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How To Live Alone: Turning 30 Is Easier If You've Learned To Exist On Your Own

Posted: 04/24/2012 11:31 am Updated: 04/24/2012 11:35 am

How To Live Alone

By Pamela Redmond Satran

When I was a kid, the only woman I knew who lived alone was my aunt Margie. Although Margie was nice enough in a peppermint-scented, pilly-sweatered kind of way, I figured she lived alone because she had no other choice: She wasn’t pretty enough to get a husband or cool enough to have friends or lucky enough to be a mom. Living alone might be better than being dead, I thought, but just barely.

I had no desire to ever live alone myself, and I didn’t think I’d ever have to. I moved from my parents’ house to a college dorm room, and from my dorm to an apartment with my first husband, and when my teenage marriage broke up, I moved in with a group of friends.

Eventually, though, I found myself too old to keep labeling my cheese but not ready to move in with my adorable but oh-so-tenuous new boyfriend. And so at twenty-three I signed a lease on my first solo apartment. I was thrilled to finally be embarking on a phase that was defined by nothing more than my own moods, schedule, and agenda. But I also dreaded discovering that, alone with my own soul, I’d find nothing very compelling. What if even I didn’t want to be with me?

It was one of the first pedestrian chores of having my own place that ended up banishing my worry: I had to paint the walls, a job that clearly fell to me alone. But at the same time, I realized, no one else had any right to decide what color I painted those walls, or at what hour, or how I configured the rest of the space around them.
I remember so vividly what a thrill it was to transform the room that I can still see the gorgeous color I chose, the palest shell pink, spreading like a blush of excitement across those walls. There was an important revelation in that moment: Living alone meant pleasing nobody, not even for one second, but myself.

Of course, there were lonely moments too, and those filled with terror: As keenly as I remember the pleasure of blasting “Desperado” for five days running after a painful breakup, I remember how desolate I felt lying alone on the floor crying over him. I recall how horrible I felt upon discovering a mouse swimming desperately in my toilet. (If you must know, I shut my eyes and -- yes, shoot me -- I flushed.) How terrifying it was to wake up from a nightmare at 3 a.m. and feel there was no one on earth I had a right to call at that hour to comfort me.

There was also a sense that I was doing this until something better -- i.e., a permanent man -- came along. But while I was waiting, I was also amassing important life skills available only to those who live alone. How to single-handedly haul a dresser up five flights of stairs, say, or how not to eat all the ice cream in your freezer. Where to fortify a door so no one can get in, and when to kick that guy in your bed out.

When it’s only you within those pink walls, on the peaceful sunny days as well as the fretful nights, you get to know yourself in a way you don’t, you just can’t, in any other situation. There’s no one else to blame the mess on, to absorb the anxiety, to break the silence. You’re forced to confront your own weaknesses as well as your strengths, to figure out exactly what you want out of living with a lover or a friend (if you end up wanting that at all), and why being alone may be just perfect.

Due to love or money or some combination of the two, I moved into and out of my own apartments throughout my twenties, finally getting remarried and having my first child in the whirlwind eighteen months before my thirtieth birthday. Except for a week or two when I’ve been traveling, I haven’t lived alone since.

But here’s the important thing: I know that I could. I know that -- undoubtedly like my aunt Margie -- I’d like it. I even know what color I’d paint the walls.

PAMELA REDMOND SATRAN is the author of the novel "The Possibility of You" and the forthcoming humor book "Rabid," as well as a creator of the website nameberry.com. A mother of three, she intends to look and act thirty-seven forever.

This piece is excerpted from Glamour's "Thirty Things Every Woman Should Have and Should Know By The Time She's 30."

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11:55 AM on 06/25/2012
Here I'm just bummed that my live in boyfriend is starting a job where he'll be out of the house 3 nights a week. I used to be great at doing things alone/spending days at a time by myself and loving it....now, all of a sudden, not so much.
03:54 PM on 04/27/2012
This article is not titled "Why you should live alone," or "Why living alone is the best decision ever," or "Real women live alone." It's a How-To! I feel funny saying this, having studied literary theory and believing that everything means more than the THING itself, but damn! It's not a feminist or anti-feminist treatise! Is it? It can be interpreted that way, but must it be? I appreciated this article, having lived in a million apartments since 18, some by myself, some with boyfriends, with roommates, with my babies and with their father and all sorts of conventional and non-conventional (whatever that is) stuff. Looking forward to moving into anew apartment thanks to a new job, and buying some light pink paint, or whatever :)
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INVet
Truth has a liberal bias
03:58 PM on 04/26/2012
I never want to live alone again! When I am home without the wife and kids I love it for the first hour or so and then I just hate not having them there.

Glad you like it - I lived alone for most of my adult life and I don't regret leaving it behind.
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INVet
Truth has a liberal bias
03:55 PM on 04/26/2012
Poor mouse!!
12crunch
Don't Panic
03:37 PM on 04/26/2012
This article is geat! I'm sharing it with friends women and men that live alone.. and may or may not want to.
12:13 PM on 04/26/2012
The point here is not to turn women against men or to encourage heterosexual women to leave their men, it is about being okay with your self. As an adult, one of the most difficult tasks, in my opinion, is to establish a peaceful relationship with your own being. Being at peace with yourself is a great thing to have while in a relationship. Also, the point here is in some ways to deconstruct societal pressures to find "the one" or the "right relationship." We are constantly bombarded with messages that paint a sad, lonely, desperate picture of those in relationships; we are also told we need relationships in order to be happy. What is lost here is that one's happiness depends as much on one's self as it does on our experience of others.
To know that you can enjoy relationships and at the same time be aware that you will be okay even if you are not in one is pretty empowering. I believe this can be empowering for both men and women.
12:15 PM on 04/26/2012
Edit: I meant to say - "We are constantly bombarded with messages that paint a sad, lonely, desperate picture of those NOT in relationships."
11:01 PM on 04/25/2012
"There was an important revelation in that moment: Living alone meant pleasing nobody, not even for one second, but myself."

I wonder if the attitude comes first and the living alone comes next.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
12:29 PM on 04/25/2012
No one to judge how you painted the walls? When has ANY man had any say as to what a woman does with the house he's paying for? In a couple of years it's not even going to be his house to begin with, so what does it matter?

Since when does being married mean a woman pleasing a man? From what I hear most women stop doing what they did (sex included) to attract the man once they feel safe in a marriage.

This article ended just as I thought. When it was time to address her nurturing instinct, the author decided to find a man and have a baby despite the fact that there are many options that would allow a woman to have a child that don't involve getting married.

Articles like this should remind men why they should not get married. Women are encouraged daily to walk out on men for some Utopia waiting on the other side.

I personally have never met a woman who was TRULY happy without a man in her life. Every honest women will confirm that. When I see an attractive woman that can't or has never found a man that wants to stay with her there is usually something wrong (hidden hostility towards men, etc.)

The number one topic most women go to therapy for is relationship related, single women included. This, "I don't need a man to make me whole" rhetoric is pure B_S.
lincolnparkman
The man with a Plan!
01:26 PM on 04/25/2012
Great post.

I think your "Women are encouraged daily to walk out on men for some Utopia waiting on the other side" speaks volumes of the truth.

The celeb culture keeps encouraging this more and more. Examples like Jennifer Lopez, Madonna, Elizabeth Taylor make it more easy to accept that you can be a celeb too in your own life - and it's going to turn out OK and you will still be "celebrated".

But what happens with all of these famous women - they end up in the arms of (you guessed it) another MAN!
05:04 PM on 04/25/2012
I live alone. I LOVE IT.
I've been married and I’ve lived with a long term boyfriend for years, and I realized the reason they didn't work out is because...*GASP* I want to be alone! I don't want marriage and I don't want to live with anybody. It really amazes me that this is so hard for so many people to understand! (And no, I’m not dating nor sleeping with multiple partners, for those of you thinking I must be sleeping around.) Some of us women just like having our own home, our own space, our own life. Some of us know that marriage isn't for us. Some of us don’t want to have children. *GASP*
I come home when I want to, leave when I want to, I can travel for as long as I want, have as many friends as I want over, turn off my phone and sleep in when I want to…it’s amazing and I wouldn’t trade it for a man and children. Sorry you can't understand that, but it's true. And it's not as uncommon as you may think!
12:58 PM on 04/26/2012
I live alone and I love it too. Im a homeowner as well.

"And it's not as uncommon as you may think! "

Exactly! The real issue there is that some men cannot comprehend a woman who wants to be alone. The OP said as much himself, if she is attractive and alone she must be damaged. lol
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johnb123
All I ask..just be reasonable....do things my way
02:34 AM on 04/25/2012
I once heard a radio talk host say...."The happiest single people, are those who have been married".  I've never been married and it's not for lack of trying...it just hasn't happened yet. At 58, I still haven't given up.
06:58 PM on 04/25/2012
Good luck to you, johnb123!
10:55 PM on 04/24/2012
It's more and more common for today's woman to easily live her entire life without a husband or children - seize the day, the world is your oyster!
09:18 PM on 04/24/2012
Reality check! Of the 27 comments here, there is not a single negative word about living alone. Sounds desperately false to me. The most honest person here must be Elvira Walker who wrote, “Sometimes living alone is refreshing.”
The key word being, "sometimes," as in, other times not!
12:33 PM on 04/25/2012
Mark,

You are 100% correct. HP is always putting some feminist spin on things. The underlying message is, "men we don't need you."

Yet ironically the depression in women is at an all time high. The number one topic women seek therapy for is relationship related.

From the single women living alone that I've known throughout my life, NONE were truly happy. Especially those that forfeited having children.
02:56 PM on 04/25/2012
That's not because having children brings happiness, rather it gives people with nothing in their lives (those who are single just long enough to find another partner) something to live for.
06:27 AM on 04/26/2012
The depression is probably directly caused by the relationship they're in! Not every woman needs a man to be truly happy. Women can be alone and adopt and be completely satisfied with their lives.
08:19 PM on 04/24/2012
I feel like your aunt Margie. I do, however, like living alone although it does get pretty lonely sometimes.
12:34 PM on 04/25/2012
Honesty appreciated.
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SkreetGil1
Obama changes: Not me, not ever
08:17 PM on 04/24/2012
Love living alone! Love it!
07:38 PM on 04/24/2012
I had never lived alone. At the age of 55 I took a leap and moved to a studio in a different city. Absolutely love it, and it has been 20 years now. I did however need a furry companion. A dog in the city, and while I still worked (retired now), was too difficult, but a cat perfect. (I had to resist saying purrfect....) When lonely, there is always the telephone, and I have great neighbors. My Kindle, computer and car take me any place I want to go. Hop on an airplane couple times a year to visit friends or family.