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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To absolutely hate being single?

300 replies

pushingthroughcracks · 12/04/2017 07:18

Sorry to be so pathetic and in many ways negative but stay with me.

I am battling a number of personal demons and I feel alone and unloved. I am trying really hard to make it different but unfortunately it isn't working!

I've not had a great time of late, I do try to speak to and text friends but they are almost always busy with their own families and it can become a difficult line between putting yourself out there for friendship and companionship and getting in people's way. I was surprised and a tiny bit put out when having driven for then best part of two hours on Monday to see a friend we had coffee and then just over an hour and a half later she cheerily got up and said she had to go because of reasons to do with her family. I didn't say anything because it isn't exactly helpful for future relations to whinge and whine about not spending a required number of hours with me, and perhaps she just hadn't thought that it took a not inconsiderable amount of time and money to see her. Anyway this is beside the point but I'm just trying to explain when I do try to initiate contact sometimes things don't go to plan!

I do try to get out of the house as much as possible. I live in a city and I do try to get involved and do as many things as possible but a lot of the time I end up in a position where I have to do things on my own and it isn't really much fun. As well as the impact on finances which is another source of stress: having to run a home - mortgage and all bills and car repairs and so on from one salary takes its toll.

I've joined over the past five years or so various dating websites - guardian soulmates and match.com and plenty of fish. None worked for me in the time I was on there. For some reason the only person wanting to strike up a conversation with me on match.com was a man from Manchester which is some 300 miles away from where I do live, and while I've nothing against Manchester as a place I would like to think there's someone amongst my millions of neighbours who I could have a relationship with! Yet I do feel I should be coupled up with one person and any social life should stem from doing things with other couples. This certainly seems to be the impression I have from scanning my eyes around those around me.

I do know, before anyone says, that loving with a cruel or neglectful or ignorant partner would be worse but that's not really what I'm about here.

I do volunteer work within my community, and I do have friends although they are somewhat scattered around this country and abroad and a couple of friendships are sadly waning a little at the moment despite attempts on my part to rekindle them. I also go to the gym but don't find this a social activity (I don't go with this expectation.)

So I do feel a little as if I am going around in circles where in order to meet someone in need to be a grounded individual with a sparkly social life yet having a sparkly social life when ones friends are coupled up and you have all the financial limitations of being single, is hard!

I am in a rut and don't want to go on like this but I don't know how to change things!

OP posts:
pushingthroughcracks · 12/04/2017 17:48

Is it easy to get boyfriends? I haven't found it so but I suspect that might just be me.

OP posts:
MyPerfectCousin · 12/04/2017 17:50

If it really were dead easy to get boyfriends then there wouldn't be so many people saying they were unhappily single.

Besides, I don't just want 'a boyfriend'. I want to meet someone with whom I am compatible.

And good for you that you are happy enjoying some single time after 20 years of marriage, but not everyone is in that position.

Some of us have already said that we do go on holidays, to concerts, to festivals, camping, walking etc on our own. Being content doing things on one's own isn't the problem.

lisaIambe · 12/04/2017 17:50

I like to think I look presentable. I do take pride in my appearance- childhood of being told my height was manly- that's a whole new thread. Not an especially tall adult but was a huge child. I still get "I think you're too tall, have you thought about a girlfriend?" And "you might have more success if you dye your hair, guys don't like redheads" comments. My hair is naturally a kind of rose gold colour. It either gets a million compliments or a lot of "oh what a shame, why don't you dye it?" Bloody confusing, definitely not helpful. If potential boyfriends don't like my hair as it is then screw them.

MyPerfectCousin · 12/04/2017 17:50

And no, it isn't dead easy to get a boyfriend.

lisaIambe · 12/04/2017 17:51

Janet it definitely is not dead easy. For some people it is. It's not like I've turned a load of guys down, guys just aren't interested. Ever. And almost all of them are taken.

MyPerfectCousin · 12/04/2017 17:52

lisa your hair sounds lovely!

Is it in a style that complements you?

I hate to talk about 'appearance' type stuff, but that really can make so much difference to how "relationship ready" you appear to the rest of the world.

Or BadLad's 'availability' criteria...

Forwardsforwards · 12/04/2017 17:53

Janet getting a boyfriend in my early twenties was near impossible..... add 2 decades and its just plain futile.

Certainly not easy. Far bloody from it.

ShatnersWig · 12/04/2017 17:55

Did someone really come on a thread about loneliness to tell us all it's dead easy to get a boyfriend? FFS.

Bollocks is it. Although I suppose if you have no standards whatsoever and would accept absolutely anybody it might be true.

Forwardsforwards · 12/04/2017 17:56

Interesting point re; relationship ready Perfect....I prob look far from it (will pm you later thank you)

Pondering whether to buy a wig because my hair is so shit...

Ava5 · 12/04/2017 18:02

"women who never seemed chatty or affable"

In other words - only pay attention to the extroverts. Do you know how many women are introverted and/or appear 'too serious'? You'd be skipping 30-50% of the population. Buying into bubbly female stereotypes is silly and oppressive to the extreme.

I'm a in a similar boat to the OP, except 10 years younger and have borderline ASD. On the surface I come off as an intense, really bright introvert. Give me 5 mins of focused attention and I'll melt like a snowman in the sun.

I, too, am tired to death of being lonely and I don't even live alone (there are humans AND dogs here). I'm starved for intimacy, affection, touch, sex, intellectual exchange. I have the urge to strangle everyone coupled up and looking content, or even having any one of the things I crave. I realized today that I was one of only a couple of unmarried people in my uni class.

So yeah, OP, I feel you. Be glad that you're NT, which makes the normal social avenues at least available to you for use without crippling effort.

pushingthroughcracks · 12/04/2017 18:04

It just makes me feel a bit rubbish.

Appearance wise, I'm not sure. I don't think it matters at a younger age but as people get older I find men can have their pick or younger women. So a man my age would be looking at women aged 28-32, possibly. And therefore it's harder to compete.

I'm really down about it all today - hard not to stop the thoughts of 'is this what the rest of my life will look like?'

OP posts:
Iheartpedro · 12/04/2017 18:05

Park run? Free event on a Saturday morning at loads of parks round the country. I know of quite a few couples from that!

MyPerfectCousin · 12/04/2017 18:06

Forwards I have a friend who told me a couple of years ago that I throw up a "fuck off" wall around me.

I know what he means...

I think that what I find hardest is that I used to feel unattractive and unloveable anyway. Then I realised I was putting up unintentional boundaries and that I didn't look as good as I could. So I addressed all that. I can see that I am more confident and more attractive now than I was, in fact, I think I'm more attractive now than I was in my mid 20s, but still no one is interested... Confused Sad

So it isn't a guaranteed solution... but it's good to feel better about yourself!

Stormtreader · 12/04/2017 18:07

Yup, "its dead easy to get a boyfriend/shag" is the other voice of "you should enjoy being single". Its basically people saying "you should stop complaining because you're choosing to be single" because they have found it easy and simply cant imagine someones experience being different from their own.

Its often trotted out by people who are either naturally beautiful, or who were in their teens the last time they were single, when it is indeed rather easier for most.

Polarbearflavour · 12/04/2017 18:08

I work in a place with lovely military officers. But sadly they all seem to be married! Urgh. I hate first dates too.

MyPerfectCousin · 12/04/2017 18:11

pushing yes, and I find that men don't age half as well as they think they do! They have no right to presume to get someone 25 years younger.

MyPerfectCousin · 12/04/2017 18:12

Absolutely, Storm

ShatnersWig · 12/04/2017 18:18

Storm Reminds me of a "well meaning" friend who, when I had been single 3 years, said "but being single is great, I loved being single, doing what you want when you want, god I loved it!" So I replied "If it was so good, why did you get married then? When are you leaving your husband to go back to being single if it's so fabulous?"

pushingthroughcracks · 12/04/2017 18:20

Well, in fairness to Janet it's true that some people find boyfriends and partners very easily secretly hoping Janet comes back and tell me her secret but I sadly am not one of them!

OP posts:
Ava5 · 12/04/2017 18:20

"I've come to the painful conclusion that I am just too ugly for most guys to notice me at the grand old age of 22."

I'm sure you're not.

I have the opposite problem. I'm lucky to be better-looking and taller than average and with really good dress sense, and I feel like it's wasted on me with my faulty neurology. I wish I could give it away to someone who could use it. When I was younger, people ooohed and aaahed over my looks constantly, but I was too cripplingly shy and suffering too much from body anxiety to take advantage of that.

I have much better social skills now, over my hang-us and still look decent but I'm stuck in a rut because of having missed all that normal developmental experience people have in their 20s with romance.

MyPerfectCousin · 12/04/2017 18:26

Yes, completely, Shatner. I am surrounded by loved up couples telling me I don't need a partner to be happy.

Well no, I don't, but only one of them wasn't actively dating or lamenting her single status when she serendipitously met her now partner.

If being single is so great, why aren't they all rejecting their relationships? Why aren't the people I know who are in less than happy marriages walking away from them?

It's because, whilst there are moments of greatness when you can do what you want, when you want, and without consideration for anyone else, actually much of the time is lonely and shit. Especially if you don't have family and all of your friends are partnered up.

lisaIambe · 12/04/2017 18:29

[https://www.google.co.uk/search?q=lisa+lambe&client=safari&hl=en-gb&prmd=ivn&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjczcyosZ_TAhWKJMAKHZyHAuMQ_AUICCgB&biw=320&bih=460&dpr=2 hair] There is a reason I picked this username Blush mine is less red though, and not as long. Slightly layered because so thick.

Not sure what I do wrong in all honesty. Not much I can do about the decent guys being taken. I think it's a more common problem than people realise.

lisaIambe · 12/04/2017 18:29

hair

MyPerfectCousin · 12/04/2017 18:36

Hm... your hair is most definitely not why you are single then... that's beautiful and I'm only slightly jealous... Wink

pushingthroughcracks · 12/04/2017 19:03

This thread has inspired me to sign up for POF again. Nothing to lose right? Because I've concluded being single really IS shit Grin

OP posts: