by LutheranChik:
I've also had people tell me to just hang out with my platonic friends more.

Yeah, I get that too. But have you noticed that as time goes on, one by one your platonic friends get matched up and ever so subtly you get to see less and less of them? And one is ever more doomed if one's platonic friends are of the opposite gender.

[Disappointed] to overly paranoid gfs of my friends.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by josephine:
quote:
Originally posted by Duo Seraphim*:
I understand nouwen's friend to be feeling that particular lack, that there is a good that God has bestowed on others - someone to be their partner and to share their life - that He has denied her. And then it is reasonable to ask why.

Is it? Does nouwen's friend also want to know why God has bestowed good things on her that other people lack? Does she cry all over her friends because God has unfairly granted her good health, because she never goes hungry, because her home is dry and the power is on and fresh pure water comes out of the tap at the touch of a faucet?

Why do we act as if God owes us an explanation when we don't get what we want, but accept the things we want without a second thought?

Speak for yourself. I don't cry all over my friends because God has granted me good health and a whole lot of other things, but I really would like to know why God has bestowed on me so many things that other people lack. I certainly do not accept the things I want without a second thought. I may not always be as grateful as I should be, but I hardly think I'm entitled to the things that I have that are just flat-out gifts from God.

So I don't feel at all bad for occasionally crying out to God when something really hurts, wanting to know why I have such pain. It's completely legitimate.

As for the advice that nouwen's friend should get a hobby, stop thinking about it so much, and learn to enjoy life alone -- been there, done that, got all the collectible action figures. I'd add chanting this mantra: "It's better to be alone than to be in a bad relationship." But let's face it, if someone feels that being in a good relationship would be better than being alone, no matter how well-adjusted they are and no matter how full and rewarding their life is, there are still going to be those times when they go home and cry or punch a hole in the wall because it's just so painful to be alone.

What I would suggest to someone in the position of nouwen's friend is that perhaps this conviction, this knowledge that she is not meant to be alone, is really just desire, not knowledge. And as the Stones told us long ago, you can't always get what you want.
 
Posted by Gort (# 6855) on :
 
nouwen, tell your friend not to give up. If a meaningful, intimate relationship with another person is a priority, then she should give it all the effort and attention she can muster. There is no reason to justify failure by 'getting used to it' or any other condescending platitudes. Guys appreciate intelligence, confidence, magnanimity, cheerfulness, good humour and (personally) aggressive honest sexuality.

Tell her to cheer up, get out there and go for it.
 
Posted by Sine Nomine (# 66) on :
 
This may or may not be a stupid contribution. I'm not sure. But I was in a similar though not identical discussion earlier this evening. On suffering actually.

The two comments I took away were "Instead of asking 'why me?' I ask 'why not me?'" and "I've given myself permission not to have to understand why."
 
Posted by Dee-nz (# 5681) on :
 
aggressive honest sexuality

Wow, (rapidly takes notes)

Part of what workes for me is focusing on wanting the things that I already have. That means fully engaging in all of the relationships and frienships that i have and trying to enjoy my work and my play.

Then I find that I dont think about being single so much because I have other stuff to enjoy. I do really struggle at times but I know when that happens that i wont always hate it so much and it helps not to feel like you are always going to feel this miserable.

I also work to make sure as many of my emotional needs are met in healthy relationships as possible so that I dont have to many holes in my emotional life. Course that does not work all of the time.

Thnkfully I am in a really good place at the moment but I am not always and I know I will go throuh it again.

I have personally narrowed the stuff I miss from not having a parner down to intimacy of some knd or another and physical pleasure. The trick for me is to find another way to have these needs met then it is not such a big deal.

and then sometimes my bed just seems like the lonliest place in the universe, and there aint nuthin I can do about it.
 
Posted by Gort (# 6855) on :
 
[Sometimes, when I cringe at seeing that sig of yours, I wonder if anyone knows it was nicked from a drunken post extolling the virtues of our very own Sine Nomine? [Hot and Hormonal] ]

quote:
Originally posted by Dee-nz:
[...] I have personally narrowed the stuff I miss from not having a partner down to intimacy of some kind or another and physical pleasure. The trick for me is to find another way to have these needs met then it is not such a big deal...

In the interest of promoting inter-gender understanding and without venturing into T&T territory, how is it you "have these needs met" and make it not such a big deal?
 
Posted by Duo Seraphim (# 256) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by josephine:
Is it? Does nouwen's friend also want to know why God has bestowed good things on her that other people lack? Does she cry all over her friends because God has unfairly granted her good health, because she never goes hungry, because her home is dry and the power is on and fresh pure water comes out of the tap at the touch of a faucet?

Ah, the "think of the starving millions/poor/sick/insert problem here and be grateful" argument.

Well, I daily thank God that I was born at a time where women's rights have advanced sufficiently that I can be educated, own property, vote and by and large have a range of opportunities denied my female ancestors. But that doesn't mean that I can't aspire to more for myself or for other women.

All the hobbies and friends and community involvement and Good Works in the world cannot displace the desire for a committed loving relationship. Not because they aren't good to aspire to or to be grateful for or in some way lesser or better than such a relationship. But because they aren'tthat relationship - they are something else. But they are worthwhile in themselves. They meet a lot of the needs of a partnership - companionship, being needed,intellectual stimulation, feeling that you contribute or are giving something back.

Which is what Dee-NZ is getting at when she talks about finding fulfillment, satisfaction and release in what you have and what you do.

But sometimes there is no substitute. That's the feeling you get when you come home and there's no-one there - because there's no-one who is meant to be there. That would be the person who wanted to be with you as your partner, rather than being somewhere else doing all those other worthy things.

So it is right to say "why?" - even though the answer may be as stark as "because I'm God and you are not."
 
Posted by LatePaul (# 37) on :
 
An intriguing thought occurred to me last night when I first read this thread: would people's responses be the same if this thread was entitled 'God withholding children'? Would someone's infertile friend be told to get a hobby, count their blessings and so on?

Perhaps they would. I can't help feeling though that even if the underlying sentiment was the same that the way we expressed it would be different. We wouldn't as easily talk in terms of 'getting what we want' and 'just desire'.

I raise this because as a single person in my late 30's I have been spoken to in terms as blunt as those, blunter in fact, on occasion when I've dared to express dissatisfaction with the single state.

Some may feel that the parallel with infertility is not appropriate. However consider that for many, singleness is in effect infertility. All my older sister ever really wanted in life was to get married and have kids. Since the former hasn't happened for her, the later probably never will.
 
Posted by PhilA (# 8792) on :
 
When people are happy and content, they are more attractive than when they are upset or low. More attractive people get more 'propositions', in other words happy people are more likely to find happiness with other happy people.

But, I'm married, so what do I know?
 
Posted by Emma. (# 3571) on :
 
Im recentlyish single, and yes Id rather be in a fulfilling relationship as I love the intimacy and companionship. I know too tho, if I had rushed into that while i was feeling "desperate" it relaly wouldnt have been good.

ALthough I didnt like it at the time there really is a lot to be said for sorting your own life out, being happy with yourself and all that and not making "being single" the focus, as "being partnered" really wont solve half the problems you(I) think it does.

That said, Im hoping not to be single forever, and if I dont happen to partner up in the near future I think Ill try things like online dating, etc etc...

I like what Gort said about not just sitting around waiting, enjoy the dating game etc...

I think theres tons of blokes out there, also single, its just finding them etc etc isnt it.
 
Posted by Auntie Doris (# 9433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LatePaul:
All my older sister ever really wanted in life was to get married and have kids. Since the former hasn't happened for her, the later probably never will.

I really relate to this. I expected to be married by the time I was 24, and now I am approaching 30 and still single (not so old I know, but when your expectations are different it seems an age!!) I was gutted when my younger sister got married, and yet now I am in the position of her being in a unhappy marriage and her envying my single life. Bitter irony for her as she never held the same desires as me to get married.

Granted, I have lots of good things in my life. I have fantastic friends, a good job, somewhere to live, and just about enough money to get by. However, I still feel that there is something missing in my life and I wish that I had someone to go home to. I don't want to have a pity party, but there is part of me that feels extremely hard done by.

I know that the grass isn't always greener, I am not that naive. But singleness can be a very lonely place when you don't feel that it is for you!!

I have also sworn at God a lot, and like Paul W I found it most therapeutic!

Auntie Doris x

[ 09. September 2005, 08:27: Message edited by: Auntie Doris ]
 
Posted by The Lady of the Lake (# 4347) on :
 
I find RuthW's comments on the subject both wise and sensitive. Also Late Paul's comparison of involuntary singleness with infertility is very apposite. A hobby is not the same as a relationship or a child - it's crass to say the least to try to equate them.

I'm glad some people on this thread point out that single people don't all have a 'the grass is greener over the hill' mentality. Unfortunately a lot of people seem to think we do.

Joyfulsoul, I like what you said about being a previous atheist. I was brought up in a churchgoing but not devout home, where there was no belief that God would give us partners; we have the responsibility to improve our own lives and take risks. [Biased]

I wonder if the churches need to ask themselves how much damage the theology of waiting for God to provide one with a partner has been doing to Christians. It's so easy for people spend years of their adult life putting the responsibility on God and I can't help but see this often as a cover for responsibility. There needs to be people saying from the front of the church quite bluntly, it's your responsibility. Allowing people to rely on God as a celestial matchmaker is IMHO a way of fobbing off the unhappily single or those who are very fragile or unsure of themselves. It's no better than allowing worship that portrays Jesus as the individual's lover. [Roll Eyes]
 
Posted by Nutmeg (# 5297) on :
 
Lady of the Lake wrote.

quote:
A hobby is not the same as a relationship or a child - it's crass to say the least to try to equate them.

I think the most insensitive thing I have heard is the well meant suggestion that a recently widowed man in his 70's get a dog. He fumed quite openly that an animal was not going to replace a 45 year relationship. I know that is a slight tangent, but I guess it is related in that it is an insensitive suggestion that does not allow acknowledgement that there is no substitute for a life long partner. I liked reading Duo's post, because I thought it was honest without being self pitying. [Overused]

I talked once with a female friend who is still single and a career diplomat. I was envying the fact that she could see the latest movie/ show/art exhibition or travel wherever she wanted. She acknowledged that yes she could, but that she found it a very selfish lifestyle, that you could do whatever you wanted really. She really wanted so much more in terms of a relationship. She is (still) attractive, intelligent, fun, thoughtful, and all the things we believe a partner will find attractive. She has not found a partner, she has adopted an asian orphan and is in the process of adopting a second.
 
Posted by Auntie Doris (# 9433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nutmeg:
She has not found a partner, she has adopted an asian orphan and is in the process of adopting a second.

If I could financially afford to do this I would. However, being limited by circumstances it is not an option at the moment [Frown]

Auntie Doris x
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Emma.:
maybe if she desperately *needs* another she needs to look at her reasons why and work on herself a bit first...

You might as well tell a starving person that they need to work on their greed.

(Also, theologically, that might make sense from some Buddhist or Cathar positions, but not a Christian one, where our tradition is that we all do need others)
 
Posted by Sine Nomine (# 66) on :
 
My religious experience has never exposed me to any "Lord, won'tcha buy me a new Mercedes-Benz" - or husband/wife/partner - theology. I thought we were supposed to pray for our daily bread and for forgiveness of our sins. And that He would be there to comfort us in our loneliness and despair, not necessarily take it away like we were contestants on The Bachelorette.

So I may well be missing the point of the thread.

But I do know from my life experience that if you're living the kind of life suggested in the New Testament - putting others first, not being obsessed with self, trying to put good things into the stream of life - you will have an amazingly attractive personality that will draw people to you. You will have lots of friends. Your friends will constantly be trying to set you up with other marvelous people they know.

But it's kind of like Peter walking on water. You can only do it if you have faith and don't think about it.
 
Posted by Emma. (# 3571) on :
 
Ken i wasnt meaning to be insensitive there. Im nto sure i can explain what i mean without sounding holier-than-thou either...

I actually would far rather be in a relationship, and agree that we are designed to work in relationship with other beings etc etc etc, but there is a level where it gets to needing and thinking it will make all things better.... I was like that when i was first split up. I think thats a case where you need to work on other things in life. Like someone obsessed with getting a new car/wining the lottery etc. Instead, focusing on becoming a more balanced person can be good.Im *not* saying all single people are like this, in fact i think im digging a hole so i might just scarper!!!
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LutheranChik:
I've also had people tell me to just hang out with my platonic friends more. Ironically, these helpful hints for happiness all come from...ahem... happily married people.

Just tell then that what a "Platonic relationship" literally is is when an older man fancies a boy or a teenager who is willing to respond, but for the sake of decency he doesn't actually bugger him.

And see how they take that.
 
Posted by Emma. (# 3571) on :
 
ohh sine said what i think but far better....

What I *dont* get is why they think its God whose witheld marriage? does she think God will one day drop a man in her lap? Arent we responsible to a certain extent?
 
Posted by BroJames (# 9636) on :
 
I don't think that any theology really helps the emotional pain of wanting to be attached to a significant other when you are not.

There is lots of advice which is good advice about living life to the full, about giving yourself to others, about making the most of the connections you do have, and not letting the one that you don't have cast a pall over everything else.

For some people they can turn their own self-knowledge from the experience of that kind of pain into a way of helping others. All of these can bring positive things out of the situation - but none of them is a substitute for what is longed for.

I think there is something in surrendering everything we are, including all our desires and longings, to God and in seeking to locate our whole desire in God - but it is a thorny road and will not remove the feeling of lack.
 
Posted by Newman's Own (# 420) on :
 
I'm unfamiliar with 'name it and claim it,' but I think that all of us know that there are many factors in our lives (whether they are our choices or not) which come from circumstances. It can be horribly discouraging to be faced with "God's will," presented as some sort of vague plan, of which we are unaware, which will frustrate any of our efforts that are not in accord with the directions.

I have seen many people struggle in circumstances similar to those of Nouwen's friend when I was Roman Catholic. I think part of the 'reassurance' which was so painful was misplaced. Many people, who never married, had embraced a sense of vocation through their work, church involvement, dedication to family, whatever - with hindsight, they might refer to their singleness as vocation (though it was more likely resignation, and accepting serving God in whatever circumstances one faced.) Unfortunately, at parish level, first marriage had to be spoken of endlessly (lest anyone think nuns and priests were superior and deny the universal call to holiness), then the singles felt left out and were praised for 'single life as vocation.' In fact, I often heard frustrated attempts to marry (never meeting the right person, a fiance dying, whatever) as a 'calling to single life.'

Very few people decided on a single life, and this should not be assumed to be a choice (unless someone makes that plain.) I cannot say how many people I encountered, who hoped for marriage, who were deeply saddened by the idea that God decided they had to be single, and that it was useless to even hope.

It is perfectly all right to scream at God if one wishes - the OT is full of this, and it is quite healthy. But someone who wishes to marry who becomes mired in hopelessness, thinking God pushed a button to frustrate all efforts, can become exceedingly bitter. I dare say that, even in a situation where one might 'meet someone,' the extreme of either excessive bitterness or eagerness would be a 'turn off.'

Perhaps it would help those in the situation nouwen describes (as it would any of us) to focus their prayer on praise for awhile (not praise for the situation - just general variety.) It's all right to be angry with God, but it can cripple us if our prayer is reduced to 'why are you making me miserable?' God has nothing to do with whether one met a spouse or not - he's not preventing a marriage. Desperation can make one jump into a disastrous marriage, so the prayers of praise can make one a bit calmer.

Pain of this type is common, I believe, to many Christian lives. On the one hand, we want to be assured that God will give us the grace to fulfil whatever it is that would be best for us - on the other, if we think God directly influences our circumstances, we wonder why he slams so many doors.
 
Posted by Philpott-Thrashington (# 5269) on :
 
53 and still single .... I used to envy married friends, especially as I got left out of their cosy 2 by 2 dinner parties .... and famly life, and children, and all that goes with it, but now I'm not so sure that I do ......

Singleness is a selfish lifestyle, but so long as this tnedency is recognised, can be very fulfilling. I had to let go of the social (and religious) expectations I was broguht up with that I would get married and have a family. Even my Mother (now 92) has stopped asking .....

It can be lonely, and it can take time to accept that your life's path may not be what you expected, or what others expect. But it also has great advantages.
 
Posted by Birdseye (# 5280) on :
 
I'm married and can't for the life of me think how it happened -it's wonderful but I never expected it though I was earth-shatteringly lonely before. Still God sent me a bloke (he really did -I could explain how it really wasn't down to me, but down to the death of Maude Flanders from the Simpsons and some parrots, but that's not relevant)

But even though the relationship is just what I needed, the pros and cons of singledom/ partnership are equal. You just have no way of telling which state is slightly more bearable for you until you've tried both.

15 to 20 people told me, as I was on the brink of officially getting engaged, NOT to do it -to quit now and keep my freedom coz relationships are not worth losing your freedom for, some of those people are apparently quite 'happily' married. I also had a similar number congratulate me -but the wistful and slightly jealous congratulations came only from single people who thought that partnership and marriage would be the best possible state in the best of all possible worlds, and the wry, amused, jolly congratulations came from people who were in relationships and knew better.

Sometimes I think, if i could change one thing about my life, I would meet my husband ten years later -not because I want less time with him, but because I want more time alone.
Most of the time I'm glad he's already here.

What's the point of that -I don't know... No use to anyone who's achingly lonely, and old hat to anyone who's in a relationship. I think it's okay to be angry with God about being achingly lonely though.
 
Posted by Joan_of_Quark (# 9887) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Emma.:
I think theres tons of blokes out there, also single, its just finding them etc etc isnt it.

Newsflash - I know where LOTS of them are!
.
.
.
... thirty-something and still living with Mummy. [Frown]

(lest anyone accuse me of being too picky and judgemental, I have given at least two such people a chance with horrible results on both occasions - I am not talking about people caring for aged parents but domestic incompetents treating chez Mom and Dad as a free B&B)

Seriously, lots of people out there haven't grown up enough to have a proper relationship -whether that is emotionally, practical skills, or whatever. Then there's another set who have done everything to prepare themselves, and have a decent life with plenty of friendships and interests while they are waiting, but the demographics are against them.

It's a kind of paradoxical intention where we probably have to have loads of good qualities and interests and at the same time open to opportunities to meet people wherever we are, yet without being or appearing desperate, etc. etc.

I haven't talked much to Christians about being single again since I converted. One thing I did notice as an atheist is that with all the "self-help" type attitudes out there, there is quite a lot of pressure on everyone to demonstrate tangible "success" - whether that's a partner, a posh house, a high-status job, flash suits - or you are some sort of loser who didn't chant their happy mantras enough. I went to a confidence workshop recently and, whilst it gave out some very good practical tips, it also pushed this ethos of being able to achieve anything you really wanted. This is of course nonsense on toast but this hyped-up ra-ra stuff is everywhere.
 
Posted by Nutmeg (# 5297) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by LutheranChik:
I've also had people tell me to just hang out with my platonic friends more. Ironically, these helpful hints for happiness all come from...ahem... happily married people.

Just tell then that what a "Platonic relationship" literally is is when an older man fancies a boy or a teenager who is willing to respond, but for the sake of decency he doesn't actually bugger him.

And see how they take that.

[Eek!] Would that be from the Plato the philosopher then ken? Sorry for the digression...
 
Posted by Zealot en vacance (# 9795) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sine Nomine:


But I do know from my life experience that if you're living the kind of life suggested in the New Testament - putting others first, not being obsessed with self, trying to put good things into the stream of life - you will have an amazingly attractive personality that will draw people to you. You will have lots of friends. Your friends will constantly be trying to set you up with other marvelous people they know.

But it's kind of like Peter walking on water. You can only do it if you have faith and don't think about it.

That is one of the best things I have read on these boards. Have faith, let go of self, seek to do what is right for the Kingdom of God, and blessings will flow, is the way I would put it. My spouse came unbidden at a time when I was both very busy, and humanly lonely. She ran her car into mine. God moves in mysterious ways ...
 
Posted by Laura (# 10) on :
 
Look - the "get a hobby" advice isn't to suggest that married people don't have hobbies or that grieving singles don't have hobbies. It's shorthand, perhaps American shorthand, for "get over it as best you can". Look: there's a body part I'm missing that almost everyone has. I have certainly grieved for its missingness. I hate that people stare at me as much as I assume it is annoying to have waiters act all pitiful when you want a table for one (this is one of my favorite things, actually, but there you go). I cannot therefore play the piano the way my father can, as I have always wished I could, although I am musically gifted.

Anyway, my point, based on personal experience is, the best advice is to allow yourself to grieve periodically, but not overmuch, because what good does it do you? Occasional allowing yourself to feel bad honors the truth that it is sometimes sad to be alone. But don't forget to really revel in the times being uncoupled means you have great freedom to have an adventure, as will happen, too.

For those who are whacking those offering advice for being clueless -- if the OP asks for advice, we all get to give it. The OP can pick and choose. Those of us with empathy but who aren't touchy-feely don't always get it exactly right, but that doesn't mean we have nothing useful to offer. Perhaps we all can think of something that we're denied that many have. I think these situations speak to each other.

L

[ 09. September 2005, 14:15: Message edited by: Laura ]
 
Posted by Little Miss Methodist (# 1000) on :
 
I think one of the big things with singleness is a self esteem issue.

The longer you are single, despite your best efforts, the more you are bound to start thinking "whats wrong with me"? I don't know any single person who hasn't walked down the street and looked at all the couples around and thought "look at him / her, they are no better looking than me, what do they have that I don't"?

And sometimes the answer is lower standards... [Biased]

But sometimes there is no obvious answer. You can do everything right, hang out where there are plenty of single people, be attractive and funny and intelligent and there is still no guarantee that you will find someone.

And thats the thing thats most frustrating about it, I think. We can do everything right, but at the end of the day, finding the right person is a two way thing. We can only take things so far, after that it relies, to a certain extent, on luck.

And, while you hope that luck will come your way soon, each time it doesn't, and each time you see another friend pair off or get married or have children, a little part of you can't help but think "why not me, whats wrong with me"?

LMM
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sine Nomine:
My religious experience has never exposed me to any "Lord, won'tcha buy me a new Mercedes-Benz" - or husband/wife/partner - theology. I thought we were supposed to pray for our daily bread and for forgiveness of our sins. And that He would be there to comfort us in our loneliness and despair, not necessarily take it away like we were contestants on The Bachelorette.

Comparing single people who pray for partners to contestants on a reality TV show is appallingly dismissive.

quote:
But I do know from my life experience that if you're living the kind of life suggested in the New Testament - putting others first, not being obsessed with self, trying to put good things into the stream of life - you will have an amazingly attractive personality that will draw people to you. You will have lots of friends. Your friends will constantly be trying to set you up with other marvelous people they know.

But it's kind of like Peter walking on water. You can only do it if you have faith and don't think about it.

So if people who want partners and don't have them it's because their faith is weak? Because they aren't good New Testament Christians? It's always a bit hard to know what to say when people say, "Gee, Ruth, you're really a great person -- why aren't you married?" But now I've got a good answer. My faith is inadequate.

Laura, you do obviously know a lot about grieving for something you'll never have. The thing about being single, though, is that it's not necessarily a permanent condition. I imagine you don't at this point in your life pray that God will change your body. But many single people who want partners quite reasonably hope and pray that they will find partners. Your advice is in a lot of ways very good, but I'd say that for a lot of single people the thing to do is not to "get over it as best you can" but to "get on with it as best you can."
 
Posted by Spiffy da Wonder Sheep (# 5267) on :
 
I feel for your friend, Nouwen, I really do, but I have no advice, because I'm a single person who is pretty much a happy camper sans partner. In my personal experience with the 'name it and claim it' crowd, there's also an extreme push to get married. As if being a single person is something that needs to get fixed, right away! I wonder if any of her feelings are coming from that kind of pressure.

Actually, except the one time the preacher was advocating a religious order, I've NEVER heard 'singleness as a good thing' from a pulpit. That's kind of irksome, now that I think about it.

[tangent: the worst pickup line in the history of the world was used on me by a Latter-Day Saints returned missionary when I made the mistake of attending an LDS church with a friend. She didn't bother to tell me it was a Singles Stake, the equivalent of a special service every week just for the single kids to see and be seen. He walked up to me, a total stranger, and said in all seriousness, "I've been praying to Heavenly Father to send me a wife, and He sent you." I think my hysterical laughter hurt his feelings.]

The way you phrased your subject is actually what caught my eye. God is 'withholding' marriage, as in God has a perfect partner (well, as perfect as any partner is) for your friend. So... is your friend the kind of person who opens Christmas presents in November? Patience is a virtue, and a neccessary one in a relationship.
 
Posted by Newman's Own (# 420) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sine Nomine:
But I do know from my life experience that if you're living the kind of life suggested in the New Testament - putting others first, not being obsessed with self, trying to put good things into the stream of life - you will have an amazingly attractive personality that will draw people to you. You will have lots of friends. Your friends will constantly be trying to set you up with other marvelous people they know.

But it's kind of like Peter walking on water. You can only do it if you have faith and don't think about it.

Balderdash! And anyone wishing to share such ideas with others (especially those in the situation of Nouwen's friends) should read Ruth's post carefully first.

So, anyone who is lonely - who does not have an amazingly attractive personality and scads of friends - has inadequate faith? Those trying to live the gospel are often taken advantage of (I don't mean in relation to romance - across the board); are the ones who everyone comes to with problems but few invite out socially; and some of the greatest saints (Jerome, for some reason, comes to mind) were rather impossible companions.

God has nothing to do with if someone has not met a spouse. Certainly, not having done so does not mean a lack of faith - and the comparison with Peter's walking on the water is an exegetical nightmare. [Biased]

However, looking to live out the gospel 'wherever one is' is a good idea - because it's the only place we can meet Christ at any given moment.
 
Posted by Laura (# 10) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:

Laura, you do obviously know a lot about grieving for something you'll never have. The thing about being single, though, is that it's not necessarily a permanent condition.

I'm aware that it isn't a perfect comparison. Almost nothing in life is. Even different single people have different experiences of it.

But I do think that finding a life partner is something which is substantially a matter of luck/chance. There are many things in life like that, and it's best in my experience to ride with them as much as possible, assuming that they will be permanent. Sometimes someone is surprised, of course -- a family member recently married for the first time at 58. But that doesn't change the fact that many people spend their lives single. Perhaps "get on with it" is a better formulation than "get over it", but I think we mean the same thing.

[ 09. September 2005, 19:30: Message edited by: Laura ]
 
Posted by Esmeralda (# 582) on :
 
Better set out my credentials first:


I think that makes it fairly clear I'm speaking from difficult experience on both sides of the fence.

And this is what I want to say:


 
Posted by Papio. (# 4201) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Paul W.:
I find the theology of swearing at God and telling him where to stick his "gift of singleness" helps quite a bit. It's theraputic anyway.

Paul W

[Overused]

The only suitable place for God's "gift of singleness" is rammed tightly up God's arse.
 
Posted by Papio. (# 4201) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Little Miss Methodist:
And sometimes the answer is lower standards... [Biased]

Hmm.

But standards should not be unrealitically low either. For example, any woman who is of below average intelligence is definately not for me. No question. Even of only average intelligence is pushing the acceptability level rather a lot. I want a bright woman.

And there has got to be a physical attraction.

And if she hates rock music, then that would be an issue.

And a right-wing woman would not be compatable either. Nor would a religious fundamentalist.
 
Posted by Papio. (# 4201) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Laura:
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:

Laura, you do obviously know a lot about grieving for something you'll never have. The thing about being single, though, is that it's not necessarily a permanent condition.

I'm aware that it isn't a perfect comparison. Almost nothing in life is. Even different single people have different experiences of it.

But I do think that finding a life partner is something which is substantially a matter of luck/chance. There are many things in life like that, and it's best in my experience to ride with them as much as possible, assuming that they will be permanent. Sometimes someone is surprised, of course -- a family member recently married for the first time at 58. But that doesn't change the fact that many people spend their lives single. Perhaps "get on with it" is a better formulation than "get over it", but I think we mean the same thing.

I'm not expecting to meet anyone ever, not even if I lower some of the above standards. Which won't happen.

I prefer "get on with it" to "get over it".

I can get on with it, but that doesn't mean I have to like it. Liking it is really a bit too much to ask.
 
Posted by OliviaG (# 9881) on :
 
The title says "God witholding marriage." From the time I was a small child, I knew I had no desire to have children of my own, and wasn't even sure about marriage. As it turned out, I wasn't a very good spouse, and I know I would be a crappy parent. Since then, I've been happily single.

Having no spouse and no children has made me wonder what the purpose of my existence is, at least in Darwinian terms. I've discovered that I can make a difference in my community and a difference to my friends that far exceeds any good I might have accomplished as a spouse/parent - which as you can see from above, wasn't much. One of my happiest moments ever was when a friend pointed out that my volunteer work with a women's organization has probably made more of a difference to more women's lives and to my community's future than I could have accomplished in a nuclear family.

To put it in God-terms, I believe that God wanted me to do something with my life other than get married and have babies. That's why God made me so bad at it: so I wouldn't be tempted, even with all society's pressure. And I believe that God will always give me what I need - not necessarily what I want - to do God's will. If your friend honestly believes that she wants to be married, and honestly believes that God is preventing this.... well, either the time hasn't come, or one of them has to be wrong.

[Votive] for both of you. Cheers, Olivia G
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Laura:
But I do think that finding a life partner is something which is substantially a matter of luck/chance.

You mean I can't go with the "My faith is inadequate" explanation? Rats. I was starting to like it. [Big Grin]

I agree that some luck/chance is involved, but it's not just luck or chance -- it would almost be easier if that were the case, because then there would be no cause for self-blame. But I think my chances of finding a partner were a lot higher in my 20s, when so many people in my age cohort weren't already married; I wasn't looking then, however, and I think that choice has made a big difference in my life. The choice to live in a town where the number of college graduates is rather low is another factor. Being a Christian reduces my chances of finding a partner even though I don't require potential partners to be Christians, as a lot of people are put off by the label to begin with. (Then there's the fact that I am deeply obnoxious and have no plans to change, but perhaps there is no need to elaborate upon that. [Smile] ) So I guess I'd say I think it's a combination of chance and choice.

To get back to the OP, I don't think God is holding out on me in not dropping the man of my dreams on my doorstep anymore than God was holding out on me when God didn't keep a friend of mine from dying a while back. Shit happens. Or it doesn't.
 
Posted by NewAger (# 10347) on :
 
Thank you everyone for such well thought out posts. I am a newbie and I have been reading everyone's posts.

I am single, 35, no biological clock with a burgeoning new career. I don't have as many friends as I would like but I am quite shy and not a cliquey person. I had such a traumatic time in relationships a few years ago that I welcomed my status as what I like to refer to as a glamourous spinster! However now it is beginning to pall. I don't swear at my Higher Power. I have just got very cynical at the way Society seems to be work against older women or women who do not conform to stereotypes.

I am a Spiritualist and I am philosophical as everyone's soul's journey is different but sometimes it is very hard to be alone. Faith is meant to be a great comfort but even if you believe in Spirit, Guardian Angels, God/Divine Light/Higher Power/whatever, you can communicate with Spirit, it's no comfort sometimes when you long for a nice boyfriend to take the edge off the London commuting lifestyle.

My guardian angel appears to want me to learn to love myself before I can love anyone else or indeed they love me! 12 steppers have this great phrase, 'God only gives you what you can handle'. Perhaps I would crap up a relationship if I met 'Mr Right' or 'Mr Right Now'.

I wish your friend the best of luck.
 
Posted by Joyfulsoul (# 4652) on :
 
Welcome to the ship, New Ager and what a lovely first post! I really resonate with what you wrote, particularly about sorting one's self out. Perhaps that is partly why I don't really hold God accountable or to blame for my lack of partnership. I have a lot of issues to work out at the moment, these are my issues - these are not God's fault. Most of all, I want to learn about being in content in every circumstance. I've seen people who has suffered a great deal in this life and still see good things and I really admire them.
 
Posted by NewAger (# 10347) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Joyfulsoul:
Welcome to the ship, New Ager and what a lovely first post! I really resonate with what you wrote, particularly about sorting one's self out. Perhaps that is partly why I don't really hold God accountable or to blame for my lack of partnership. I have a lot of issues to work out at the moment, these are my issues - these are not God's fault. Most of all, I want to learn about being in content in every circumstance. I've seen people who has suffered a great deal in this life and still see good things and I really admire them.

Thank you for your kind words says lonely Spiritualist home on a Friday night [Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by Anselmina (# 3032) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sine Nomine:

But I do know from my life experience that if you're living the kind of life suggested in the New Testament - putting others first, not being obsessed with self, trying to put good things into the stream of life - you will have an amazingly attractive personality that will draw people to you. You will have lots of friends. Your friends will constantly be trying to set you up with other marvelous people they know.


Great. So not only am I alone and partnerless, but I've only got myself to blame because I never put others first, I'm obsessed with myself, contribute nothing good 'into the stream of life' and consequently have an amazingly unattractive personality.

Wondered where I was going wrong. Think I'll get me to a nunnery.
 
Posted by Laura (# 10) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Anselmina:
Great. So not only am I alone and partnerless, but I've only got myself to blame because I never put others first, I'm obsessed with myself, contribute nothing good 'into the stream of life' and consequently have an amazingly unattractive personality.

Wondered where I was going wrong. Think I'll get me to a nunnery.

I'm waiting for the sunshine crew to tell you guys it's probably because you're butt-ugly and you ought to stop kidding yourselves and dedicate your lives to lepers or similar.

[ 09. September 2005, 22:57: Message edited by: Laura ]
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Laura:
... or similar.

Reading for the blind leaps to mind.
 
Posted by Sine Nomine (# 66) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
Comparing single people who pray for partners to contestants on a reality TV show is appallingly dismissive.

I see no difference between praying for a partner or praying for a Mercedes-Benz. So yes, it was dismissive. It was meant to be dismissive.

quote:
So if people who want partners and don't have them it's because their faith is weak? Because they aren't good New Testament Christians?
Has your life experience shown you that people who put others first, who aren't obsessed with self, and try to put good things into the stream of life don't have amazingly attractive personalities that draw people to them?

I pretty much said what I meant and meant what I said. I made no comment on their faith or lack thereof.

But if you want to go in that direction, I guess people who are praying for partners and don't get them would assume it was their lack of faith. But as I said above I personally don't think one should be praying for much more than the stuff listed in the Lord's Prayer...for oneself.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sine Nomine:
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
Comparing single people who pray for partners to contestants on a reality TV show is appallingly dismissive.

I see no difference between praying for a partner or praying for a Mercedes-Benz. So yes, it was dismissive. It was meant to be dismissive.
Because having a relationship with another human being is so just so much like owning a luxury automobile.

quote:
quote:
So if people who want partners and don't have them it's because their faith is weak? Because they aren't good New Testament Christians?
Has your life experience shown you that people who put others first, who aren't obsessed with self, and try to put good things into the stream of life don't have amazingly attractive personalities that draw people to them?
Some of them have that kind of magnetism, and some don't. There are plenty of people who attract others very easily who don't seem to be living the sort of life the New Testament asks us to live. There isn't even a strong correlation, never mind a causal link.

quote:
I pretty much said what I meant and meant what I said. I made no comment on their faith or lack thereof.

But if you want to go in that direction, I guess people who are praying for partners and don't get them would assume it was their lack of faith. But as I said above I personally don't think one should be praying for much more than the stuff listed in the Lord's Prayer...for oneself.

I think you're wrong. If I don't take the deepest desires of my heart to God, I'm not giving God a chance to influence what they are or to tell me anything about them.

[fixed code]

[ 10. September 2005, 00:12: Message edited by: RuthW ]
 
Posted by Sine Nomine (# 66) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
Because having a relationship with another human being is so just so much like owning a luxury automobile.

Well, I could make a comment about guys who treat their cars a lot better than they do their girlfriends...but I do think the principle is the same. It is a selfish request of God. A request for self.

quote:
There are plenty of people who attract others very easily who don't seem to be living the sort of life the New Testament asks us to live. There isn't even a strong correlation, never mind a causal link.
I disagree. The essence of charm is at least giving the impression you're more interested in the other person than you are in yourself. There is a strong correlation between being a giving person and attracting people. Of course "The Cad" often attracts women, but I doubt the ensuing relationship is very good long term.

quote:
I think you're wrong. If I don't take the deepest desires of my heart to God, I'm not giving God a chance to influence what they are or to tell me anything about them.
I tell God all the time that I'm sad or lonely. I don't however give Him instructions about what to do about it.
 
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on :
 
quote:
I'm waiting for the sunshine crew to tell you guys it's probably because you're butt-ugly and you ought to stop kidding yourselves and dedicate your lives to lepers or similar.

Or chaplaincy duty on the Ship. [Biased] [Sigh] It's a tough job...but someone's got to do it.
 
Posted by Sine Nomine (# 66) on :
 
I guess I'm trying to be too serious for Purgatory, being unfamiliar with the neighborhood, so let me say that I just checked the Prayers for Family and Personal Life section of the BCP and did not find a prayer entitled For Finding a Boyfriend. I did however find one For Those Who Live Alone.
 
Posted by Papio. (# 4201) on :
 
Right. I only care about myself and everyone hates me. That's why I don't have a girlfriend.

My goodness, Sine. What a helpful perspective.

Just a pity that it is wrong.
 
Posted by Sine Nomine (# 66) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Papio.:
Just a pity that it is wrong.

Since this is Purgatory, the home of reasoned debate, I get to ask you "wrong in what way".

You may well be extremely disagreeable for all I know.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
In addition to the prayer for those who are alone you'll also find the Psalms in the BCP. The psalmist seems to think personal petition is okay; he is forever beseeching God to listen to him, to save him from peril, to smite his enemies. When Moses asks God to send someone else to lead the people of Israel, God gets ticked off, but God also comes up with a solution to Moses' public speaking problem and says Aaron can be his spokesman. Gideon asks for a sign from God and gets it; but he's still not sure, so he asks for another sign, and he gets it.

In the garden Jesus says to God, "Father, if you are willing, remove this cup from me; yet, not my will but yours be done." I think this is a good model for petitionary prayer. But the parable of the unjust judge (Luke 18) suggests that hectoring God for what we think is due to us might be the way to go.

As you point out, Sine, the Lord's Prayer is one of our main models for prayer. Half of it is petitionary prayer, for daily bread, for forgiveness, for salvation from the time of trial. I think it's a mis-reading to claim that we are not to ask for anything not specifically listed here, a mistake to take this as a specific list of the three things we're allowed to ask for instead of as a comprehensive model. As soon as we notice that water is not on the list, we have to admit that this prayer is meant to be exemplary, not prescriptive.

If someone wants a spouse, or a Mercedes, or a job, or a nicer-looking body, or better health, or anything, there's nothing wrong with asking God. To not bring before God our little wants, not to mention our great desires, no matter how unworthy and selfish they are, is to deny God the chance to do anything about those wants and desires. If someone can honestly say to God, "I want this, but I honestly don't expect you to do anything about it," great. But if someone deep down honestly wishes God would do something in their life, no matter what that thing is, they should say so in prayer. Praying about these things is absolutely essential to the process of conforming our will to God's will. To not bring our selfish desires before God is to deny that we have them and to deny that God can change us; it says that we think we are going to change on our own, without God's help, that we are self-sufficient. Praying for what we want helps change what we want. Not praying for something because we know it's selfish and greedy is to say that we're going to stop being selfish and greedy before we've even started praying. Not praying for what we want denies on a very deep level that God acts in our lives.

I find the notion that the life lived by New Testament precepts makes someone charming and attractive completely laughable. The life of Paul is testament to how wrong-headed that is. The idea that someone who wants a partner doesn't have one because they're not living their life the right way is in my experience equally wrong. The person I know who most impresses me with the holiness of his life, the person with whom I most want to pray because God's presence in the room is palpable when I pray with him, has been alone his whole life, despite his wish for a partner.
 
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on :
 
I have a real theological issue with self-censoring one's prayers because they're not the "right" ones.

As has been pointed out, the Psalms are an excellent example of people praying in a completely honest, raw, transparent manner. Is it all high, lofty stuff? Heck no. There's incessant kvetching, vindictive paranoia, tiresome self-pity, self-rationalization, bragging, fear, confusion. That's us; that's our lives. And I think there's a reason why the Psalms made the canon; that's how God wants us to relate to God -- holding nothing back; offering ourselves entirely, our hopes, our fears, our thoughts -- the good, the bad, the ugly.
 
Posted by Kelly Alves (# 2522) on :
 
From above:
quote:
There's incessant kvetching, vindictive paranoia, tiresome self-pity, self-rationalization, bragging, fear, confusion...
That about sums up my prayer life. [Big Grin]
Well, not really, there are also moments of reflection, remorse, thankfulness, concern/joy/praise for others, etc.

YMMV, but for me, it seems unproductive not to present God with the selfish desires I have, since God knows I have them anyway.

In any case, I totally agree with Ruth's description of the dynamic of prayer. As Lewis said(somewhere), "I don't pray because it changes God, I pray because it changes me." If you hold stuff back--even stuff that might be labeled whiny or selfish-- that stuff may not get changed.

Or maybe it will, who knows? I'm just playing it safe.
 
Posted by Sine Nomine (# 66) on :
 
I personally think a lot of the psalms are weird as shit. I once read that the Book of Psalms is a hymnal, and like all hymnals has good hymns, mediocre hymns, and really rotten hymns. So I don't mind feeling some of them are creepy. To me the point is "not my will but yours be done".

I do bring before God whatever has happened or I've felt strongly about for good or bad that day. But I try and make it about how I feel rather than what I want. "I am lonely, God" rather than "I want a partner, God." I have a track record that proves I don't know what's best for me. I cannot run my life well. It's much better for me not to try at this point, I promise you.

My comment about "charming" was not in the context of the New Testament but rather secularly about giving the impression you're interested in other people. I'm sorry I didn't make that clear. As to the New Testament in general, I said that it encourages us to think of others before we think of ourselves. Do you disagree that it says that? And do you disagree that people who think of others before themselves are generally thought to be attractive to be around? I think you're reading more than I meant into what I said, but then it's my fault for not being clearer.

I guess I could come up with some anecdotal examples to counter your anecdotal example of your holy single gentleman friend, but the whole discussion is pretty much personal opinion anyway.

If you find what you're currently doing works for you, that's the important thing. Trying to run my life wasn't working for me, so I'm attempting something different.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
We all have a track record that proves we don't know what's best for us. If we didn't, we'd be doing God's will all the time. I don't think we're all that far apart in our thinking, Sine. If "I want this, but I'm not asking for it because that is the road to thinking I can run my own life" works for you, then of course that's what you should do. I have found that for me, not saying what I want is the road to shutting God out of my life and thinking I can run it on my own. Sometimes I only learn how pathetically selfish and greedy and misguided I am by asking God for what I want.

quote:
As to the New Testament in general, I said that it encourages us to think of others before we think of ourselves. Do you disagree that it says that? And do you disagree that people who think of others before themselves are generally thought to be attractive to be around? I think you're reading more than I meant into what I said, but then it's my fault for not being clearer.
Of course the NT encourages us to think of others first, and people who do that are very nice to be around. It's good advice for living whether one is a Christian or not, but you said in the closing sentence of your original paragraph that people who live according to the NT get more dates, and presumably the point of dating in this context is to find a partner:

quote:
But I do know from my life experience that if you're living the kind of life suggested in the New Testament - putting others first, not being obsessed with self, trying to put good things into the stream of life - you will have an amazingly attractive personality that will draw people to you. You will have lots of friends. Your friends will constantly be trying to set you up with other marvelous people they know.
I can't argue with what your life experience has been, but I will put forward the idea that living the kind of life suggested in the New Testament does not necessarily win friends and influence people. Jesus must have had an amazingly attractive personality, but I'll bet he was deeply lonely, too. And his friends were annoying, and they deserted him in his last hours.
 
Posted by NewAger (# 10347) on :
 
As far as I am aware, and this is coming from a distant memory of a Church of England childhood, Jesus did not expect us to censor our prayers. Everyone's prayers are an individual thing.

Any other 12 steppers out there will recognise the phrase 'put your worries in the hands of the Higher Power'.

As for the art of attraction of the opposite sex, it's all about confidence and being a positive person as far as I can tell. Unfortunately I am neither [Smile]
 
Posted by Sine Nomine (# 66) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
Sometimes I only learn how pathetically selfish and greedy and misguided I am by asking God for what I want.

God, or somebody, gave me some things I thought I really wanted some years ago. Getting them nearly destroyed me. Today I find it better not to ask.

quote:
I will put forward the idea that living the kind of life suggested in the New Testament does not necessarily win friends and influence people. Jesus must have had an amazingly attractive personality, but I'll bet he was deeply lonely, too. And his friends were annoying, and they deserted him in his last hours.
I guess you have higher standards than I do. I wasn't really thinking of the big guys like St. Paul and Jesus. I was thinking more along the lines of say, Grits, who if she wasn't already married you'd be trying to fix her up with all your better single men friends because she's just so nice to be around due to the way she tries to live out her beliefs.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
If I had "better" single men friends, I wouldn't be having this instructive (to me, at any rate) conversation with you on a Friday night, Sine! [Big Grin] Not to wish misfortune upon Mr. Grits, but if Grits ever comes back on the market, she might be old enough for my single gentleman friend. So I do see your point.

People don't try to set me up with guys they think I might like. They do look at me quizzically and ask why a wonderful person like me isn't married. Next time it happens, I'll tell them it's because they haven't set me up with the man I'm meant to marry. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Sine Nomine (# 66) on :
 
I realized in reviewing this thread that my comment about St. Peter, walking on water, and faith, wasn't about faith in God so much as "don't look down while you're walking on water or you'll fall in".

Which is to say, there is a paradox in being selfless in order to get something for yourself. Kinda like being proud of one's humility.

But the OP seemed to me to be about where is God if you're single and don't want to be that way. I have to think that for a religious person the answer has to be "God knows better than you what you need or don't need." If I were religious I don't think I'd have to like it, but I think I'd have to accept it. Because if I don't accept it I'm saying I know better than God. And that's stupid. I don't.

If you're not religious it can just be bad luck or something random. Alignment of the planets. Easier in a way than if it appears to be something that's being withheld by a Supreme Being who is reputed to love you.

But you never really know what was ultimately good or bad in your life until the very end, when you see how it all turned out.

Cold comfort however when you've got an empty bed now.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sine Nomine:
But the OP seemed to me to be about where is God if you're single and don't want to be that way. I have to think that for a religious person the answer has to be "God knows better than you what you need or don't need." If I were religious I don't think I'd have to like it, but I think I'd have to accept it. Because if I don't accept it I'm saying I know better than God. And that's stupid. I don't.

Still, there's the parable of the unjust judge. And I think you write off the Psalms too readily.
 
Posted by Sine Nomine (# 66) on :
 
I write off "Wonder, Love, and Praise" pretty readily also. Face it. There are junk hymns today. There were junk hymns 2000 years ago.
 
Posted by Sine Nomine (# 66) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
Still, there's the parable of the unjust judge.

Oh...and isn't there a school of thought that says we are the judge and God is the widow? I believe that is Thomas Keating's take on the parable. What then?
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
I've never heard it that way before. The New Jerome Commentary says:

quote:
Two lessons are drawn via the argument from the lesser to the greater: if the persistent pleading of the helpless widow triumphs over an unjust judge, how much more will the persistent praying of Christian disciples achieve; if an unjust judge yields to the entreaties of a widow, how much more will a gracious God.

 
Posted by Kelly Alves (# 2522) on :
 
Gotta admit, the alternate take is intriguing to me. Does fit in with some reports of God's behavior-- or, as Anne Lamott put it, when God acts like Sam-I-Am.
 
Posted by samara (# 9932) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sine Nomine:
But the OP seemed to me to be about where is God if you're single and don't want to be that way. I have to think that for a religious person the answer has to be "God knows better than you what you need or don't need." If I were religious I don't think I'd have to like it, but I think I'd have to accept it. Because if I don't accept it I'm saying I know better than God. And that's stupid. I don't.

Do you mean "religious" in a particular sense, and as distinct from "Christian"?

Because I'd only have to accept the exact circumstances of my life as God's will and thus inarguable if I believed that every thing (never mind good and perfect) is the direct result of God's will. And I'm not sure I buy that, religious/Christian or not.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
Luke spells out pretty clearly that we are the petitioners, in parallel with the widow, and that the comparison is between the unjust judge, who grants what the widow asks for because she bugs him so much, and God -- "will not God grant justice to his chosen ones who cry to him day and night?" Not that there isn't interesting mileage in reversing the parallelism, the way a midrash might. But I don't think the text says God is the petitioning widow.
 
Posted by Gort (# 6855) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by nouwen:
[...] However, where does marriage for my friend fit in? What if she fails to find fulfilment in 'single' life but is never married. What if, deep within she knowns that her life needs to be joined with another, but that 'other' never comes along. What theology helps this?

neowen, "to be joined with another" implies the basic sexual nature of marriage. All else is a dance. The last thing a potential lover wants to hear during the waltz is long-winded scriptural evidence of God providing the "desire of hearts etc, etc, etc. "

What theology helps this? None. That is unless your friend has given up for the monastic life.
 
Posted by Papio. (# 4201) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sine Nomine:
quote:
Originally posted by Papio.:
Just a pity that it is wrong.

Since this is Purgatory, the home of reasoned debate, I get to ask you "wrong in what way".

You may well be extremely disagreeable for all I know.

Well, let's see.....

IRL at least, I have a lot of friends who like me. They are decent people. The general consensus among them seems to be that I am an extremely decent bloke.

I realise that this may not always come out on this forum, and I have no idea how popular or unpopular I am here. I don't really care anymore, tbh and, anyway, I have no reason to suppose myself unpopular on the ship...

The voluntary work I do does not ever want to see me leave. Throughout my whole life people have told me I would be suitable for the "caring professions". I have often (very often) been told I am better than I used to think I was, and I am now starting to believe that.

So yes. Your wrong about me.

If you don't like me, then fair enough. I suspect your not bothered either way, actually.

Why haven't I got a girlfriend? Because I am not that good looking, because until recently I had little self-confidence. No, that wasn't because everyone hated me, either, Sine.

I really do not percieve the slightest evidence that "everybody" "hates" me, either here on in the real world where people's opinions of me matter slightly more than they do here. If you percieve it differently then fine. I'm sure you can find people on here who don't think much of me. Whoop-de-doo.
 
Posted by Papio. (# 4201) on :
 
Just to say: I realise I am far from perfect. I realise that some people just do not like me.

But overall?

In any case, leaving myself out of it for a minute, when I look at my friends, relations, co-workers etc I am drawn to pretty much the same conclusions as RuthW.

The only point on which we are agreed, Sine, (at least on this thread) is that subjective value judgements about peoples personalities and personal anecdotes about friends will change the mind of no-one.
 
Posted by Faithful Sheepdog (# 2305) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Papio.:
Why haven't I got a girlfriend? Because I am not that good looking, because until recently I had little self-confidence. No, that wasn't because everyone hated me, either, Sine.

In my opinion the most ugly man in the world is Woody Allen, yet he has been associated with a stream of beautiful women for all of his life. Don't fall for the "sorry loser" act that he adopts in his films. In reality he is very talented, highly successful and deeply desirable to many women.

I have no idea what you look like in real life, but you cannot possibly be any uglier than Woody Allen. In that case, rejoice, a stream of beautiful women are completely within your grasp. As far as I am concerned you are good looking enough. Work on that self-confidence and go for it! [Smile]

Neil
 
Posted by Sine Nomine (# 66) on :
 
Ahem...well, you know, being overly sensitive and being quick to take offense where none is meant possibly aren't the world's most attractive qualities either.

In any case, I'm going to post what I just wrote in a PM because I obviously did a piss-poor job of explaining where I was coming from with this.


What I said, or was trying to say, was not that if you don't have a partner you're not nice. But rather that if you work at not putting yourself first, on being genuinely interested in other people more than you are in yourself, good things will come back to you. It's kind of a "letting go" thing. If you don't look for it, you'll find it. It's a paradox but a generally true one I think.

I do think spending too much time and emotional energy on what I want or what I don't have is counter-productive. If I am out there with my focus on other people and what I can do for them I'm just going to be a better all round person. I'll be a happier person too, because I truly believe real happiness comes from what I do for others. It makes me feel so much better about myself. And being relaxed and feeling good about myself will draw other people to me. And I can't get either of those feelings if I'm concentrating on me.

Now, don't ask me how well or how consistently I do all this, or I'll have to kill you.

Now I'm going back to Hell and stay there.
 
Posted by Esmeralda (# 582) on :
 
No, the ugliest man in the world is John Mortimer. It was a blessing his father was blind and did not have to see him. However, he too has had affairs with, and married, some gorgeous women. Either he's very charming, or he's got the secret of some very powerful love potion.

Woody Allen, OTOH, has very sexy mournful eyes, a lovely Jewish nose, and a generally attractive face shape. Which simply goes to show that attractiveness is deeply subjective (I typed 'suggestive' at first, that may also be true).

In the case of both men, power and fame have got to be part of the mix. But I wouldn't sleep with Johnny Vegas however rich and powerful he got.

Of course there are some absolute standards of beauty. Regularity, symmetry and proportionality of features, for instance. But culture and personal feelings (and experience) make the edges of what is attractive so fuzzy, that almost anyone can find someone else who finds them attractive - if they're lucky enough to meet someone.
 
Posted by Papio. (# 4201) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sine Nomine:
Ahem...well, you know, being overly sensitive and being quick to take offense where none is meant possibly aren't the world's most attractive qualities either.

Point taken. [Hot and Hormonal]

It is something I need to work on, isn't it?

Thanks for the PM. [Biased]

[ 10. September 2005, 13:49: Message edited by: Papio. ]
 
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Esmeralda:
No, the ugliest man in the world is John Mortimer.

I say Lyle Lovett.
 
Posted by Joan_of_Quark (# 9887) on :
 
Physical attraction for me tends to grow over time. Sometimes I am attracted to a person when I first meet them but my longest and/or least grim relationships have NOT included that, however over a pretty short space of time they become irresistible because of who they are and our shared history. I suspect that for those of us who are not uniformly conventionally gorgeous things like getting to know the other person as a person (radical concept, huh? [Smile] ) rather than trying to show off at speed-dating events is probably going to pay dividends.
 
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on :
 
In defense of the ugly, the insufficiently selfless, the othewise f*****-up whose loneliness would seem to be, according to the theology I've heard expressed here, a function of the Old Testament YHWH's punishing them for not being good enough to deserve a relationship...I think longing for a meaningful, committed connection to another human being is a powerful affirmation of one's essential humanity. Anyone who didn't feel this longing on some level I'd find damned frightening. So, Sine's posts to the contrary, perhaps we're not completely damaged goods.

For the record, and speaking to the OP, I don't ascribe to a God who dispenses favors like a gumball machine. But -- if you can't shamelessly kvetch to God...to whom else?
 
Posted by Auntie Doris (# 9433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Faithful Sheepdog:
[QB] In my opinion the most ugly man in the world is Woody Allen, yet he has been associated with a stream of beautiful women for all of his life. /QB]

Just reminds me of the Mrs Merton interview with Debbie McGee when she said

"So tell me Debbie, what attracted you to millionaire Paul Daniels?"

[Killing me]

Auntie Doris x
 
Posted by Joan_of_Quark (# 9887) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LutheranChik:
I think longing for a meaningful, committed connection to another human being is a powerful affirmation of one's essential humanity. Anyone who didn't feel this longing on some level I'd find damned frightening.

What she said!

The times of my life I didn't feel that, I probably was "damned frightening" - imagine a Valkyrie-sized person possessed of the even temper of an OT prophet in one of their more vengeful moments, and stand well back...of course, this was due to being hurt repeatedly, not that anyone was going to get near enough to check.

In my vast experience of Christianity, like nearly 3 months now [Biased] , I think it's just fine occasionally to mention to God that I would kind of like someone to love, in that way, preferably one who doesn't let me down too badly this time. It would only be as crass and just plain silly as praying for a Merc if I prayed for someone with the looks of Andy Garcia && the brain of Albert Einstein && Bill Gates's money, etc etc.
 
Posted by Sine Nomine (# 66) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LutheranChik:
So, Sine's posts to the contrary, perhaps we're not completely damaged goods.

I'm really absolutely amazed at how you read into what I posted things that aren't there. It appears to me you took a positive and general statement about a good way to live one's life and turned it on its head to an intensively personal and negative one. Is this a Lutheran thing?
 
Posted by Laura (# 10) on :
 
But let's face it -- being ugly works better for men than women. A man can be uglier than dirt, old, fat and have a ferocious comb-over and still be surrounded by gorgeous women, assuming a certain number of other sterling qualities.
 
Posted by Grits (# 4169) on :
 
I'd think the most encouraging thing to remember is that you only have to find that one person, sort of like Ruth referred to earlier. Sure, I think dating, having a boyfriend, being in love, etc. would make for a more intense (read: complicated) life, but it still doesn't guarantee the kind of relationship which leads to marriage.

I think what Sine has been trying to say, as diplomatically as he possibly can, is that some -- SOME -- singles are or have become very self-absorbed. It's not a point of condemnation -- we all have a touch of it. I think he was merely pointing out that, as Christians or just as decent people, there is a certain aura that can develop around someone who looks out for those around him. In being able to reach out to others, you convey the sense that you are in a place of well-being, and that's a very precious commodity these days. It's hard to do for others if we are spending the bulk of our time taking care (read: whining) of ourselves. Aren't you more attracted to a giver than a taker?

I hope that Papio and others who truly desire to find a partner realize that you sometimes have to crush a lot of coal to make a diamond, and whether you be the crusher or the crushee, the end result can last a liftime.
 
Posted by Papio. (# 4201) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Grits:
I hope that Papio and others who truly desire to find a partner realize that you sometimes have to crush a lot of coal to make a diamond, and whether you be the crusher or the crushee, the end result can last a liftime.

I am not certain what you mean. Sorry.
 
Posted by Gort (# 6855) on :
 
I think it means you have to kiss a lot of frogs before your lips blister. [Confused]
 
Posted by Grits (# 4169) on :
 
Don't be sorry! I just meant that finding a partner can involve "process" -- whatever you choose that to mean. You can look at it as being with lots of people, weeding them out, discerning which qualities are important to you, etc. Or you can view it as finding someone who is close to "right", and refining the relationship to determine if it can go the distance. Of course, you may be the one on the receiving end of all this, as well!

I would love to be a matchmaker. Don't get me wrong -- I celebrate singlehood (and Lord knows I'd love to be celebrating it firsthand on occasion!), but my heart really goes out to those who truly desire to be part of a couple. I don't think it has anything to do with "God's will". Sometimes, it's just the luck of the draw. However, God's will can be shown in how we use whatever life we have, even if it's not what we would desire for ourselves. So, even though my heart's in Paris, my bod's in the kitchen, and I just make the best of it that I can.
 
Posted by Alogon (# 5513) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by nouwen:
where does marriage for my friend fit in? What if she fails to find fulfilment in 'single' life but is never married. What if, deep within she knowns that her life needs ot be joined with another, but that 'other' never comes along. What theology helps this?

She needs to read When Bad Things Happen to Good People.

The premise of this thread's title, that her loneliness and frustration are God's doing, is the problem. It's very clear from the Bible that close human relationships are the will of God.

On the other hand, I am glad to hear it suggested (at long last) that singleness is or can be a gift. The melody of the spiritual song "It's a gift to be single, it's a gift to be free" is playing in my head right now. Oh, wait-- shouldn't that be "a gift to be simple?" No matter: it's a Shaker song. Do you know who the Shakers were? I suspect that almost anyone would find me very hard to live with. I often find myself hard to live with. [Snigger] The New Testament does not oblige us to pair off-- rather the contrary, if anything.

Even while she seeks a partner, there is certainly nothing wrong with counting her blessings. Without doing so, she is liable to h rush into a commitment that she will live to regret.

One of my friends married late and, in the middle of raising two children whom he loves very much, his wife against his will initiated the nastiest divorce I've ever heard about. He's still suffering. That's the way too many marriages end. It gives one pause.
 
Posted by MaryFL (# 7482) on :
 
I think there are two issues here.

One is, it would be nice to have a spouse to share your life with. The other issue is with marriage being "the norm." Just look at the way people look at others who are over thirty and not married. It becomes obvious (to them) that there must be something wrong with you. This, to me, is annoying. Doesn't annoy me enough, obviously, to rush into a commitment with the first person I find, but I wish people would stop treating singles like they're incomplete persons until such time as they get married. [Disappointed]
 
Posted by NewAger (# 10347) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by MaryFL:
I think there are two issues here.

One is, it would be nice to have a spouse to share your life with. The other issue is with marriage being "the norm." Just look at the way people look at others who are over thirty and not married. It becomes obvious (to them) that there must be something wrong with you. This, to me, is annoying. Doesn't annoy me enough, obviously, to rush into a commitment with the first person I find, but I wish people would stop treating singles like they're incomplete persons until such time as they get married. [Disappointed]

Could not agree more. Well said.
 
Posted by LatePaul (# 37) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Laura:
But let's face it -- being ugly works better for men than women. A man can be uglier than dirt, old, fat and have a ferocious comb-over and still be surrounded by gorgeous women, assuming a certain number of other sterling qualities.

Doesn't have to be sterling, could be dollars, yen, euros...

[Biased]
 
Posted by Spiffy da Wonder Sheep (# 5267) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by MaryFL:
The other issue is with marriage being "the norm." Just look at the way people look at others who are over thirty and not married. It becomes obvious (to them) that there must be something wrong with you.

It's also an issue for those of us what aren't yet thirty but don't 'date' (which, of course, means going out to bars and taking random strangers home for a test drive). Thanks, but I don't see anything wierd in making a pot of soup for my friends on a Saturday night instead of getting sloshed and stupid with someone.

(By the way, anyone who wants minestrone soup, be at my house in about an hour [Big Grin] )

[ 10. September 2005, 23:59: Message edited by: Spiffy da Wonder Sheep ]
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sine Nomine:
What I said, or was trying to say, was not that if you don't have a partner you're not nice. But rather that if you work at not putting yourself first, on being genuinely interested in other people more than you are in yourself, good things will come back to you. It's kind of a "letting go" thing. If you don't look for it, you'll find it. It's a paradox but a generally true one I think.

"Good things" might or might not include finding a partner. If you meant the "it" we're to give up looking for and thus find to be a partner, you're wrong; this is not generally true. Sometimes it does happen. But letting go and not looking for a partner does not necessarily mean you'll find one. Plenty of people on this thread, including me, can testify to that.

Sine, the more I think about it, the more what you're saying on this thread strikes me as some kind of social version of a prosperity gospel. Put others first, be genuinely interested in others (or at least give that impression), don't be self-absorbed, and good things will come to you. Except it just isn't automatically true. There are loads of good people out there doing just that who are getting chewed up and spit out by life. If everyone else was healthy and well-adjusted, what you say would be true. But they aren't. Sometimes there is absolutely no reward at all, at least not in this life, for doing the right thing and caring about others enough to put them first.

And comparing the Psalms to Wonder, Love and Praise? Please. [Roll Eyes]
 
Posted by Laura (# 10) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
Sometimes there is absolutely no reward at all, at least not in this life, for doing the right thing and caring about others enough to put them first.

Indeed. Sometimes it led to fun stuff like upside-down crucifixion. Not much time for dating in there.

That said, I don't think Sine was preaching a sort of marital prosperity gospel. I think he's giving the Biblical version of "get past it".

But Sine, I think you should take into account that there are people who really are great folks and great Christians who are single and grieve for that a bit. And I don't see what's wrong with that.

I should have said earlier, by the way, that I object to the inherent assumption reported in the OP that a person is single if God has deliberately deprived her/him of companionship. The God I believe in isn't in that business. It's more that whether you've got a love partner here on earth isn't His primary concern. He's more interested in what you do with what you have to work with.
 
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on :
 
I think it's a problem, Laura, with this idea that God is all-sovereign over the minutiae of events in the space-time continuum. Thus if I'm single, or ugly, or have shin splints, it's God's doing.

Not that I subscribe to such a view of God, but I think that it leads to the "God is withholding marriage from me" sort of train of thought.
 
Posted by Laura (# 10) on :
 
I'm familiar with this as "God is My Micromanager" theology. ("He meant me to miss that highway exit!")
 
Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on :
 
The same God who finds parking spaces for certain drivers, no doubt.
 
Posted by miss jane (# 3107) on :
 
quote:
What if, deep within she knowns that her life needs ot be joined with another, but that 'other' never comes along. What theology helps this?
The theological perspective that I would genuinely believe helps us understand this is the already/not-yet. The Christian life is fundamentally one of suffering now, glory later. Yes, close, loving relationships are a good gift of God. But being a mature Christian, a nice, even a 'really really goodlooking' person, rich and/or famous, and wanting to get married doesn't mean that it is going to happen for you. I think the infertility analogy is a good one. Life this side of Jesus' return is not how it was supposed to be. The creation groans with longing and all that. Some people experience miraculous healings now. But other faithful, prayerful Christian people die horribly and prematurely. Some people find godly, loving spouses. Others find unfaithful abusive spouses. And still others find no-one at all. We are not in heaven yet. The day will come, however, when God will wipe away every tear from our eyes. Keep praying. Keep looking (if you can do this without it leading you to sin... bitterness, covetousness, self hatred, sexual immorality; choose your poison), but know that this is not the only age, and that in the age to come, it will be better than O.K, it will be perfection.

with love,

jane
 
Posted by scoticanus (# 5140) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Laura:
I'm familiar with this as "God is My Micromanager" theology. ("He meant me to miss that highway exit!")

There is also the High Church variation:

Holy Mary, Full of Grace,
Let me find a parking-space!
 
Posted by The Lady of the Lake (# 4347) on :
 
Re: Esmeralda's post/advice, which I thought was great:

quote:
Firstly, if you are a Christian woman and want your spouse to share your faith, you have to come to terms with the fact that in almost all churches, there are not enough single men to go round. And some of them are going to be gay anyway.
Long before you get to whether or not they're gay, there are other problems to face. Like, are they afraid of women or are they looking for a 'girl'.
Do they agree with the use of birth control in marriage ? (I've seen people get married where they don't really agree on this issue, and it spells disaster. It's expressing all sorts of differences in attitudes, not necessarily just relating to sex, but to roles, priorities, etc.)
Are they just playing the field and refusing to settle down (especially if they're older) ?
Do they rely on a woman to give their life meaning and to give them good self-esteem (I come across an alarming number of Christian men who have this sort of attitude. They often seem to lack close male friendships.)

quote:
All single women seeking church membership should be warned that it will seriously decrease their chances of marriage. Jesus told us, after all, to count the cost of discipleship.
You're right. A friend of mine has done research on single women in the churches, and advocated saying this upfront.
I'd add, though, that the churches have no excuse at all for not seriously working to make more male disciples.

quote:
If you are single and likely to remain so, you will have to make your own arrangements for this. You could house-share, or live in community (which has its own hassles), or do what I did, which is to gather a 'mini-community' of fellow singles around you.
Yes that sounds like a good idea, in general actually. Maybe belonging to a community to which you travel once a year, and whose rule of life you aim to life by all year round, belongs to this mindset ?
 
Posted by Tubbs (# 440) on :
 
Interestingly enough, there was an article about this in this month’s Easy Living. The writer, Shane Watson gives these reasons:

- I haven’t met the right man
- I’m not looking in the right places
- Timing
- Getting picky
- Being scared
- Losing the hunger
- Bad role models
- Becoming an independence junkie
- Serenity (or lack of)
- Addicted to my unfinished story
- The joys of being selfish

Weirdly enough, she doesn’t include any mention of God withholding a partner because he’s a big meanie / insert your reason here.

I was still single in my thirties and came to the conclusion that, in most cases, getting married / acquiring a significant other was more influenced by luck and circumstances than anything I could actually do … And having come to that conclusion, I realised that the best thing I could do was “get past it” and accept my situation as it was and make the best of it. That said, the Pollyanna approach didn’t always work and there were times when I felt pretty pissed off about it. So I used to have a bloody good moan to the Lord about it. (And now I'm married, I have a good moan about that as well).

It’s not just the lack of a companion or a shag that you have to grieve for, it’s the lack of a family, children etc. (And before anyone says anything, I know that being married doesn’t guarantee children either, but it does help increase your chances!) Those are big issues to work through, and one of the things that really used to annoy me was just how lightly those would be dismissed. Stuff like this makes me want to spit in the speaker's eye:

quote:
Originally posted by josephine:
quote:
Originally posted by Duo Seraphim*:
I understand nouwen's friend to be feeling that particular lack, that there is a good that God has bestowed on others - someone to be their partner and to share their life - that He has denied her. And then it is reasonable to ask why.

Is it? Does nouwen's friend also want to know why God has bestowed good things on her that other people lack? Does she cry all over her friends because God has unfairly granted her good health, because she never goes hungry, because her home is dry and the power is on and fresh pure water comes out of the tap at the touch of a faucet?

Why do we act as if God owes us an explanation when we don't get what we want, but accept the things we want without a second thought?


Tubbs
 
Posted by Anselmina (# 3032) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sine Nomine:
Has your life experience shown you that people who put others first, who aren't obsessed with self, and try to put good things into the stream of life don't have amazingly attractive personalities that draw people to them?


Well, yes and no. And I do know, I think, what you're saying that if someone is attractive through selfless goodness, it will be seen and appreciated by others, one of whom might want to make a partner of that person. No doubt it happens, but I don't see it as a recommendation for getting hooked up with someone, by any means.

I see many people who put others first and do good things and are genuinelly good people and I think they've got amazing personalities because of all that. But they're still unmarried, lonely and asking 'why?' They don't seem to draw to them people who want to make partners of them, sadly.

In fact, experience seems to demonstrate, very often, that people such as you describe generally draw the kind of people who like to 'use' people like that.

I also see self-obsessed morons who are real takers and contribute nothing positive who manage to get through partner after partner after partner.

Sure, there are some people out there who find their spouse because they were attracted to, or came to appreciate their sterling qualities, but it seems just as likely you can still find yourself a wife/husband if you're a git of the first order and care diddly squat for nowt else but yourself. So the 'non self-obsessed, giving into the stream of life' thing seems to be rather turned on its head.

That's what experience shows me.
 
Posted by Tubbs (# 440) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sine Nomine:
Has your life experience shown you that people who put others first, who aren't obsessed with self, and try to put good things into the stream of life don't have amazingly attractive personalities that draw people to them?

The problem with that theory is that reduces the whole marriage / singleness issue down to merit. People with amazing personalities that draw others to them get married, those without them don’t. I Think Not. And I can't think of a situation where you could seriously suggest that to someone in conversation where you wouldn't get a smack round the face. What you’re implying is that someone is single because they’re not a nice person.

Much of it comes down to being in the right place at the right time. (In my case, in front of the now husband in a toilet queue at a party [Eek!] )

It's also an issue that people have to deal with in their own way. In my case, deciding to pray for contentment with what I had helped. I also told God that either he had two choices - either take the desire for a husband and family away or hurry up and provide one. But part of the reason for doing that was purely selfish - I thought that life would be more fun if I focussed on what I had rather than what I didn't. But that isn't something that would work for everyone. And reducing what was a long process of getting past it into a few sentences makes it sound much easier than it was.

Tubbs
 
Posted by I_am_not_Job (# 3634) on :
 
Why don't we set up a Ship of Fools dating agency?

All I can say is from my own experience a partner comes up when you least expect it. I'd made a silly vow that I wouldn't date anyone ever again until I met the person I would marry. The next day I met this bloke who was ostensibly the complete opposite of what I thought I was looking for in a bloke and he somehow persuaded me to go out with him and a year later we were married.

OK, sickening I know but let your friend cry her tears when she needs to but then get on with life.
 
Posted by Gill H (# 68) on :
 
The Ship actually has a pretty good matching record. How many weddings has it been responsible for now? At least 10, I think.
 
Posted by Joan_of_Quark (# 9887) on :
 
On the one hand, we have people saying Christianity is a great way of staying single forever if you're female (even if you don't want to) and on the other, matches apparently made on SoF. OK, I know SoF is NOT a church. But what's going on here? Is it the female:male ratio, are non-Christian men reluctant to date Christian women, do Christian women ALL have to start wearing socks and sandals after a certain amount of time in the faith [Smile] ?
 
Posted by Auntie Doris (# 9433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Gill H:
The Ship actually has a pretty good matching record. How many weddings has it been responsible for now? At least 10, I think.

OK - so who is in charge? and where do I sign up?

Auntie Doris x
 
Posted by Catrine (# 9811) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Gill H:
The Ship actually has a pretty good matching record. How many weddings has it been responsible for now? At least 10, I think.

Who have met their spouses through SoF? (Sorry to be nosey, but I'm intrigued)
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Catrine:
Who have met their spouses through SoF? (Sorry to be nosey, but I'm intrigued)

Yes. Ship romances seem to be quite common, actually...

I checked Limbo, but it seems none of the TDA (Tigglet's Dating Agency) threads has made it there. Oh well...

[spelling]

[ 14. September 2005, 12:02: Message edited by: Marvin the Martian ]
 
Posted by Gill H (# 68) on :
 
I'm one of the few who remembers the first one, Claudine and Ian. She was an Aussie, he was from the UK, they flirted on the ship and within a very short time she was coming over her to marry him. Neither of them are on the ship these days - too busy having a life, I think.
 
Posted by The Lady of the Lake (# 4347) on :
 
quote:
Is it the female:male ratio
It's not just that, I find. Plenty of people of both sexes have issues to work through in the churches. It's easy just to think women are all doing okay, and it's easy to kid oneself aboutthat, IMHO.

quote:
are non-Christian men reluctant to date Christian women
Quite a few do, but some resent women who stick to their faith. [Roll Eyes]
Then there are ex-Christian men who do not want to touch Christian women with a bargepole, and ditto for ex-Christian women re: Christian men.
I would never tell women they should only date Christian men though. Plenty of Christian women have good relationships with men who are 'nominally' Christian.

quote:
do Christian women ALL have to start wearing socks and sandals after a certain amount of time in the faith ?
Why not just the sandals ? [Biased]
 
Posted by Esmeralda (# 582) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Lady of the Lake:

quote:
do Christian women ALL have to start wearing socks and sandals after a certain amount of time in the faith ?
Why not just the sandals ? [Biased]
Yes, they definitely shouldn't have socks before marriage [Biased]
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Joan_of_Quark:
On the one hand, we have people saying Christianity is a great way of staying single forever if you're female (even if you don't want to) and on the other, matches apparently made on SoF. OK, I know SoF is NOT a church. But what's going on here? Is it the female:male ratio, are non-Christian men reluctant to date Christian women

In my limited experience its because most Christian women are reluctant to have anything to do with Christian men...
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Lady of the Lake:
I would never tell women they should only date Christian men though. Plenty of Christian women have good relationships with men who are 'nominally' Christian.

Presumably they include all the women who come to church on their own, or with their children and no bloke, giving the place the impression of being full of single women when it isn't really? (or at least not single and interested ones anyway)

But this is in danger of turning into a retread of half a hundred previous whinges.
 
Posted by Joan_of_Quark (# 9887) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Lady of the Lake:
[QUOTE]Plenty of people of both sexes have issues to work through in the churches. It's easy just to think women are all doing okay, and it's easy to kid oneself aboutthat, IMHO.

Kind of like dating agencies, evening classes and other places which tend to have a permanent rump of the dorkishly unpairoffable (and a hopefully tiny minority of the absolutely barking) in amongst the people you might actually want to meet? Along with all the church-specific issues, that is?

quote:
Originally posted by Esmeralda:
they definitely shouldn't have socks before marriage [Biased] [/QB]

Aha, maybe that's what I'm doing wrong! I get cold feet, you see. (And got cold feet about marriage on more than one occasion [Smile] )

quote:
Originally posted by ken:
In my limited experience its because most Christian women are reluctant to have anything to do with Christian men...

That sounds like a challenge [Two face] ... now where DID I put my bargepole?!
 
Posted by Papio. (# 4201) on :
 
In case ken is correct, I would like to point out to any eligible and involuntarily single hetrosexual Christian women (aged 21-35) that I am friendly towards Christians but am not myself a Christian....

[Two face] [Two face]
 
Posted by josephine (# 3899) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tubbs:
Stuff like this makes me want to spit in the speaker's eye:
quote:
Originally posted by josephine:
Why do we act as if God owes us an explanation when we don't get what we want, but accept the things we want without a second thought?


Sorry you feel that way, Tubbs. I had seriously overdosed on Katrina news last week, among other things, and was feeling angry and uncharitable when I read the OP.

Nouwen asked for a theological answer to her friend's problem. Since I didn't say it particularly well the first time, I'll try again. The theological answer is that you don't always get what you want. Not only that, but you don't always get what you deserve. Solomon himself said that the fastest person doesn't always win the race. Likewise, the most lovely, most gracious, most charming person doesn't always get a spouse. As my father always said, life's not fair; get used to it. Solomon said time and chance happen to everyone.

Life is difficult. It hurts. Bad things happen. And good things happen, too. Sometimes the good things and bad things that happen are the consequences of choices you've made -- you got an A because you studied hard; you got an F because you didn't turn in any homework all semester.

But many times, most times perhaps, the good things you get are not the result of anything you've done; you didn't get them because you are better than anyone else, or worked harder, or had more faith, or because God loves you more. Same with the bad things -- they're not because of anything you've done or failed to do, not a result of a lack of faith, not because God hates you or is holding back on you. They just happen.

That's not an easy answer to accept, I know. But it's the answer that I believe is true.
 
Posted by andrew1066 (# 10360) on :
 
hello, I am new to S-o-F and this is my first posting
what Josephine just posted makes sense to me
I have been both happily and unhappily married, and unhappily and happily single, which I now am.
A question that occurs to me time and time again is:
How do the couple create, enter into, solemnize (call it what you will) a marriage that is valid in the eyes of God-&-the-Church?
I am not asking how to create a marriage that is valid according to [English, or any other earthly jurisdiction] law.
What exactly do the couple need to
DO? and
INTEND? and
PROMISE?
What is necessary and sufficient to the creation of a theologically valid marriage?
(apart from the confetti of course)
 
Posted by corvette (# 9436) on :
 
welcome andrew [Smile]


rats, so the confetti *was* important after all, that explains everything. Ain't hindsight wonderful? [Frown]
 
Posted by Ms Lilith (# 1767) on :
 
Hi andrew1066 I think maybe 'theologically what makes a marriage" would be a good thread of it's own. I nearly derailed this one with an anecdote and some thoughts.

So about singleness… I am 28 and single because

And probably for other reasons but I don’t think it is God's fault any more than I think it is God's fault I don’t have a job or a size ten figure or red hair (I prayed for red hair as a child). It is about the choices I have made.

And thinking that, my logical head says "don’t be silly now it is nt God's fault is it" but I remember being in love with a man I couldn’t have and at the time it felt reasonable to cry at God for sending him into my life. So although it has never occurred to me to rage at God for the people I haven’t met I can kind of understand why someone would cry and wonder what the pattern and purpose is behind the pain they are feeling. And I can understand that hearing "but your theology is all wrong" isn’t going to help in that moment because you work out your pain within the parameters you have and later you think about the theology.

[ 15. September 2005, 00:19: Message edited by: Ms Lilith ]
 
Posted by Papio. (# 4201) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ms Lilith:
the men Ive met have liked their women to be a teeny bit less clever than them

Really? [Eek!]

Methinks you may just have met dorky men.
 
Posted by Rat (# 3373) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Papio.:
quote:
Originally posted by Ms Lilith:
the men Ive met have liked their women to be a teeny bit less clever than them

Really? [Eek!]

You'd be amazed, this really isn't (wasn't?) an uncommon view. As a workmate of mine once said to me, quite seriously:

quote:
Well, obviously you want a girlfriend who's intelligent, successful and funny. As long as she's not quite as intelligent, successful or funny as you.
Looking at Mr Rat's generation (40+) he is quite unusual among his friends in being with a woman who is of a similar educational level and career status to him. Most of his workmates are degree-educated men married to hairdressers, shop-assistants and the like. (Which is not to suggest that hairdressers and shop-assistants are not intelligent, but there is an obvious gap in status, education and earning power there.)

Obviously this attitude can't have been universal, or there'd be a lot more educated spinsters than their are, but in certain circles it seems to have been common.

I have to say, though, looking around the partnerships of people my age and younger, I don't see the same gap. It seems the norm to be with someone of a similar level of education to yourself, often met through education or work. And while I don't spend a lot of time around young men, I get the impression they are far less hung up about such things, if they cross their minds at all. So chalk up one improving social trait, IMO, if my impressions are correct.
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ms Lilith:
So about singleness… I am 28 and single because

<snipped a couple out>


Yep, that's pretty much the list of reasons why I'm currently single as well. Except I'm not 28 yet. And reverse the usage of "men" and "women" [Biased] .
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
Hmmm...

getting a bit personal here I suppose. But a few months ago I realised that if I looked back over the last 30 years or so & added together women I had had some sort of relationship with (including ones that lasted little more than an evening), the count was now just about into two figures. Which isn't exactly a statistical sample but is enough to do 5-bar gates with. So I wrote down on a piece of paper some characteristics

And found (amongst some rather less expected things) that just about all these people had had better educational qualifications than me, and that one thing they nearly all had in common was being very clever.

Of course that leaves open the question of whether I am more likely to fancy brainy women or they are more likely to fancy me... general observation that it is usually women who decide these things would make it likely that the latter is true.

There is certainly some sorting by education going on. In my age group about 1 person in 10 in the UK has a university degree. Amongst current twenty-somethings its more like a third. Say 1 in 5 is a good average. If it was at random the chance of 10 consecutive close encounters (of whatever kind) being with someone who had a degree would be 1:5^10 which is about 1 in a million. (And yes I know that educational acheivement is a very bad proxy for being clever, and I know that the real odds are a lot less than that because there are class, employment, and geographical issues to consider. )

So my own personal experience from a sample of one (i.e. me) is that intelligence is no barrier. Quite the opposite in fact...
 
Posted by The Lady of the Lake (# 4347) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ken:

In my limited experience its because most Christian women are reluctant to have anything to do with Christian men...

Maybe you're right about some people. In response to your comment:

quote:
Presumably they include all the women who come to church on their own, or with their children and no bloke, giving the place the impression of being full of single women when it isn't really? (or at least not single and interested ones anyway)
Maybe this depends on the church ? The women I'm referring to are ones who are married, remarried or repartnered to or going out with 'nominal' or non-Christian men. I'd be interested to know what some people in those relationships think of the theology of God giving or withholding a partner. [Biased]

People I've known who've done evening classes have been pretty normal and well-adjusted. Maybe this is because people who like learning languages tend to be sociable and well-adjusted in the first place, and are learning languages in order to communicate with other people. [Smile]
 
Posted by Rat (# 3373) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Lady of the Lake:
People I've known who've done evening classes have been pretty normal and well-adjusted.

Me too. They have, though, tended to be either young mums or retired couples. So not necessarily a good hunting ground for a single person, whether they're looking for new friends or a potential love-interest.
 
Posted by Esmeralda (# 582) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
Hmmm...

getting a bit personal here I suppose. But a few months ago I realised that if I looked back over the last 30 years or so & added together women I had had some sort of relationship with (including ones that lasted little more than an evening), the count was now just about into two figures. Which isn't exactly a statistical sample but is enough to do 5-bar gates with. So I wrote down on a piece of paper some characteristics

And found (amongst some rather less expected things) that just about all these people had had better educational qualifications than me, and that one thing they nearly all had in common was being very clever.

Of course that leaves open the question of whether I am more likely to fancy brainy women or they are more likely to fancy me... general observation that it is usually women who decide these things would make it likely that the latter is true.

There is certainly some sorting by education going on. In my age group about 1 person in 10 in the UK has a university degree. Amongst current twenty-somethings its more like a third. Say 1 in 5 is a good average. If it was at random the chance of 10 consecutive close encounters (of whatever kind) being with someone who had a degree would be 1:5^10 which is about 1 in a million. (And yes I know that educational acheivement is a very bad proxy for being clever, and I know that the real odds are a lot less than that because there are class, employment, and geographical issues to consider. )

So my own personal experience from a sample of one (i.e. me) is that intelligence is no barrier. Quite the opposite in fact...

Ken, if only I'd met you when I was single! I suppose I might have not found you brainy enough, but I don't get that impression from your many posts. And our politics might have agreed admirably..

Alas, now it is too late.

I find pretty strange that people won't go where there are Christians looking for Christian partner. There were few enough of them around in my day, that if Christian Connection had existed then, I'd definitely have joined!

Of course you meet the odd dork/axe murderer (all right, there aren't that many Christian axe murderers about, but there are plenty who look and behave like one). But you have to take your chances, or you'll never meet anyone!

It would be interesting to do a poll of how people met their partners, Christian or not. I met mine at a Christian conference, where I'd gone to run workshops on feminism! (and I thought he was a complete dork at first, and for a considerable time after that).
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
I've heard it said that generally speaking, intelligent women look for partners who are their equals or betters in intelligence; for men this factor is not nearly so important. (Yes, it's a generalization.)

It was from some kind of study done years ago, and was invoked to explain why (at least in the U.S.) a single woman's chances of marrying decrease with each additional degree she earns, but it is not so for a man. If women normally marry "equally or up," their potential partner pool is smaller than that of similarly educated men, who often choose to marry "down."

From my own experience, I'd say there's something in it. I've met quite a few never married female PhDs and relatively few males. And I've certainly experienced the stereotypical male reaction to my intelligence and / or degree. (Everything from a high school boyfriend's anger when I earned a higher grade in biology, to being told by a grad student that "I had a mind like a man"--he couldn't understand why I got pissed off at his lovely little compliment--to having my past boss use the phrase "intelligent women" as a swear word.)

I got fed up and refused to hide my light under a bushel. Fortunately, I met a lovely man who was actually PROUD of having an educated and intelligent wife. (he brags about me [Axe murder] )

Obviously, not all Western men are like this. But quite a few are. Maybe that explains why I had to marry outside my own culture to find a secure one.
 
Posted by Papio. (# 4201) on :
 
Rat - I know men who actively want their women to be slightly less intelligent than themselves as well. I even know a few men who actively want their girlfriend to be dense. [Disappointed]

I also know men, such as myself, who would like their girlfriend to be roughly on a par intellectually with themselves. Slightly brighter or less bright is fine. Significantly brighter or less bright is not. But, basically, the same level is ideal.

Have to say that I haven't met many men who want a much brighter female partner, though.....
 
Posted by Papio. (# 4201) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lamb Chopped:
I've heard it said that generally speaking, intelligent women look for partners who are their equals or betters in intelligence; for men this factor is not nearly so important. (Yes, it's a generalization.

This is probably true, although also a generalisation, as you say. Intelligence, or the lack of it, is a significant factor for when deciding whether or not to date a given female.

Ideally (and I stress ideally), I would like my gf to have a 2:1 or 1st class honours degree*, to be well read, to be articulate, to be emotionally literate and to be able to live and let live most of the time. I assume that this is also what most women mean by intelligence?

Papio

*Is that really snobby? [Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by Joan_of_Quark (# 9887) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Papio.:
Have to say that I haven't met many men who want a much brighter female partner, though.....

I was reading up on high IQs somewhere (hopefully no-one will mistake me for someone who thinks high IQ is exactly the same as intelligence etc etc) and it said that generally more "intelligent" people are more "successful" - in terms of jobs, partners etc. However, beyond a certain point they find it harder to get partners. This kicks in at 140ish for men BUT 125 for women. [Roll Eyes]

Also hope no-one thinks I meant everyone in an evening class was a dork - was just trying to say that every place which includes meeting the rest of the human race has a few of 'em. My own worst experience at evening class was being chatted up by the male model during coffee break in a life drawing class - kinda ruins the mystery, doncha know? [Biased]
 
Posted by Little Miss Methodist (# 1000) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Papio.:
Ideally (and I stress ideally), I would like my gf to have a 2:1 or 1st class honours degree*, to be well read, to be articulate, to be emotionally literate and to be able to live and let live most of the time.

*Is that really snobby?

Yes.

Lets put it this way. I'm intelligent, (i'd say I was very intelligent, but that would be way too much boasting [Biased] ). But, I have a third class degree. It's got nothing to do with intelligence and everything to do with losing interest in my subject and just not really working. I could have got a first if I had wanted to, but instead I had a good time at university, and have absolutely no regrets about that. I certainly don't think it makes me any less intelligent than people who have firsts. Accademic qualifications aren't everything, and whilst they can be an indicator of intelligence, being intelligent is about more than making the right marks on an exam paper.

Almost top of my list of attributes in a partner is that they would have to be at least as intelligent as me, and I rate that highly because if i'm going to end up with this guy for the rest of my life, I want to be able to have intelligent conversations with him on my level.

Papio, perhaps what you mean is that you are attracted to girls who are more accademic - I think thats slightly different to intelligent.

LMM

[ 15. September 2005, 17:55: Message edited by: Little Miss Methodist ]
 
Posted by Auntie Doris (# 9433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Little Miss Methodist:
Almost top of my list of attributes in a partner is that they would have to be at least as intelligent as me, and I rate that highly because if i'm going to end up with this guy for the rest of my life, I want to be able to have intelligent conversations with him on my level.

Kind of where I sit with this issue. I want to meet someone who is intelligent, but that doesn't mean they wil necessarily have gone to uni. I want someone who can string a sentence together though... and has an opinion about most stuff!!

Unfortunately, my last blokes appeared to have had shit for brains. [Frown]

I am (reasonably) intelligent, I have a degree and a Masters, but my real problem is that I have a big fat mouth and I say what I think!!! [Big Grin]

Auntie Doris x
 
Posted by Papio. (# 4201) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Little Miss Methodist:
quote:
Originally posted by Papio.:
Ideally (and I stress ideally), I would like my gf to have a 2:1 or 1st class honours degree*, to be well read, to be articulate, to be emotionally literate and to be able to live and let live most of the time.

*Is that really snobby?

Yes.

Lets put it this way. I'm intelligent, (i'd say I was very intelligent, but that would be way too much boasting [Biased] ). But, I have a third class degree. It's got nothing to do with intelligence and everything to do with losing interest in my subject and just not really working. I could have got a first if I had wanted to, but instead I had a good time at university, and have absolutely no regrets about that. I certainly don't think it makes me any less intelligent than people who have firsts. Accademic qualifications aren't everything, and whilst they can be an indicator of intelligence, being intelligent is about more than making the right marks on an exam paper.

Almost top of my list of attributes in a partner is that they would have to be at least as intelligent as me, and I rate that highly because if i'm going to end up with this guy for the rest of my life, I want to be able to have intelligent conversations with him on my level.

Papio, perhaps what you mean is that you are attracted to girls who are more accademic - I think thats slightly different to intelligent.

LMM

I had a good time, did not work that hard, and still got a 1st.

How do you define intelligence then? I think being academically able, emotionally literate and articulate are pretty key indicators. Can someone be intelligent without them? I think not.
 
Posted by The Lady of the Lake (# 4347) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lamb Chopped:

I've met qutie a few never married female PhDs and relatively few males.

What are the differences between married and never-married women PhDs ?
I wonder if there are some psychological differences that might explain why some get hitched and some don't. The married ones I know are stable and happy, but one thing they have in common is that they have interests outside work and can handle non-academic types of people. Not all academics one comes across are like this.
 
Posted by Papio. (# 4201) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Joan_of_Quark:
However, beyond a certain point they find it harder to get partners. This kicks in at 140ish for men BUT 125 for women. [Roll Eyes]

But as you said, IQ scores are complete and absolute bollocks. I have had been tested 4 times, and the difference between the lowest and highest scores is over 20 points. And, no, there is not a progressive increase each time.
 
Posted by LatePaul (# 37) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Papio.:
I think being academically able, emotionally literate and articulate are pretty key indicators. Can someone be intelligent without them? I think not.

How are you defining that? Just curious.
 
Posted by Papio. (# 4201) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LatePaul:
quote:
Originally posted by Papio.:
I think being academically able, emotionally literate and articulate are pretty key indicators. Can someone be intelligent without them? I think not.

How are you defining that? Just curious.
Able to know, without having to think too much, what emotions other are presenting and whether these seem genuine. Ability to know you feel. Politeness. Ability to leave alone. Ability to push someone if that is appropriate.

FWIW - I think I could improve on some of these.
 
Posted by LatePaul (# 37) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Joan_of_Quark:
However, beyond a certain point they find it harder to get partners.

Cool! So it's not that I'm sad, desperate and not NT-Christian enough, it's just that I'm too smart! [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Papio. (# 4201) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Papio.:
quote:
Originally posted by LatePaul:
quote:
Originally posted by Papio.:
I think being academically able, emotionally literate and articulate are pretty key indicators. Can someone be intelligent without them? I think not.

How are you defining that? Just curious.
Able to know, without having to think too much, what emotions other are presenting and whether these seem genuine. Ability to know you feel. Politeness. Ability to leave alone. Ability to push someone if that is appropriate.

FWIW - I think I could improve on some of these.

Bearing my brother in mind, I know that Asperger's Syndrome, for example, effects these abilities.

But for those without AS etc...
 
Posted by Joyfulsoul (# 4652) on :
 
Hmm... I must be one of the very few that thinks intelligence is over-rated... I'd rather have a kind bloke than a bright one. I've met so many intellectual idiots that quite honestly I want someone who is loving rather than intellectually stimulating. In the end, the guys who have made a greater impression on me are the ones who are patient and kind and unselfish rather than those who are quick-witted or clever. Honest to God, I think the ones who are most intelligent are the ones who less parade it.
 
Posted by Rat (# 3373) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Papio.:
Ideally (and I stress ideally), I would like my gf to have a 2:1 or 1st class honours degree*, to be well read, to be articulate, to be emotionally literate and to be able to live and let live most of the time. I assume that this is also what most women mean by intelligence?

I think if I were to define the kind of intelligence I'd look for in a man, I wouldn't necessarily get too hung up on education as more than a very rough guide. I know some degree educated people who I'd be hard pushed to define as intelligent.

For me (and this is obviously subjective and probably predjudiced to some degree) the signs of intelligence I would look for are being well and reasonably broadly read, and having a well-travelled mind. By which I don't necessarily mean they should have travelled, but that they are interested in things and people and experiences outside themselves, and willing to admit that their own experience is neither universal nor a clinching argument.

And they must be able to argue their point of view. That's essential. And be confident enough in their own intelligence to deal with the fact that I will disagree with them and argue my point, often and at length and sometimes just for the sake of it. An amazing number of otherwise reasonable men get huffy or angry if you dare to do anything but agree with their latest pronouncement - that is a total no-no for me. I'm not good at tact, or all that sneaky make-him-think-it-was-his-idea-all-along stuff. And, frankly, I don't believe any man I could respect would be fooled by either for any length of time

So an ability to defend his point of view and enjoy doing it, and not take himself too seriously, is a good pointer to intelligence for me, partly because it implies not having anything to prove. And if he can argue me round to his point of view just now and again, or at least persuade me to re-assess in the light of new information, I will - in a rather stereotypically girly way - be terribly impressed and probably fancy him a lot more.
 
Posted by Papio. (# 4201) on :
 
Rat - I agree with all that, broadly speaking.

I don't think that formal education is always the same as acadcemic intelligence or that academic intelligence is the only form of intelligence.

So far as I know, that isn't what I said. But I thought all of what you said was conveyed in what I said.
 
Posted by Joan_of_Quark (# 9887) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Papio.:
quote:
Originally posted by Joan_of_Quark:
However, beyond a certain point they find it harder to get partners. This kicks in at 140ish for men BUT 125 for women. [Roll Eyes]

But as you said, IQ scores are complete and absolute bollocks. I have had been tested 4 times, and the difference between the lowest and highest scores is over 20 points. And, no, there is not a progressive increase each time.
Actually I didn't say they were bollocks, I would rather categorise them as one possible indicator of intelligence - intelligence being something that is more than one-dimensional, as you recognised when you posted about literacy, emotional sensitivity and all of that elsewhere. I don't know how you were tested, but the standard tests are expected to produce that kind of wild swing when you're several standard deviations from the mean. I mean, I bet your result didn't ever come out as 89, did it? [Smile]

I suspect that most of us accumulate stereotypes about what we are/aren't looking for, why we think we are/aren't hitched up ourselves, etc. In my history, for every gloriously erudite bloke whose dazzling wit could keep me entertained for weeks there's a shambling, bearded and be-corduroy'ed academic who's absolutely clueless in the real world except insofar as he can latch onto a more sorted-out woman to deal with domestic complexities. And so on...
 
Posted by Tubbs (# 440) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by josephine:
quote:
Originally posted by Tubbs:
Stuff like this makes me want to spit in the speaker's eye:
quote:
Originally posted by josephine:
Why do we act as if God owes us an explanation when we don't get what we want, but accept the things we want without a second thought?


Sorry you feel that way, Tubbs. I had seriously overdosed on Katrina news last week, among other things, and was feeling angry and uncharitable when I read the OP.

Nouwen asked for a theological answer to her friend's problem. Since I didn't say it particularly well the first time, I'll try again. The theological answer is that you don't always get what you want. Not only that, but you don't always get what you deserve. Solomon himself said that the fastest person doesn't always win the race. Likewise, the most lovely, most gracious, most charming person doesn't always get a spouse. As my father always said, life's not fair; get used to it. Solomon said time and chance happen to everyone.

Life is difficult. It hurts. Bad things happen. And good things happen, too. Sometimes the good things and bad things that happen are the consequences of choices you've made -- you got an A because you studied hard; you got an F because you didn't turn in any homework all semester.

But many times, most times perhaps, the good things you get are not the result of anything you've done; you didn't get them because you are better than anyone else, or worked harder, or had more faith, or because God loves you more. Same with the bad things -- they're not because of anything you've done or failed to do, not a result of a lack of faith, not because God hates you or is holding back on you. They just happen.

That's not an easy answer to accept, I know. But it's the answer that I believe is true.

That’s more like it, thanks for the clarification.

The thing is, questions like “Why am I still single?” come from the heart. While answers like yours – which I agree with pretty much - come from the head.

When someone is in tears, the only possible answer is “It’s Because They’re All Numbskulls Who Don’t Know A Good Thing When They See It! ™” along with offers of tea, tissues and biscuits.

When someone is calmer and more receptive, then your answer is appropriate. Phased correctly, it’s honest, truthful and to the point.

And then there are the situations when the only solution is to voice certain unpalatable truths about your friend in the hope that it may encourage them to change. Things like banging on endlessly about previous relationships does not make someone inviting to anyone new.

Tubbs
 
Posted by Jazzuk777 (# 5720) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Papio.:
Rat - I agree with all that, broadly speaking.

I don't think that formal education is always the same as acadcemic intelligence or that academic intelligence is the only form of intelligence.

So far as I know, that isn't what I said. But I thought all of what you said was conveyed in what I said.

Papio I am glad you qualified your earlier statements somewhat. To suggest that you look for a partner based on their qualifications, left me in disbelief! Some of us don't have degrees at all, for reasons completely not to do with our intellectual ability - I am frequently told by people they are surprised I don't have a degree.

I don't consider myself especially intelligent, or not - frankly it's not something I consider important, say like things such as, willingness to think about things, humour, love, integrity...it tends to be the unwillingness to consider things/people rather than the inability, that generally gets my goat anyway!

[ 15. September 2005, 20:19: Message edited by: Jazzuk777 ]
 
Posted by Ms Lilith (# 1767) on :
 
It is true. I stand by what I said. Men will respect you and like you and be your friend and even love you a bit for being their intellectual equal but they choose pretty little women who will look up to them for being so clever. Or worse, clever manipulative women who are content to play at being the admiring dim pretty girl who lets her man make the decisions. If a man's ego needs this, he really isn’t worth the bother and I couldn’t respect him. I figure I'd be better off dying alone and being eaten by kittens.

quote:
Originally posted by Papio.:
*Is that really snobby? [Hot and Hormonal]

Yes but I know what you mean. Im a snob too. While I can see what LMM is saying about academic being different to intelligent (and I have met her in real life and found her to be both articulate and emotionally literate) I probably have to admit to the same standards. And as my mother tells me intellectual snobbery is still snobbery and it isn't attractive. I'm not saying I'd have an application form for being my boyfriend with "second class honours or below need not apply" on it but I'd wonder whether the person had the same values as me. Education is a luxury and I might see an intelligent man choosing to squander it as being a tad irresponsible. Of course there are reasons and I fell apart a bit in my third year but luckily it was modular and I knew name on the paper in the last exam was enough for my 2:1.

Emotionally literate is interesting. I think of myself as being fairly emotionally literate. For the work I've been good at, just being bright wouldn't have been enough. Good facilitation and mentoring needs someone who can judge people and situations. And I think I'm a good friend but when it comes to knowing if people like me romantically I'm utterly dense. A really good friend of mine (now happlily settled with a partner I like very much) recently told me that on an occasion a few years ago he came to visit me with the intention of trying to get together with me. I was so staggered by this because I had no clue, I hadn’t realised at all.

Maybe that is my problem. Im too bright but not emotionally intelligent enough. [Frown]

For what it's worth tho I'm a fabulous ex-girlfriend. It's my romantic skill. I'm surprised there aren’t queues of young men outside my door waiting to date me and dump me. So if there are any late 20something early 30something men out there who want a great ex girlfriend who will cook for you when you are passing through the city, listen to your problems, take your wedding photos etc. Applications stating academic qualifications will be taken by PM. [Biased]
 
Posted by Papio. (# 4201) on :
 
I have also met LMM and also found her as you said.

Am leaving this alone now for a bit, because I am clearly not using certain words in the way that most people understand them. Or, at least, it looks that way to me.
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ms Lilith:
So if there are any late 20something early 30something men out there who want a great ex girlfriend who will cook for you when you are passing through the city, listen to your problems, take your wedding photos etc.

Hmmm. And I'm even in the same city...

quote:
Applications stating academic qualifications will be taken by PM. [Biased]
Bugger. I've only got an Ordinary Degree. Ah well, win some lose some [Biased] ...
 
Posted by Ms Lilith (# 1767) on :
 
What makes you think you are being misunderstood? Seemed clear enough to me. Or have I misunderstood? [Confused]
 
Posted by josephine (# 3899) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tubbs:
When someone is in tears, the only possible answer is “It’s Because They’re All Numbskulls Who Don’t Know A Good Thing When They See It! ™” along with offers of tea, tissues and biscuits.

Oh, absolutely. And if instead of asking, "What's the theological answer to this problem?" nouwen had asked, "What should I have done?" -- well, that's what you do. And I'm sure that's what nouwen did.

quote:
And then there are the situations when the only solution is to voice certain unpalatable truths about your friend in the hope that it may encourage them to change.
Ah, yes. Mousethief has a friend who has no trouble at all getting first dates, but can't ever get a woman to go out with him a second time. Unfortunately, when he asks friends what the problem is, he doesn't seem to be able to hear the answer.
 
Posted by Ms Lilith (# 1767) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by josephine:
Ah, yes. Mousethief has a friend who has no trouble at all getting first dates, but can't ever get a woman to go out with him a second time. Unfortunately, when he asks friends what the problem is, he doesn't seem to be able to hear the answer.

Oh dear! What is the answer? Or do I want to cherish my ignorance on that?

[ 15. September 2005, 22:00: Message edited by: Ms Lilith ]
 
Posted by andrew1066 (# 10360) on :
 
my experience similar to Little Miss methodist, my degree is a 3rd,
the polite expression is "poet's third", but it was as much that I was drunk most of the time (inadequate immature chemically dependent etc); AND when mid-degree I got a fully-funded fees+accommodation scholarship to read in the USA for a PhD,
my dad's response (Why do you want to be an academic? they're all lazy fools, why not get a proper job, etc [and he had a degree himself!])
was such that I just gave up, there was simply no way to gain his approval or commendation no matter what I did, no matter how hard I studied or excelled, so I thought "I'll show you who's lazy etc" and never looked at another book or did another stroke of academic work, though I did go to the exams;
and I have taken 2 IQ tests in my life, one when I was 16 scored 78 and the other when I was 28 scored 143, which explains why I am single according to a posting above, I am too stupidly iquelligent
My late wife was in every way my intellectual equal, and had more attuned emotional antennae than me, but she missed out on her education, and was mid-degree at her death
 
Posted by Jahlove (# 10290) on :
 
I have been informed recently that really, really brainy guys are totally blind to come-ons, anyway
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sine Nomine:
.... It appears to me you took a positive and general statement about a good way to live one's life and turned it on its head to an intensively personal and negative one. Is this a Lutheran thing?

Sine, your kindness knows no bounds. [Disappointed] Not to mention your charming avoidance of generalities.
 
Posted by Duo Seraphim (# 256) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lamb Chopped:
quote:
Originally posted by Sine Nomine:
.... It appears to me you took a positive and general statement about a good way to live one's life and turned it on its head to an intensively personal and negative one. Is this a Lutheran thing?

Sine, your kindness knows no bounds. [Disappointed] Not to mention your charming avoidance of generalities.
Getting a mite personal, aren't we? Please stop it both of you.

Duo Seraphim, Purgatory Host
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Lady of the Lake:
quote:
Originally posted by Lamb Chopped:

I've met qutie a few never married female PhDs and relatively few males.

What are the differences between married and never-married women PhDs ?
I wonder if there are some psychological differences that might explain why some get hitched and some don't. The married ones I know are stable and happy, but one thing they have in common is that they have interests outside work and can handle non-academic types of people. Not all academics one comes across are like this.

I think you're right that being "only" an academic could put people off you (and this applies to either gender.) But the idea I was exploring was that maybe the reason so many apparently bright, attractive, cheerful female PhDs go "untaken" might be that they simply have a much smaller pool of potential partners to chose from (since so few less-educated men are wiling to consider them as possibilities, and there just aren't many male PhDs (or intellectual equivalents) to go around.)

I mean, you meet male department heads (PhD taken for granted, intelligence likely, though not guaranteed [Devil] ) with wives who were lucky to graduate from high school. But when was the last time you met a female academic (or intellectual equivalent) with a husband who never did college?
 
Posted by mertide (# 4500) on :
 
Isn't the size of that pool within their control, though? If highly educated women don't consider lesser educated men to be acceptable partners, and highly educated men do consider lesser educated women to be acceptable, then those women have a lot of competition for that small group of men. If those women as well as a high education level insist on physical attractiveness, social adeptness, and even openness to a particular religious outlook, they're looking at a very small pool indeed that are their targets, while those same men may have a potential mate pool tens or hundreds times bigger, and may themselves have certain "must haves" for a spouse that have nothing to do with the quality of the degree. It's not exactly God withholding marriage if the women withhold themselves from the vast majority of men who might be interested in them.
 
Posted by I_am_not_Job (# 3634) on :
 
Er, couldn't it be partly to do with time and social circles. If you're an academic you're more likely to work with and hang out with other academics. The advantage for men, and I agree this is sexist, is if they get on with their launderette, they are probably more likely to ask her out, than the academic woman is going to ask out the sexy car mechanic.

My other half and I both have IQs of around 150 and were at the same college at uni. WHoever said women with IQs over 125 can't find men obviously hasn't been to freshers week!!!
 
Posted by I_am_not_Job (# 3634) on :
 
Thinking a bit further though when I had my gap year before uni I met a gorgeous safari guide in Africa. We had a romance and when I got home I set about working out how to save part of my student grant to go visit him in the vacation, only to get a letter saying he was breaking it off as he couldn't compete with Oxford graduates and he didn't want to hold me back. I was devastated!

However, of course, there is the theory that people end up with their more or less equals. Put 100 men and 100 women in a room and tell them to pair up people will go for the best they think they can get. An intelligent man might end up with a less intelligent woman, but her looks will no doubt make up for it. This sounds reductionist but its basic evolutionary theory. Subconsciously we go for what we think is the best genetic match we can get that will be complimentary to us.

(Of course my hubby being equally intelligent to me must also be as gorgeous as me! [Biased] )
 
Posted by Little Miss Methodist (# 1000) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Papio.:
I had a good time, did not work that hard, and still got a 1st.

Maybe you would have more sucess with women if you used that as your chat up line? [Roll Eyes]

LMM
 
Posted by LatePaul (# 37) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Papio.:
quote:
Originally posted by Papio.:
quote:
Originally posted by LatePaul:
quote:
Originally posted by Papio.:
I think being academically able, emotionally literate and articulate are pretty key indicators. Can someone be intelligent without them? I think not.

How are you defining that? Just curious.
Able to know, without having to think too much, what emotions other are presenting and whether these seem genuine. Ability to know you feel. Politeness. Ability to leave alone. Ability to push someone if that is appropriate.

FWIW - I think I could improve on some of these.

Bearing my brother in mind, I know that Asperger's Syndrome, for example, effects these abilities.

But for those without AS etc...

It's funny you should say that because I was about to say that the person I've personally met who is the cleverest is not very emotionally literate. He's aware of it though as he once told me that his brother had AS and he suspected he might have a mild case of it himself.

So, not to split hairs, but I feel that whilst emotional literacy is undoubtedly a desirable trait in a partner it is not, IMO, a necessary part of intelligence per se.

(btw so long as I'm nit-picking I think you mean that AS affects those qualities. If it effected them then your brother and my friend would be more, not less, emotionally literate. [Biased] )
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mertide:
Isn't the size of that pool within their control, though? If highly educated women don't consider lesser educated men to be acceptable partners, and highly educated men do consider lesser educated women to be acceptable, then those women have a lot of competition for that small group of men. If those women as well as a high education level insist on physical attractiveness, social adeptness, and even openness to a particular religious outlook, they're looking at a very small pool indeed that are their targets, while those same men may have a potential mate pool tens or hundreds times bigger, and may themselves have certain "must haves" for a spouse that have nothing to do with the quality of the degree. It's not exactly God withholding marriage if the women withhold themselves from the vast majority of men who might be interested in them.

In my experience, many men are intimidated by women who are better educated than they are and by women whom they perceive to be more intelligent than they are. Crossing education off her list of desireable qualities in a mate will frequently not increase the size of the pool of potential mates for a well-educated woman; less well-educated men typically don't want her.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
In my experience, many men are intimidated by women who are better educated than they are and by women whom they perceive to be more intelligent than they are.

This conversation has been nagging me for the lst 48 hours since Rat posted:

quote:

degree-educated men married to hairdressers, shop-assistants and the like.

so I set to thinking about couples I know well enough to have some idea of their education and I really don't know many who fit this description. In fact I can hardly think of any.

Starting with my own family my Mum had more education qualifications than my Dad (which would not have been hard as AFAIK he left school at 14 with none whatsoever). I & my brother married women with more exam passes than us (though since then I've managed to get a few more her but she kicked me out & married someone else with even fewer...) and my sister has more than her husband.
One of my male cousins is married to a woman less educated than him, one to someone about the same, one to someone (much) more educated.

(None of this says anything about intelligence of course, but there is no real way to measure that)

Thinking about my close friends, I can't call to mind more than one or two where the man has significantly higher education than the woman, and rather more where it is the other way round.

Same goes for my colleagues here at work.
 
Posted by Callan (# 525) on :
 
Originally posted by Little Miss Methodist:

quote:
Maybe you would have more sucess with women if you used that as your chat up line?
Let's drop this entire tangent shall we.

Callan
Purgatory Host.
 
Posted by Jazzuk777 (# 5720) on :
 
From my experience at junior and primary, the girls in my classes consistently performed better academically than the boys anyway......being normally 1st or 2nd male in the class, my scores still normally equated to somewhere around the middle of the female half of the class.....as to what would have happened in Secondary, I never got to see that, as I ended up going to an all-boys grammar school [Frown]

So if women find it difficult to date/marry less intelligent men (or men find it difficult to date more intelligent women - the complementary hypothesis), then by rights only a 50% of us ever will, roughly the most most intelligent half of the male popluation, and the least intelligent of the female population!*


(*I know this is Purgatory not Heaven, but please don't take my theory too seriously!)
 
Posted by mertide (# 4500) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
QUOTE]In my experience, many men are intimidated by women who are better educated than they are and by women whom they perceive to be more intelligent than they are. Crossing education off her list of desireable qualities in a mate will frequently not increase the size of the pool of potential mates for a well-educated woman; less well-educated men typically don't want her.

My experience is more that highly educated women are far more likely to reject say a tradesman or someone with a lesser education, even a lesser standard degree, with a "just not my type" than the rejection going the other way. If you add a tendency to look for a mate later in life, when the available pool is smaller, I suspect some women are unconsciously setting themselves up to have great difficulty in finding a partner.

I wonder if rather than a woman's education and intelligence being a turn off for men, what is actually the turn off is the intellectual snobbery that can be associated. Most people don't find being told directly or indirectly that they're just not quite good enough for consideration an attractive feature. Perhaps the problem isn't that no-one wants a highly educated woman in her late 30's, but that no-one in the vanishly small group of targets in her group of contacts who meet her criteria does.
 
Posted by Emma. (# 3571) on :
 
hmmm futures not looking good for me then!!!!
(good education and iq)

Im not too worried to be honest. If im still single in a few years time I see no shame in online dating etc....
 
Posted by HopPik (# 8510) on :
 
As a somewhat irreverent and definitely irrelevant tangent, can I just mention that when I first saw this thread I read the title as "God witholding massage"?
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Emma.:
hmmm futures not looking good for me then!!!!
(good education and iq)

All you have to do is not look down your nose at plumbers and taxi drivers...
 
Posted by Joan_of_Quark (# 9887) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by Emma.:
hmmm futures not looking good for me then!!!!
(good education and iq)

All you have to do is not look down your nose at plumbers and taxi drivers...
I can see the adverts now..."Black cab drivers - we always know the quickest way!" [Biased] -- but would they stop talking once they got there?! Could bring a whole new meaning to the inevitable phrase, "Do you know who I had in the back of the cab last week?"
 
Posted by saysay (# 6645) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mertide:
My experience is more that highly educated women are far more likely to reject say a tradesman or someone with a lesser education, even a lesser standard degree, with a "just not my type" than the rejection going the other way.

Not IME. There does tend to be a communication breakdown, though, when one person is not educated and doesn't see education as having value and the other person has more or less dedicated their lives to education.

I used to think that most people (like me) wanted a partner in the same intelligence bracket (which, as has been pointed out, doesn't necessarily correspond to level of education). But some of my male friends have convined me that this isn't true - they want their partners to be less intelligent than they are because it makes the relationship less complicated (ok, I'm never sure how serious they are about this, as their longer relationships are usually with intelligent women, but I suspect there may be something hidden in the joking).

I think it's harder on men to be married to someone with more education than it is on women because of cultural expectations. Most people's default assumption is still that the man's career is more important than the woman's (because, you know, he earns more) and reversing that can be a challenge.

I have two good (female) friends who have phd's and are married to men less educated than they are who do manual labor. Socially, things can get very awkward. I tend to think a lot of the situations are funny, but I also think it takes an extremely secure man to be able to deal with it. I see a certain amount of the same social problems in couples where the man has a lot more education, but not nearly to the same extent.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by saysay:
I also think it takes an extremely secure man to be able to deal with it.

Exactly. The one relationship I had with a man who didn't have a college degree eventually foundered, in part because of his perception that I looked down on him for not finishing college. This was really his own feelings of failure and inadequacy projected onto me, but it didn't matter; sometimes I made him feel bad about himself just by being who I am. [Frown]
 
Posted by mertide (# 4500) on :
 
Since it seems my experience is not held in common with most of the educated women here, does anyone have a strategy for how these wonderful, smart, educated women are likely to find personally and socially acceptable partners? Do they expand the age range they're looking in or look in different places? Take on "fixer-uppers"?
 
Posted by Joan_of_Quark (# 9887) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mertide:
...Take on "fixer-uppers"?

If I understand "fixer-uppers" correctly, that's an analogy to buying a scruffy house and renovating it, right? The trouble with that is that human "houses" are going to have feelings. Suppose I say to some hypothetical new partner, "John, if only you shaved off that bird's nest of a beard, your real personality would shine through so much better" etc. I've had experience of control freaks in relationships, and they started with very sensible suggestions for how to make my life better. Only once they had me lulled into thinking they had my interests at heart did they start on the changes that were to make me a better trophy wife FOR THEM, and start demanding rather than suggesting. But I'd be very wary of someone whose agenda included a lot of changes to me, and guess others would if I were to do this to them. Maybe I am just not subtle enough at all that stuff about "power behind the throne", "let the man THINK he thought of the great idea all by himself" etc. - but then I am rubbish at telling the difference between general banter and real flirting so will probably not be in need of these "skills" any time soon!
 
Posted by The Lady of the Lake (# 4347) on :
 
One way of looking at the issue is of seeing certain qualifications as part of a specific career path. e.g. some avenues of work require a PhD, but then, people who train to be architects or doctors or engineers train for roughly the same length of time as it takes to get from first degree to PhD. (There's a difference between someone who does a PhD in order to work in particular industry, or in a university, and someone who does it as a career break or a hobby.)
That's restricting things to people with university education, but to me it makes things clearer. A PhD does not prove someone is 'more intelligent' than others who have done academic study for less time. It proves that they have specialised in one narrow area for a while and written a book of up to 100, 000 words long.
 
Posted by Gort (# 6855) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mertide:
Since it seems my experience is not held in common with most of the educated women here, does anyone have a strategy for how these wonderful, smart, educated women are likely to find personally and socially acceptable partners? Do they expand the age range they're looking in or look in different places? Take on "fixer-uppers"?

They can start by being honest with themselves about their priorities. Many "intelligent" women have more important personal issues than finding a mate. It shouldn't be surprising if they're alone because career or intellectual pursuits take precedence over fulfilment in a relationship. It takes work to find that special someone and it's easier to write off failure as an act of God or lack of available, qualified candidates. As I mentioned earlier, aggressive action helps if finding a compatible partner is important. Archaic social convention shouldn't restrict the modern woman from taking the traditional male role in initiating contact.

Another matter that I've discovered from personal experience is the high percentage of emotionally and physically abused female victims of childhood. I'm sure this effects many males also, but since my emotional interaction with them is on a different level, my experience of the problem with regard to women is biased. It seems many female victims reach middle age without finding a personal resolution to the abuse which continues to color their relationships with men. It's difficult to imagine a person committing themselves to an open, honest and loving relationship with a partner who subconsciously symbolizes pain and insecurity. Many times that lack of resolution can be purposely buried under academic, career or "intellectual" priorities.
 
Posted by Emma. (# 3571) on :
 
what do you suggest then?

are you saying women are just sensitive creatures and you find that hard to deal with? or that theyre all screwed up and need therapy? Or if they have suffered abuse theyre not good potential mates?
 
Posted by Gort (# 6855) on :
 
My "suggestion" is in the first line of my response above. I'm not "saying" anything like you are extrapolating, just commenting from my experience.
 
Posted by Anselmina (# 3032) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Gort:
They can start by being honest with themselves about their priorities. Many "intelligent" women have more important personal issues than finding a mate.

Just for clarification. I know what an intelligent woman is. What's an "intelligent" woman? And is there some reason why 'more important personal issues' are more wrong for her, than they would be for anyone else, say, a man or a married woman?

A 'more important personal issue' can include anything from caring for needy relatives, health issues or needing to put a roof over one's head. Is it really dishonest to prioritize these things over finding a mate?


quote:
It shouldn't be surprising if they're alone because career or intellectual pursuits take precedence over fulfilment in a relationship.
So while waiting, or aggressively searching for Mr Right, women should forget about the bills, the rent, the need to earn a decent wage in order to live a reasonable life? And, further, they should be willing to sacrifice 'intellectual pursuits' just in case they may be perceived as taking precedence over a bloke?

I know it's a tedious feminist thing to say, but I wonder how many men deliberately play down career, and satisfaction from enjoyable pursuits in case it rookies their marriage chances? Most men I know would consider a decent career something as a good thing in terms of appearing to be a decent prospect for marriage. But it doesn't work the other way?

I suspect most men have a perfectly fair and reasonable expectation that they can have satisfying work, should they need it, mental stimulation and a partner should they wish it. And I'm disappointed that anyone should feel that oughtn't to apply for both sexes.

quote:
Archaic social convention shouldn't restrict the modern woman from taking the traditional male role in initiating contact.
Now I'm confused. Initially, you were advocating women to sacrifice intellectual pursuits and a decent career so they could pursue men for marriage. A truly 'archaic social convention' if ever there was one. Now you're saying 'archaic social convention shouldn't restrict... woman'. Which is it?

quote:
Another matter that I've discovered from personal experience is the high percentage of emotionally and physically abused female victims of childhood. I'm sure this effects many males also, but since my emotional interaction with them is on a different level, my experience of the problem with regard to women is biased. It seems many female victims reach middle age without finding a personal resolution to the abuse which continues to color their relationships with men. It's difficult to imagine a person committing themselves to an open, honest and loving relationship with a partner who subconsciously symbolizes pain and insecurity. Many times that lack of resolution can be purposely buried under academic, career or "intellectual" priorities.
I can certainly understand a woman who has been a victim of abuse being wary of future relationships, or caught in a spiral of harmful relationships. I'm wondering how the academic, career and "intellectual" profile of a woman should necessarily be connected with that. (And again "intellectual" in quotes. Are women only "intellectual", and never intellectual? What qualifies a woman as intellectual, in your eyes, rather than "intellectual"?)

Is it really so unusual for women to have careers, intellect and academic aptitude but that we have to explain it by suggesting it's probably a result of their being damaged, compensating delusionists?
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mertide:
Since it seems my experience is not held in common with most of the educated women here, does anyone have a strategy for how these wonderful, smart, educated women are likely to find personally and socially acceptable partners? Do they expand the age range they're looking in or look in different places? Take on "fixer-uppers"?

Well, I "expanded the age range" by marrying about 20 years above myself, and also the "culture range" by marrying an Asian. But I don't think all cultures have the same issues as Western ones with regards to education and romance. At least, my husband feels no need to hide the fact that his wife is highly educated (of course, he has nearly as much himself) and in fact others in the community tend to regard me as a "trophy wife" (shows what THEY know) [Biased] .

To be sure, there is a strong tendency there as well to marry equally in as many respects as possible, and I HAVE met Asian men who were vastly insecure and took out their feelings on their somewhat more educated wives. The difference is maybe that the community condemns him for it. She is not the oddity; he is.
 
Posted by Gort (# 6855) on :
 
Anselmina wrote:
quote:
Just for clarification. I know what an intelligent woman is. What's an "intelligent" woman? And is there some reason why 'more important personal issues' are more wrong for her, than they would be for anyone else, say, a man or a married woman?
First, I profess to be a liberated male with respect to gender issues over intelligence, emotion and physical issues. I refuse to acknowledge any significant differences between the sexes on those three subjects (except for basic physical procreational roles) and if confronted with scientific evidence to the contrary, I will ignore that evidence on moral principles, especially when it attempts to define my personal interaction with fellow humans. Please, let's not get our feminist dander up, this is the wrong place and I'm the wrong target.

My quotes were only meant as acknowledgment that the word "intelligent" is a slippery one as has been noted elsewhere on this thread. Nothing more. I don't understand how you assume that I think 'more important personal issues' are wrong for her and not for a man or married woman. I was simply observing that if an issue is more important than finding a mate, then that may be a factor in subsequent failure in finding one. There's nothing "dishonest" about having other priorities, unless a person is fooling themselves into thinking those other priorities are not more important. I'm not making value judgements here.
quote:
So while waiting, or aggressively searching for Mr Right, women should forget about the bills, the rent, the need to earn a decent wage in order to live a reasonable life? And, further, they should be willing to sacrifice 'intellectual pursuits' just in case they may be perceived as taking precedence over a bloke?
Did I say anything about sacrificing to find Mr. Right? No. There's no reason to assume that women can't multi-task any better or worse than men. If finding a partner is a priority, then make it so. If it's not, then don't expect Mr. Right to drop out of the sky any faster than your job promotion or Uni degree.
quote:
I can certainly understand a woman who has been a victim of abuse being wary of future relationships, or caught in a spiral of harmful relationships. I'm wondering how the academic, career and "intellectual" profile of a woman should necessarily be connected with that.
It isn't necessarily connected with that. My experience has been that a "high percentage of emotionally and physically abused female victims" (this isn't meant to imply that men don't do the same) ignore the effects of childhood abuse on their adult social lives by focusing on academic, career or intellectual pursuits to enhance missing self-esteem or as possible compensation for the difficulty of enjoying close personal relationships with the opposite sex. Again, there is no value judgement here, it's simply an observation from my experience. God knows I'm not educated, intelligent or objective enough to propose a solution for the many problems that confront humans seeking mates. I am bright enough, however, to notice certain patterns in my personal experiences.

[ 17. September 2005, 23:47: Message edited by: Gort ]
 
Posted by saysay (# 6645) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Anselmina:
quote:
Originally posted by Gort:
They can start by being honest with themselves about their priorities. Many "intelligent" women have more important personal issues than finding a mate.

A 'more important personal issue' can include anything from caring for needy relatives, health issues or needing to put a roof over one's head. Is it really dishonest to prioritize these things over finding a mate?
I read this differently. I don't think Gort was saying that it's dishonest to prioritize those things over finding a mate, but that women should admit that that's what they're doing.

I broke of my last LTR when I was 22, right before my life fell apart. For years I didn't even bother looking for a relationship, because I knew that I didn't have any time or energy to devote to one. When I finally got things back together, I discovered that the pool of potential mates in my age range had shrunk considerabley, as many people had either gotten married or were already involved in LTRs.

That's just the way the cookie crumbled. But it would be dishonest for me to complain that there are no decent men who like intelligent women - the fact that almost all my female friends are either married or in the planning stages indicates otherwise. But my priorities during my twenties were very different from their priorities.

quote:
Originally posted by Anselmina:
I suspect most men have a perfectly fair and reasonable expectation that they can have satisfying work, should they need it, mental stimulation and a partner should they wish it. And I'm disappointed that anyone should feel that oughtn't to apply for both sexes.

I'm not sure anyone was advocating for a double standard. But all the men that I know konw that if they devote all of their time and energy to their career and none to dating or finding a mate, they have to find their career very satisfying, because there's a good chance they'll never find a mate.
 
Posted by The Lady of the Lake (# 4347) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Gort:

It takes work to find that special someone and it's easier to write off failure as an act of God or lack of available, qualified candidates. As I mentioned earlier, aggressive action helps if finding a compatible partner is important.

That's true.

quote:
Another matter that I've discovered from personal experience is the high percentage of emotionally and physically abused female victims of childhood. I'm sure this effects many males also, but since my emotional interaction with them is on a different level, my experience of the problem with regard to women is biased. It seems many female victims reach middle age without finding a personal resolution to the abuse which continues to color their relationships with men. It's difficult to imagine a person committing themselves to an open, honest and loving relationship with a partner who subconsciously symbolizes pain and insecurity. Many times that lack of resolution can be purposely buried under academic, career or "intellectual" priorities.
I definetely feel I've seen this in some people, and was just discussing this sort of thing with a (female) friend last night in fact.
Sometimes the problems get expressed in the work too, which can complicate things even further. It takes real clear-sightedness to be able to handle the connection between both spheres. IME there are some women like this who don't necessarily help because they pass on a cynical view of men into the academic culture (for example), and this then influences younger women who are just starting off, but who have problems of their own that need dealing with. So it becoms a vicious circle.
[Help]
 
Posted by Anselmina (# 3032) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by saysay:
quote:
Originally posted by Anselmina:
quote:
Originally posted by Gort:
They can start by being honest with themselves about their priorities. Many "intelligent" women have more important personal issues than finding a mate.

A 'more important personal issue' can include anything from caring for needy relatives, health issues or needing to put a roof over one's head. Is it really dishonest to prioritize these things over finding a mate?
I read this differently. I don't think Gort was saying that it's dishonest to prioritize those things over finding a mate, but that women should admit that that's what they're doing.

Which is to say that, of course, women are not admitting that's what they're doing. I'm wondering why the assumption that women aren't being honest with themselves, as in this: 'They can start with being honest with themselves.'

Gort, thanks for your reply, much of which I agree with to an extent. I still don't see why a woman should prioritize marriage in a way a man doesn't have to, apparently, despite the fact she may not be in a position to do that. Your message still seems to assume that there is a lot of free and easy choice in how some people live their lives, and that certain 'priorities' can be easily subjugated in favour of others. In which case it might be reasonable to suggest that if only a woman could pick and choose the 'marriage' priority her singleness problem would be solved.

But it's no easier for a woman to cooly select the 'I'm hunting for a man' option in the game of life than the 'I'm trying to earn a living' or 'I'm trying to be a good daughter and take care of my invalid parents' options.

And it really does sound as if you're saying that women who wish to be married ought not to give a priority to the same extent that men do to 'intellectual pursuits'. Otherwise they've only got themselves to blame! I know what you're saying is a bit more complex than this, but so is living life as it comes and doing what needs to be done regardless of what one might wish to do.
 
Posted by Emma. (# 3571) on :
 
ok - so if a single woman was going to "prioritize" marriage - er, what would she do then?! Im puzzled.....

(im not desperate to jump into it again - just curious as to the asnwer!)
 
Posted by Gort (# 6855) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Anselmina:
[...] But it's no easier for a woman to cooly select the 'I'm hunting for a man' option in the game of life than the 'I'm trying to earn a living' or 'I'm trying to be a good daughter and take care of my invalid parents' options.

And it really does sound as if you're saying that women who wish to be married ought not to give a priority to the same extent that men do to 'intellectual pursuits'. Otherwise they've only got themselves to blame! I know what you're saying is a bit more complex than this, but so is living life as it comes and doing what needs to be done regardless of what one might wish to do.

You're focusing on a 'men vs. women' debate that wasn't my intention. I apologize for implying that. I admitted my view of the problems were biased because I can't experience the same effect in my relations with men. Maybe it's expressed in the common 'control freak' attitude, I dunno. I'm a highschool graduate, speculating on psychological stuff, using a limited vocabulary.

There is no "blame" in the sense that someone is "guilty" for not accomplishing what they desire. I recognize there are plenty of complex issues that demand our attention daily. However, I try to the best of my ability to accept responsibility for using everything in my power to accomplish those things that I firmly desire. When I set myself to a task, failure is not an option. I've discovered that when you are completely convinced that your goal is achievable (in practice it means being convinced it's already accomplished... visualization, etc.) then things tend to arrange and conform themselves to your expectation. I'll just shutup about this. It's beginning to sound like an amateur self-help treatise.
quote:
Originally posted by Emma.:
ok - so if a single woman was going to "prioritize" marriage - er, what would she do then?! Im puzzled.....

(im not desperate to jump into it again - just curious as to the asnwer!)

Keep it upper most in your thoughts. Make yourself available. Seek out groups of singles. Dress up. Flirt. Be friendly, outgoing, fun... pinch an arse once in awhile. [Biased]
 
Posted by Papio. (# 4201) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LatePaul:
So, not to split hairs, but I feel that whilst emotional literacy is undoubtedly a desirable trait in a partner it is not, IMO, a necessary part of intelligence per se.

(btw so long as I'm nit-picking I think you mean that AS affects those qualities. If it effected them then your brother and my friend would be more, not less, emotionally literate. [Biased] )

Yes, I kind of realise that I was subsuming things into the catergory of intelligence that were not strictly the same thing. I certainly would not want to claim my brother was dim. He isn't...

And, yes, I do tend to confuse "affect" and "effect". [Roll Eyes]

LMM - I hadn't realised until I re-read this thread a minute ago just how bitchy my reply to you must have sounded and probably, in fact, was. FWIW, I enjoyed meeting you at the 2004 (?) Artists meet and I enjoy chatting to you in the cafe. I apologise for the horrible comment.
 
Posted by Curiosus (# 4808) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Gort:
However, I try to the best of my ability to accept responsibility for using everything in my power to accomplish those things that I firmly desire.

Ultimately I accept responsibility for the fact that I'm single. Yes, it is very difficult to meet potential dates but on the rare occasion that I am not exactly the ideal date [Disappointed] However, going back to the OP, that doesn't stop me from getting really, really cross with God sometimes. He knows exactly why I find it so hard to trust people and why I run away if there's any chance that I'm going to get hurt. I struggle to understand why God leaves me to battle my problems on my own. I used to pray that God would help me find a situation where I would meet someone special. Now that I've realised that a relationship/marriage is highly improbable I ask Him to give me strength to accept the fact that I'm single. So far He doesn't seem to listen to that request either! I'm rapidly coming to the conclusion that God is deaf when it comes to human relationships.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosus:
Now that I've realised that a relationship/marriage is highly improbable I ask Him to give me strength to accept the fact that I'm single.

But that's exactly like a hungry person asking for the hunger to go away, rather than for food.

Desires for companionship, company, friendship, love, sex, mutual aid, children, economic security (all of which we at least fantasise about getting from marriage even if we know that in real life most marriages achieve only some of them) are completely natural, inbuilt, as much as part of us are breathing and eating and drinking. They're not even specifically human things - we share most of them with other animals.

We can live with them not being satisfied but that's not the same as wishing them away.
 
Posted by scoticanus (# 5140) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
But that's exactly like a hungry person asking for the hunger to go away, rather than for food.

It isn't "exactly" like. Without food, you'll die. You won't die without a relationship, although life may be difficult and unfulfilled.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Gort:
quote:
Originally posted by Emma.:
ok - so if a single woman was going to "prioritize" marriage - er, what would she do then?! Im puzzled.....


Keep it upper most in your thoughts. Make yourself available. Seek out groups of singles. Dress up. Flirt. Be friendly, outgoing, fun... pinch an arse once in awhile. [Biased]
And in what way is that different from the advice you'd be giving to single men?

Also you are sort of asking people to act a part to pretend to be someone they are not. What happens when this prioritising person, of whatever sex, lands their fish and then goes back to being someone who doesn't like dressing up or flirting, or isn't outgoing & friendly, or who wouldn't dream of pinching anyone's parts uninvited in a month of Sundays? Is there a law against misrepresentation of goods?
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Anselmina:
I suspect most men have a perfectly fair and reasonable expectation that they can have satisfying work, should they need it, mental stimulation and a partner should they wish it. And I'm disappointed that anyone should feel that oughtn't to apply for both sexes.

Most men work in jobs they hate, or at any rate are totally bored with, because they need the money.

Unless we are only thinking about a minority of men in professional or managerial or technical jobs, or the tiny rump of old-style craft jobs. And not always even then - I do rather techy work in offices, but at previous places of emplyment the people I worked with found my notion that one of the things I'd like to get out of work was fun to be rather strange. And not something you say at your annual appraisal if you have any desire to get promoted.

People do get enjoyment out of work but its usually the incidental or accidental features of the work rather than the job itself. People they meet or places they go.

The idea that work is an exercise in self-fulfilment is in an industrial age something that is pretty much the province of an affluent minority who have choices and opportunities that most people never get. And - this is me sticking my neck out here to get chopped off - that minority perhaps has included more women than men, a large proportion of them being women who derived some economic security from their husbands. But most women, like most men - and almost all working-class women and men - work because they have to.

Maybe I've been reading too much. Stuffing my head with William Morris and Kropotkin and Eric Gill... This crazy notion that there has to be abetter way to do things than this...
 
Posted by Anselmina (# 3032) on :
 
Ken, I wrote that men have a fair and reasonable expectation of these things. Not that they always achieved it, but that in a perfectly fair and reasonable way they perhaps expected such things. This was in reply to my interpreting Gort's post - rightly or wrongly! - that women shouldn't expect similar things. So I was suggesting that women's expectations are in many cases no different than men's.

I said nothing about men always getting what they wanted workwise, or in any other sphere of life, come to that.

[ 19. September 2005, 11:43: Message edited by: Anselmina ]
 
Posted by I_am_not_Job (# 3634) on :
 
I disagree strongly that it is a minority privilege to do work one enjoys. I agree it is the case that a minority do this, but that is more to do with cultural expectations and people not knowing how to open their minds. Very few people have guns held against their head making them go into that office. If I left school at 16 I would still have a wide range of options like working in a bank, working in a supermarket, working in a fashion shop, working as a bin man, working as a postman, making something in a factory, all manner of things. I would look at all of these and think about my hobbies and interests, could a job include an aspect of these, or do I want to work hours that give me more time for them? What are my friends doing? Which have prospects or on the job training and do I want that or do I just want 9-5 and beer money? I did a job I hated for 18 months. I got up and left. I would say 50% minimum of my colleagues hated it to (it was accountancy afterall [Biased] ) but did they leave too? No, they thought I was mad. They were all educated but couldn't think beyond a standard world view. Very sad.
 
Posted by Gort (# 6855) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by Gort:
quote:
Originally posted by Emma.:
ok - so if a single woman was going to "prioritize" marriage - er, what would she do then?! Im puzzled.....


Keep it upper most in your thoughts. Make yourself available. Seek out groups of singles. Dress up. Flirt. Be friendly, outgoing, fun... pinch an arse once in awhile. [Biased]
And in what way is that different from the advice you'd be giving to single men?
It isn't any different than I would advise single men.

quote:
Also you are sort of asking people to act a part to pretend to be someone they are not. What happens when this prioritising person, of whatever sex, lands their fish and then goes back to being someone who doesn't like dressing up or flirting, or isn't outgoing & friendly, or who wouldn't dream of pinching anyone's parts uninvited in a month of Sundays? Is there a law against misrepresentation of goods?
None that I'm aware of, but you do have a point. I suppose it's better to remain shabby, introverted, unfriendly, anti-social, boring and blame your fate on God. At least you're being true to yourself and others.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
I must say, I resent seeing introverted there in the list with unfriendly, anti-social, and boring. It's not an inherently negative personality trait, even if it's not everyone's cup of tea. I score off the chart for introversion, and I'm attracted to introverted men. Extroverted people can be exhausting for me and sometimes even irritating.

[clarification]

[ 19. September 2005, 20:30: Message edited by: RuthW ]
 
Posted by Joan_of_Quark (# 9887) on :
 
A lot of people don't have much clue about the difference between "introverted" and "shy"/"unconfident"/"socially inept" and just tend to use the two notions interchangeably. Sigh. I'm off-the-scale introvert too. Of course, the two things CAN go together, and in my case did for much of my life. Now I'm not quite as scared of the rest of humanity as I used to be, it's still not that easy getting across to other people, esp in a would-be-dating situation. In relationships I have run into the problem that I need more people-free space/downtime than almost everyone else.
 
Posted by andrew1066 (# 10360) on :
 
Um. Perhaps I am dense (emotionally illitrat?) but I am finding this hard to follow, it seems to be a bit off-track, and to have devolved into a discussion focussed on
What qualities does a person need to attract an available life-partner?
IME these qualities include:
be in the right place at the right time
be capable of independence rather than clinging / needy / dependent
exhibit, or at least be capable of, those qualities you find attractive in others, which typically include: kindness, capacity to empathize, and to communicate (incl listen) GSOH, etc
this is where eddikayshun comes in, because it can (tho does not always) signal the capacity to communicate; and the capacity to be independent, including financially self-supporting [like, people with degrees are higher earners, etc]
but none of these are specifically Christian markers
It is not God who with-holds marriage. God wants us to be fulfilled complete human beans, and if we are (to the extent that we are) capable of marriage (companionship, intimacy, mutual support, commitment) God wants us to take the risk of going out there and meeting people.
If the parameters I apply, or the [social] circle I move in, is such that the pool of availables is small, then the probability of my meeting a right person is naturally less; but this is not "God with-holding", it is a natual consequence of my choices and situation.
And, given that I am single, but am willing not to be; I can either accept the fact of singleness, or do something about it, by e.g. change my choices, and situation. I do not have to do everything all at once, step by step, small manageable / achievable / under-my-control changes.
Or am i not accurately following the emotional register & subtext of this discussion?
 
Posted by Joan_of_Quark (# 9887) on :
 
Andrew, I think that's true. I suspect it might be useful to have a thread on All Saints on how to stop being single (for those who want to!) - I know there's one for the aftermath of split-ups, but not AFAICT for those of us who are mostly over the fallout from our last debacle but feeling a tad wobbly about getting out there again. Anyone think that's a good idea?
 
Posted by Anselmina (# 3032) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Gort:
I suppose it's better to remain shabby, introverted, unfriendly, anti-social, boring and blame your fate on God. At least you're being true to yourself and others.

So once again we're back to Sine's point that wonderful people get husbands if they want them and if you're not married you must be some kind of dysfunctional misanthrope. Because as everyone knows nobody who is either dysfunctional or misanthropic ever gets a marriage partner. And no wonderful people ever remain unmarried.

Still, good to know that so far as Gort goes, if someone is remaining true to themselves and is still unmarried, the truth they are remaining true to is that they must be shabby, introverted, unfriendly, anti-social, boring. It's clearly not possible to be rather an ordinary, likeable, straightforward human being with the same quota of gifts and faults as most other people and still not have found the right person to have spent one's life with. No, that's obviously out of the question [Disappointed] .
 
Posted by andrew1066 (# 10360) on :
 
good idea
yes i am open to meeting people
most strangers can be friends who havn't met yet

I am very new and shy of starting a thread - am I as an apprentice of standing to do so?

hows about a thread, like Ms Lilith suggested, on How is a valid sacramental/ theological marriage created? It may be also legally (according to the law of the land) valid, but what are the conditions necessary to the creating of a sacramental marriage?

if there was a thread for singles who are truly single, and open to the possibility of not being single, yes I'd be interested?
but, it's like politics and power
- just as the desire to exercise political power should be an absolute disqualification from ever doing so; so,
Am I sure I want to meet (or be) someone who joins a singles club? [Confused]
 
Posted by Ms Lilith (# 1767) on :
 
Andrew1066, anyone can start a thread. I believe the apprentice thing is just so people know that you are new and can be welcoming but also so they can be aware that any breaches of etiquette are usually unintentional. Don’t be shy. Start your debate thread off in purg. People will be nice cos you are new.
 
Posted by Gort (# 6855) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Anselmina:
quote:
Originally posted by Gort:
I suppose it's better to remain shabby, introverted, unfriendly, anti-social, boring and blame your fate on God. At least you're being true to yourself and others.

So once again we're back to Sine's point that wonderful people get husbands if they want them and if you're not married you must be some kind of dysfunctional misanthrope. Because as everyone knows nobody who is either dysfunctional or misanthropic ever gets a marriage partner. And no wonderful people ever remain unmarried.

Still, good to know that so far as Gort goes, if someone is remaining true to themselves and is still unmarried, the truth they are remaining true to is that they must be shabby, introverted, unfriendly, anti-social, boring. It's clearly not possible to be rather an ordinary, likeable, straightforward human being with the same quota of gifts and faults as most other people and still not have found the right person to have spent one's life with. No, that's obviously out of the question [Disappointed] .

Yes, it's all true, Anselmina. Thank you for your insightful and objective analysis of my attempt at irony. Tell me, do you consider a good sense of humour desirable in a potential partner? Do you think that sometimes those seeking mates become so bitter with failure that they project a defeatist persona? Can they become so defensive that even innocent, objective advice is taken as an attack? Is it possible for people to reach such a fragile state that any suggestion of help is a personal stab in the heart?

After all, It's clearly not possible to be rather an ordinary, likeable, straightforward human being with the same quota of gifts and faults as most other people and still blame God and every single member of the opposite sex for their failure. No, that's obviously out of the question.
 
Posted by Anselmina (# 3032) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Gort:
None that I'm aware of, but you do have a point. I suppose it's better to remain shabby, introverted, unfriendly, anti-social, boring and blame your fate on God. At least you're being true to yourself and others.

And the clue that this was 'ironic' and humourous was [Confused] ? The above appears to my mind to be a very plain and straightforward statement of what you wanted to say. It also largely reflects what's gone before. That you didn't want people to take it seriously this time is rather hard to spot. But then what else can you expect from a woman who's probably only 'intelligent' [Biased] .

For goodness sake, Gort. Did you really think you could offer the 'innocent objective advice' that women, who want to be, could probably be married if only they were less obviously intelligent and more marriage-obsessive, and have people gratefully receive it without challenge and debate? That, in short, they've only got themselves and their work-related ambitions to blame if they're partnerless?

I feel an objective distance in this argument, because I've never experienced much of a pull towards marriage myself. But on behalf of so many dear friends and other acquaintances who would love to be married but who are not, through no fault of their own - or certainly not through the faults you've listed - it's important to challenge such assumptions, I think.

I don't deny that it's easy to look at some folks - female and male - and think 'no wonder they never married', in exactly the same way one looks at others and thinks 'who on earth would have taken him/her on?'! But, I suggest, your 'innocent objective advice' isn't much use to the majority of ordinary singletons who simply haven't (yet) had the luck, timing or opportunism to find the right person for them.

I know the old cliche is partially true that to find the right person you need to be the right person; but in real life, it just ain't as simple as that.
 
Posted by Gort (# 6855) on :
 
The "clue" was here. Looks a little different in context huh?
quote:
Originally posted by Anselmina:
[...] For goodness sake, Gort. Did you really think you could offer the 'innocent objective advice' that women, who want to be, could probably be married if only they were less obviously intelligent and more marriage-obsessive, and have people gratefully receive it without challenge and debate? That, in short, they've only got themselves and their work-related ambitions to blame if they're partnerless?

Nowhere have I said that ANYONE (let alone "women") should be "less intelligent or more marriage-obsessive" or that "they've only got themselves and their work-related ambitions to blame". It's difficult to discuss this with you Anselmina, when you continue to assume I've taken positions that I haven't. One clue that you have a chip on your shoulder is your continued insistance on using "women" in your responses when I have clearly corrected your assumptions in that regard... what? four times now?

There's nothing constructive to be gained from my further comments here. Apologies for stirring up a can of worms and offending anyone.
 
Posted by Anselmina (# 3032) on :
 
Sorry. Could have sworn this was you.

quote:
Originally posted by Gort:
They can start by being honest with themselves about their priorities. Many "intelligent" women have more important personal issues than finding a mate. It shouldn't be surprising if they're alone because career or intellectual pursuits take precedence over fulfilment in a relationship.

However, if it helps to write it off as 'chip on the shoulder' feel free. As you say, no point in attempting debate.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Gort:
The "clue" was here. Looks a little different in context huh? [QUOTE]

No, it doesn't really.

It still boils down to "no-one loves you because you are a dog".
 
Posted by Gort (# 6855) on :
 
I concede to all of your points, Anselmina, and apologize again for offending everyone.
 
Posted by Alogon (# 5513) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
I must say, I resent seeing introverted there in the list with unfriendly, anti-social, and boring. It's not an inherently negative personality trait, even if it's not everyone's cup of tea. I score off the chart for introversion, and I'm attracted to introverted men. Extroverted people can be exhausting for me and sometimes even irritating.

So do I, and I agree that extroverted people can be exhausting (or at least "high strung" people, perhaps that's a little different), but it also seems that opposites attract. With the roommates and significant others I've had, the most successful relationships were with different personalities, although we had interests in common. I think it can be even harder to live with someone too much like yourself than with someone who has more complementary strengths.
 
Posted by andrew1066 (# 10360) on :
 
irony, huh?
Years ago I was an utterly dysfunctional immature wierdo, and _as such_ got married etc and had lots a GF's etc, got divorced; after that my late [2nd] wife and I met and got together, we were kind to one another, and I was a good and faithful H.
Now I am more emotionally grown up and mature and living a disciplined life as an OK and real [single] person.
There's nothing 'wrong' with me that I am single, just how it is for me right now.
God made me, and God don't make junk - I am "fearfully and wonderfully made"; so, yes, I am a wonderful person. And this is so even though I still have my original talent for screwing up and falling flat on my face sometimes!
Or am I missing irony/sarcasm etc?
 
Posted by Jahlove (# 10290) on :
 
Posted by Andrew1066


quote:
Years ago I was an utterly dysfunctional immature wierdo,
So what happened/what's new?

[Smile] [Roll Eyes] [Cool] [Yipee] [Killing me] [Two face] [Angel]

Luv ya

[ 21. September 2005, 00:15: Message edited by: Jahlove ]
 


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