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The Top 10 Myths About Single People

Posted: 04/12/11 09:56 AM ET

Stop telling single people why they are not married. If you are so sure that becoming unsingle is the ultimate and tyrannically powerful life goal of most single people, you probably believe a lot of other things about singles that just aren't true. It's time for some debunking.

Here are the top 10 myths about people who are single. For some of them, I'll provide just a brief version, with a link to the more detailed dethroning.

Myth #1 about single people is that if you are single, you are interested in just one thing: getting coupled. Single people, according to the myth, are home crying in their beer, distraught that they don't have a sweetie. You can think that, as long as you never ask singles what they want. But those pesky social scientists are always asking questions. When they asked a national sample of single people, in 2005 and again in 2010, whether they were looking to get married, fewer than half said yes! Younger people are more likely to say they are looking, but they get over it. The unmarried people who are least likely to say that they want to get married are the ones who already tried it: those who are divorced or widowed. In later life, men are always more eager to get remarried than women are, but even for them, if they have good support for friends, then they are no more interested in signing on again than are women. Now let me tell you about a category of single people you may not have heard about: people, like me, who are single at heart. For the single at heart, being single is who we really and truly are. We are not people who are "unlucky in love" or afraid of getting rejected or any of those other dopey stereotypes. We are not "marking time" until we find "the one." We just love our single lives. We love striking just the right balance between the time we spend with other people and the time we spend in sweet solitude. We love pursuing our passions. Single is who we are.

Myth #2 is that there is a dark aura around people who are single. The myth insists that if you are single, you are miserable and lonely and your life is tragic. Maybe you have heard that there are scientific studies showing that if you get married, you will be happier and better off in all sorts of ways than if you stay single. Well, I'm a social scientist, and I read those articles in the professional journals. Not what the media claims about the findings; I read the actual reports. I've posted my conclusion here.

Myth #3 is that if you get married, you will be healthier and you will live longer. Not so! Find out what the research really shows here.

Myth #4 about single people is that if you are single, everything is always about you. According to the myth, if you are single, you are like a child. You are self-centered and immature, and your time isn't worth anything because you have nothing to do but play. Meanwhile, the myth says, married people are out there helping other people, supporting their parents, and maintaining communities. They, supposedly, are the selfless ones. Except that they are not. Read about two national surveys that debunked that myth here.

Myth #5 is really a set of myths that include all the scare stories that are told about single women. Listen up, all you single women! According to the myths, your work won't love you back and your eggs will dry up. Also, you don't get any, or, if you do, you're promiscuous. These myths are ways of undermining anything that single women might love about their lives. Are you a single woman who has a great job that you are passionate about? Better be careful: that job won't love you back! And besides, while you are busying yourself with your work that you only think is making you happy, your eggs are drying up. (There's still another myth in there, that if you are a woman, you are yearning to have kids. How could anything, other than landing a mate, matter more?) Notice also the part about sex. One presumption is that if you are single, then you are probably promiscuous. But if it seems obvious that you are not the promiscuous type, then there's still another myth ready to take you down: you poor thing, you are not getting any. Myths about single people always get you coming and going; no matter how you lead your life, there's a myth out there that can be used to demean you.

Myth #6 is also a set of myths, this time including all the scare tactics told about single men. So listen up, all you single men! The myth-makers know who you are. You are horny, slovenly and irresponsible, and you are the scary criminals. Or, you are sexy, fastidious, frivolous, and gay. (And of course, they think that the gay part is a bad thing.) Notice how this parallels the catch-22 that was applied to single women. (Read more here.)

Myth #7 is aimed at single parents. It is very simple. The myth says: Listen up, single parents, your kids are doomed! I know you've heard this one before. Try to raise children as a single parent, the myth insists, and those kids will end up as drug-addled juvenile delinquents having kids while they are still kids themselves. The myth-makers seem to think that kids raised by married parents have two loving parents, who have perfectly harmonious relationships with each other and with each of their kids, and who both lavish untold amounts of time and resources on those kids in a home free of conflict. But "Leave It to Beaver" was a TV show; it wasn't real! I'm a social scientist. I've read the journal articles that supposedly show that the kids of single parents are doomed. Some of the studies show no differences at all between the kids raised by single parents and those raised by married parents. Sometimes there is a difference, but it is nothing like what you have been led to believe. (Read more here.)

Myth #8 about single people is the pity myth: Aw, you poor, single people, too bad you are incomplete; you don't have anyone, and you don't have a life. What is so amazing about this myth is that people try to pin it on some of the most accomplished and beloved single people. (Read more here.)

Myth #9 is going to sound very familiar. It is a favorite myth for scaring single people into getting coupled. It says that if you are single, you will grow old alone, and you will die in a room by yourself where no one will find you for weeks. You know what kills me about this? How does getting married guarantee that you won't die alone? Unless you and your spouse die at the exact same time, then either your spouse dies first and you are left "alone," or you die first, in which case, well, you're dead! But what about the part about growing old alone? That's interesting, too, because there is a lot of research on that. Studies show that it is hard to find a group of people any less likely to be lonely in later life than women who have always been single. I think it is because they don't pick out one person to be "the one" and then stick everyone else on the back burner. They attend to the friends and family and other important people in their lives, and that pays off.

Myth #10 is the family values myth. It says: Let's give all the perks, benefits, gifts, and cash to couples and call it family values. Who gets the breaks on car insurance, health insurance, vacation packages and gym memberships? Married couples do! The singles who pay full price are subsidizing them. If you have followed the same-sex marriage debate, you probably already know that there are 1,138 provisions in federal laws in which marital status is the basis of benefits, rights, and privileges. Some of these are big things. If you are married and you die, your Social Security benefits go to your spouse. If you are single and you die, your benefits go back into the system. And if someone who really cares about you dies, they can't give their Social Security benefits to you, a single person, even though you may have been their best friend for life. That's one of the reasons the GLBTcommunity wants in on official marriage. But guess what? Every single person, whether gay or straight or anything else, is left out of this treasure trove of perks and privileges. Making marriage the basis for privilege is what a lot of people call family values. That's a myth. I call it discrimination.

For even more about myth-demolishing research, check out "Singled Out," "Single with Attitude" and this post.

 
 
 
Stop telling single people why they are not married. If you are so sure that becoming unsingle is the ultimate and tyrannically powerful life goal of most single people, you probably believe a lot of ...
Stop telling single people why they are not married. If you are so sure that becoming unsingle is the ultimate and tyrannically powerful life goal of most single people, you probably believe a lot of ...
 
 
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11:12 PM on 05/14/2011
As a single I feel like there are many contradictory messages out there directed at us. For example, you should either be happily single or actively seeking a mate. But if you're looking for a mate, you're desperate. And if you're not, you're too career oriented. You should "put yourself out there" or "you'll find someone when you stop looking." If you don't have a date, you're too picky, but if you give someone a chance, your friends can't believe you went out with him!

I sincerely wish I could be happy single. I think I'd be more content if I were surrounded by friends and family. I'm an only child, my close family is small, my extended family spread out. As someone who is somewhat introverted, I have few close friends, and all are married and/or having children now. I'm not on their radar. They hang out with in-laws, other moms from the school, or their fiances.

I am working to make my life better on my own. I'm trying to go back to school to get into a new, hopefully rewarding career that I can have a comfortable life with. I have lots of hobbies I enjoy. I have pets. I would also like a best friend and partner to share this journey through life with, and possibly some children, too. At this point, though, I wouldn't sacrifice my values or myself to be with just anyone. Does that make me desperate?
05:24 PM on 04/22/2011
One of my dad's longtime buddies sends a lot of email forwards and has my address on his list. He and I also correspond briefly on occasion - maybe once or twice a year.

I've always caught a vaguely disrespectful vibe from him but nothing blatant until now. I think it's mostly due to my being happily single all my life, but there are probably other factors as well.

He knows I like to play casino poker. The other day he emailed (just to me) an ad for a poker tournament (something he's never done before) in western WA that pictures a beautiful woman displaying a royal flush. He somehow couldn't help himself from gratuitously typing in the following weird one-sentence message to accompany the ad:

"Here's a chance to visit your money and see how it's doing!"

This is offensive on multiple levels. I have no idea what he was thinking, but regardless, from now on his emails will bypass my inbox and go straight to the archive, marked as read. (I prefer this form of filtering over trashing, unless it's spam.)

After gathering myself, I sent him the following reply:

"Thanks for passing along the Tulalip poker ad. I'm looking forward to visiting friends in WA sometime soon."

He's certainly not one of them.
01:24 AM on 04/19/2011
Sometimes I walk down the street and look around to see if there is a guy I'd like to have as a livealong and I almost never see anyone who sings to me.

I like that my life offers the freedom to do exactly as I please, whenever I please, get up when I like, go to sleep when I like.

As for a sleeping companion, I stopped caring whether someone with hairy legs was sharing my bed. In fact, at some point I began to believe that sharing my bed with my hairy beagle, Casey, was as pleasurable in it’s own way and in other ways a lot less bother. For example, I can blow my nose loudly in the night and Casey could care less.

Of all the things I worry about (on my blog www.confessionsofaworrywart.com ), finding a mate is not one of them unless you count the worry that I will meet someone I like. Then what?
08:41 PM on 04/18/2011
A many of woman increases her lifespan by divorcing. Although being coupled can be fun, many of my married female friends admit to me privately they wish they were single too.
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Thaag Tidestalker
Axial Tilt: the Reason for the Season!
05:52 PM on 04/18/2011
Why is it that people think that when we get injured or sick our spouse will take care of us? I had two injuries while I was married. Both injuries required flat-on-my-back-knocked-out-cold surgery to correct. The second time, he was off having a wonderful time with his buddies and was late picking me up from the hospital. The day after both surgeries, even though they were to my foot and to my knee, he wanted me to clean house and cook and general stuff that required I walk around even though I wasn't supposed to. He finally got off his ass when he saw the blood soaking the dressing on my knee.

Five years after the divorce, I got hit by a car and required surgery again to fix my leg so I could walk again. I lived alone and yet my friends made sure I barely had to do a thing but get my butt to the toilet, and the first few days they helped me with that too. One friend came over and helped me sponge-bathe during the first two weeks since the doctor forbade me to shower. Another friend stopped by every day, picked up my debit card, got my favorite soda and a pack of my smokes and whatever little things from the grocery that I needed and a Pepsi for himself. My friends took care of me.

Why would I need a spouse again?
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gleannfia
02:27 PM on 04/19/2011
That reminds me of what Jacqueline Bissett was once quoted as saying: "My father was a physician. My mother got cancer, and he didn't take care of her. That is one reason I won't marry."
03:47 PM on 04/18/2011
How about all the people who get married because they NEED someone to make them happy? All those co-dependent weak minded people? How about all the people who need someone to feel validated because they can't go through life on their own without needing another hand to comfort them? It would look silly to be carrying around a teddy bear and blankie in your 20's sucking your thumb. Thus, get yourself another human seeking co-dependency, have children that you can control, pass on your own bad habits from your own childhood and repeat the same things you hated onto your own kid screwing up their head and adding another body to this oppressed world of misery, apathy, and ignorance. Then you get to juggle their life, your own life, and the entity of your and your spouse. Deal with all that nonsense of rearing a kid and all the stress? Oh, but them walking and hitting a couple of other milestones makes up for it! Oops, I guess that makes me self centered. Sigh. I choose not to drink arsenic because it has adverse effects. Does that make me bad, too? I prefer the option of being single. Less hassles. Who wants to be hassled? Certainly not Jeff Spicoli.
12:18 PM on 04/18/2011
I think some of these myths are a function of geography. If you live in a small town and you're not married by 30 people may view you as if you'll never get married. But if you live in a big city you might find that few people are married by 30. http://bit.ly/beCSJu
08:49 AM on 04/18/2011
To "ronan4" - Since your comment to me was apparently disapproved, I would like to take the opportunity to thank you for putting me in my place. Nothing diminishes me more than the ramblings of a Fred Phelps wannabe with a desperate need of re-schooling in the English language.
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kadellagroove
Left leaning, Jeffersonian Whig.
02:23 AM on 04/18/2011
I'm quickly becoming the "last man standing" of all my friends. And I'm not even remotely close. haha. I feel a conflicted nature to being a single man in this culture. on one hand you seem to attract a bit of envy from many people in relationships. as if I'm out every night with a different women just liven it up vegas style. the other side of course is the pressure to settle down and start a family and if I don't soon then there must be something wrong with me.

For the most part, the reason I am single, is not for lack of opportunities. But It fits my lifestyle and I just haven't been struck by anyone enough to settle down with them. its as simple as that. I enjoy it most days. but some days I admit I am filled with anxiety about it.

I think mostly that anxiety comes from the external pressure of society, friends, family... sometimes directly but mostly indirectly. the older I get (I just turned 27) the more prevalent that pressure becomes. But honestly... theres just no way I will be with someone if its a compromise on what I want in a relationship. thats a decision I made a long time ago which I think a lot of people feel is unrealistic. but it is what it is and I'm in no rush.
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ShakeYourComplacency
Commonsense Progressive
06:04 AM on 04/18/2011
I think you're absolutely fine, and when a person comes along who wants what you want then it will be a perfect match. And even then, it's your choice. The pro-marriage people who want everyone to marry (except gay americans of course), seem to think we live in a cave and can't see what's going on outside. At work, there were two guys which no one thought would marry. One was a player, the other a bookish, sensitive loner. Both married by chance. They met their wives while simply engaging in the activities they loved. Meanwhile, the long-time marriage couple we worked with, who had a rock solid marriage and kids, lots of plans, suddenly divorced, nastily and bitterly.

The moral of this story is we shouldn't judge others' choices, because life is not about building a metaphorical brick house, it's about change. Change will happen to all of us whether we're ready or not, and we can use it to grow, or weaken. As long as we keep our minds free, our bodies healthy and our hearts open, we will live the life we're meant to live, married or not.
02:56 PM on 04/18/2011
your wisdom is my treasure...with gratitude, faith
04:10 PM on 04/18/2011
Anxious. I can just see you rocking back and forth in your chair with a slight shake in the hand, perseverating on the idea while mumbling, "I gotta get married....I gotta get married...." LOL

I'm 39 bro. And there's no rush. Don't follow the sheep. When has ANY great spirit who ever took flesh considered to be of the norm? Sheep follow sheep. That's not you. Don't cave to pressure. Most all of what we are taught is wrong anyhow. People just repeat what they were taught. I didn't vote on any of this blueprint laid out for life, did you? Keep living the dream, YOUR dream! - El Fooch
08:09 PM on 04/17/2011
As a queer person, i have taken what many of my peers find to be an unusual position. i think civil marriage should be abolished, along with all special rights that come along with it. Single people and partnered people deserve the same rights. Giving special privileges to married people is done for the express purpose of promoting a narrow-minded idea of family. i think it's pretty sad that queer folks have been accused for that last 35+ years of asking for "special rights" when it's the hetero married folks who actually have special rights.
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kadellagroove
Left leaning, Jeffersonian Whig.
02:18 AM on 04/18/2011
I like that point of view.
01:52 PM on 04/17/2011
I think that the best lesson that anyone can take away from this article is that we need to stop judging other people, and start being happy with what we have. I could tell you that a million dollars would make me happier, but I make a simple living and I am just as happy or not happier than millionaires. I've been single, and I am married now. There's pros and cons either way.
01:26 PM on 04/17/2011
One thing about these myths is true: the person who believes them is telling you a great deal about his/her own foibles and insecurities!

IMHO many people are simply too immature to foster a successful partnership; and most of those too immature to make it alone! (lol)

Personally, I'm very happy being single, and I perfer the company of other people who've learned to take care of themselves, their home, job, life, etc. independantly. IMO this "life experience" helps foster a personal relationship that is both independant and interdependant (opposed to dependant), which allows you to enjoy a relationship on a more personal level. When both people have had time to get to know and develop themselves fully (and learned to toss old baggage) both bring more constructive things into the relationship...
12:47 PM on 04/17/2011
Bless you! This is why it seems to take such courage to be alone -- because we are viewed as pathetic, not fully formed creatures. And I love the point about LBGTs fighting for marital legal rights. You are right -- the focus should be on ending discrimination against we single folks and ending policies that prevent us from doing any damn thing we want with our money and benefits. Having a family is one way to live, but it's not the only way. Thank you for shining some light.
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Jokergirl
No joke actually, humor helps heal
08:33 PM on 04/17/2011
I agree there's a certain self-reliance and independence that comes with being single, for me at least. I also helps me know that when I enter into relationships I'm just not going to be a puppet for the other person to order around, so when it does end I won't be totally dysfunctional about it. I can stand on my own two feet because I have been single. I know people who cannot function without being in a relationship, they go from one guy to the next like they're on an assembly line and I don't think before they jump into the next relationship. Maybe it's because I don't have a big issue with being single or alone.
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builderman55
Featherless Biped
12:01 PM on 04/17/2011
Married an divorced twice, have no kids. I love being single, have a great work life, a good, small community of friends and more things that interest me than I have time for. I read, ride a Harley, build houses, date, see good movies, enjoy my family, love my niece and nephew. And when I am ready to go home, I have pets that I love and care for and who love me unconditionally. What's not to like about this??!!
10:19 AM on 04/17/2011
Exciting article Bella!! You definitely hit a lot of nerves and that is good for stimulating thinking and higher levels of consciousness!
I've been married and had children. I've been single. For me, being married carried more cons than pros...but, it could have been that I didn't pick the "right" partner for myself.
I divorced the last man I was married to because he was so self-centered and selfish, he wouldn't allow one of my children (who was living with their dad) to visit long term (the other two children were living with us) and he wouldn't allow me to temporarily leave to take care of my mother who was dying. Selfishness and narcissism are character traits of married and single people.
Married men have been soliciting me for sex since I was in my teens, while single and married for my meager life of 58 years.
The last married man lied to me and told me he was single and had never been married. He went so far as to buy me a diamond engagement ring. He was with me four out of seven days of the week, sometimes two weeks. Three years later I discovered he was married and now he is "out there" preying on another woman (who believes him to be single). His wife is educated, a licensed therapist, and financially secure and they have been married approximately 32 years.
Bella, thank you for attempting to dispel the myths.