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Nedda Alammar

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Committed to Ourselves... or Just Committed?

Posted: 07/05/2012 7:00 am

I recently met up with a girlfriend for drinks who had some news.

"I guess I'm... happy," she said quizzically, as if 'happy' was so foreign a word she wasn't sure if she was pronouncing it correctly.

But it was foreign. Because something happened in her life that only happens on soap operas. An old relationship had turned into a new one; her male best friend finally realized there is no such thing as a male best friend, and all on his own.

"Well that's great!" I exclaimed. In the ten years I've known her, I'd never seen her so happy. This was good. I was excited. Supportive. A friend.

"Well," I said quizzically. "Now what do we do?"

"Yeah, I dunno," she said bluntly. We both faced the bar and thought for a moment.

"Should we order nachos?

"Yeah. That works."

An odd night was upon us. What would we do? My girlfriend and I spent the past decade of our lives inhaling many nachos, many happy-hour-tinis, rehashing the could-have-been-should-have-been romantic escapades of the moment. 'How could he'....'He didn't even'...'Who does that?' After which we'd flirt with sub-standard guys and watch them go after girls who were obviously total skanks. We're too awesome for all of this. Next week? Same place? And I always went home feeling totally bloated yet totally awesome. We are soooo awesome, we'd say to ourselves, as we hauled ass to Port Authority for the commuter bus to our parents' homes. That is, until I found a boyfriend. Then I'd haul ass back to his apartment in Manhattan.

But now, when I calculate the amount of money I've spent on nachos and drinks and public transportation, the amount of time talking about how we weren't happy and what he could say or do that would make us happy, I really don't know how I've made it this far without declaring bankruptcy or dying of boredom.

I really had that much to say? No wonder I'd lived at home.

Now I am not a fan of looking back, not ever, unless I have a receipt valid for 30 days. But when your best friend, your partner in crime in putting men last and everything else first, moves forward in that area that seems to matter most to everyone else other than you guys (but really you guys, too), you can't help but look at your own life. And the fact that you are happy. And probably shouldn't be.

Can I really be happy living alone? In an apartment I rent? In the middle of nowhere? Next to an ultimate fighter/exterminator who plays in a punk rock band? Certainly not. Or without the faintest desire of wanting to procreate? No way. My previous life was much healthier. I had a boyfriend who carried business cards. And wore Oxfords. We lived on the Upper East Side -- well, virtually lived. I was a gypsy for about three years until I decided to look for another vocation.

I digress.

So it didn't work out. But was I now so far deep in the state of not believing anything really works out that I kind of accepted it? Where did my high expectations for life come from?

"It's all our fault," my mother says. "We loved you too much."

Maybe my mother was onto something other than the self-perpetuating guilt typical of an Arab mother. Because maybe I was the one who was guilty; guilty of holding out for a relationship that doesn't really exist. The kind where a guy believes in you, supports you, and never expects you to carry your underwear around in your purse.

What was my problem?

When I looked at my life, though, I really didn't see a problem. I have great friends, when I see them. A great family... when they're not all fighting with each other, therefore making me forget I have them. A great job where sometimes the only person I speak to all day is my wine guy, and he has his TV on the whole time. And wait, I don't even have a regular hairstylist.

Oh God. Who am I? I couldn't possibly be happy. I couldn't commit to anyone. Not even a hairstylist.

As I watched my friend gush, I painted a smile on my face while the anxiety attack exploded in my head. Luckily, she had an unchallenging job that afforded her an expense account and absolutely no guilt. Good for that. Because my martini glass was looking half empty.

At the end of an early night, we walked through the city streets; she to a hotel in midtown to meet her boyfriend, and me to the train station to my apartment in the suburbs.

"I can't believe I actually enjoy this city now," she said.

"Yeah. It's funny how I don't," I said. " -- At least not now." We were moving in directions we'd never gone before.

"You know, I've never had what you have," I confessed.

"Do you want that right now?" she said blankly.

"No," I said instantly, like a reflex. I stopped cold.

And that's when I realized that maybe when we finally know who we are and what we want, the answer is so simple. And if we look for it in a martini glass, we'll never find it. Because it's right there in front of us.

And sometimes, instead of putting our hopes into something we know is hopeless, we need to put them in something we are sure about. Like good girlfriends. At least for awhile. As we stood in the street, I realized I didn't need anyone to tell me that although I wasn't moving in the direction I planned on, I wasn't getting to the place I needed to be.

"Are you still freaking out?" she asked.

"No," I said. "No I'm not."

"All right then. Let's keep walking."

 

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dancerctry
I love Gardening and Decorating
11:52 AM on 07/09/2012
Surprises happen in life. Maybe after returning drunk from somewhere she sleeps with the rocker neighbor, ends up pregnant because drunk doesn't always equal remembers birth control and it turns out the rocker neighbor is actually a cool down to earth guy with shared beliefs. We plan and God laughs................hard..................and often. But if you're truly not happy, then change what you're not happy about. Happiness means different things to different people. Some personalities aren't built for marriage and kids but their happy with the unusual experiences. Like I said, the rocker might actually be a nice guy. Probably not intelligent after all the ultimate fighting blows to the head but you never know.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pslcitizen
I intend to live forever. So far, so good.
12:34 PM on 07/08/2012
Maybe you both should be committed...lol.
11:04 PM on 07/06/2012
No matter how "Heaven-being-a-single" is, I bet, everyone in this earth wants to make a family. even when they're never try to have one, or involve themselves to think about how great having a family is.. but naturally, Family is what human has to be. what people are meant to live their life. to having a kids. keeping on the descent. and committed to others.
well.. this is what my friend told me, she's perfect. good looking girl. look even younger.smart. has a great job. make a lot of money each month and so on. but her age is 35. she's married just a year ago.
It's how she regret a things, about why didn't she married earlier, she wanted a kids growing up when she still can play with'em. she just think about it after married.
Don't blame yourself because of how "Heaven-being-a-single", or blame yourself how regret you are now in heartbeat, take a look at yourself, you gotta need it.

otherwise, you morning is just a "being-single-on-misery" morning.
03:12 AM on 07/06/2012
"And sometimes, instead of putting our hopes into something we know is hopeless, we need to put them in something we are sure about. Like good girlfriends. At least for awhile. "

Yes we can be happy with low expectations that keep us from having to do anything that makes us really uncomfortable or throws our sense of identity into question. That does not mean we should not take on these challenges. For some people the challenge is pursuing a challenging career, for others it's getting into a stable relationship. Whatever it is we should not let our complacency which is often experienced as happiness, dull the desire to pursue the things that really challenge us. Taking ourselves out our comfort zone is how we achieve great things. Building a family is a great thing.
10:13 AM on 07/06/2012
real happiness is not contingent on external circumstances... more like "it's not having what you want, it's wanting what you've got"
02:58 AM on 07/06/2012
if there is a single certainty in this life, it is that some jaded half wit, with a grudge against the world, will read a story on the internet and feel compelled to post "yawn." and they never realize that their intended put down of the material tells us so much more about themself. sadly, they have the life they so richly deserve.
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MikeDu
Both salubrious and lugubrious concurrently.
02:57 AM on 07/06/2012
It was Henry David Thoreau who said "The mass of men lead lives of quite desperation." Much of the struggle these days seems primarily to involve the 'expectations game'. Am I happy enough? am i content enough? You're as happy or unhappy as you are, as content or discontented as you are becaue you were born with the 'anxious' gene, to a greater or lesser degree.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jo Derr
12:05 AM on 07/06/2012
Yawn.
11:29 PM on 07/05/2012
Carrying panties in our purse! Greatest and most relatable line of all. Thank you.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Elise Von Holten
Dyslexic on-top-of -it all!
07:53 PM on 07/05/2012
Honestly. Chose this day--it's all there is--It all goes by very quickly--I had a life that looked so picture perfect, and was actually abusive and awful--when it fell apart (gay-30 yrs), leaving me handicapped, alone, I found another life-emotionally a bit better, then, when I figured out that the he in the new life was nuts (really) I knew I could be happy alone, because I had been by myself in it for so long...the daily physical pain is awful and the dis-figuration from my illness (hands mostly) is ugly, but I was so happy in general (lots of friends) that while I was off white water rafting, I met someone who overlooked all that and we are having a very good time--and for the 1st time ever--not in my beaten up, poor, incest-ed, abusive, childhood, not my gay ex and not the crazy one--I am loved, with a capital L. It's inside that counts and we can choose to be happy no matter what...what's inside gets reflected back to us outside. Really.
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MaxHeadroom
My Karma ran over my dogma.
06:46 PM on 07/05/2012
Hey... I'm all in for the whip cream treatment. That's food, isn't it?
06:27 PM on 07/05/2012
at times, I feel the same... thank you so much for sharing :)
03:44 PM on 07/05/2012
Great story. Being comfortable in our own skins is so important but unfortuantely most of us dont get there in our 20's or sometimes even our 30's.

Marielaina Perrone DDS
http://www.drperrone.com
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kittenesque
01:33 PM on 07/05/2012
This was uplifting in a way while despairing over the lives un-lived. Guess that makes it more human. We all go through bouts of jealousy that our life hasn't fallen into place like others. Maybe it is not jealousy at all, just expectations from ourselves. Nedda, I don't know about the Arab life you lived but having seen a lot of immigrant lives as much as living my own, yes, immigrant life it hard. Esp. for the first generation and the immigrants themselves. The only way "success" comes is if you drive yourself to the pinnacles of our field. But we all know that only brings money, never happiness, and always exhaustion. You just have to love with you do. Happiness becomes a choice, cliche as it is. Small things make bring contentment.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Nedda Alammar
12:25 PM on 07/07/2012
Kittenesque thanks for your comment and insight. Yes, you are right about the immigrant life--being the best at what you do is paramount. But I think the difference for Arab girls is that marriage is everything--I'd probably be married with a ten year old son right now if I grew up in Iraq, and career is everything---I'd probably be a chemist or engineer, just like my mother and father. I think the difference for Arab girls like myself born and raised in America is that we are sort of stuck in between having all the freedom to decide who we want to be with and when, and the pressure of being amazing in our chosen field. It's not a bad spot to be in though, because all it means is that settling is not an option, as it should never be for any woman...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kittenesque
08:38 PM on 07/08/2012
Can't agree more with that. Settling should never be an option.