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As someone who has spent the past five years writing about dating and encouraging people to bring romance and dignity back to relationships, I have frequently been met with consistent pushback that sounds something like this:
There are no good people left in the world.
Nobody wants to put in any effort anymore.
I’ve accepted that I’m just going to be single forever.
Negative, negative, negative.
For many people, particularly during holidays and special occasions, being single causes some self-reflection (often sparked by inquisitive relatives). Outdated mindsets that tell us being single means we are somehow unfit or unqualified to have a relationship.
In the era of opportunity, though, many of us are walking our own paths in search of ourselves, our passions, and our goals in life. Not always on this list is: a relationship.
I fully believe that being in a happy and healthy relationship brings much fulfillment to our lives in ways that being single simply does not. There is physical intimacy, emotional support, encouragement, and even being challenged—in a context that is just not matched by a friend or family member.
That being said, though, this will feel like a burden if we are not yet comfortable and happy with ourselves as a single individual. Any challenge brought about by our partner will feel like a personal attack. Anytime they become distant due to something they are working through themselves, will feel like rejection. Any small criticism will be magnified ten-fold.
If, we are not yet happy with ourselves.
There’s a reason this is a recurring theme in my writing and why I even wrote a book on the topic. There is a unique power in singledom.
The power of creating the life that you want to live without asking for approval or permission. The power of learning to understand yourself in ways unclouded by the judgment of others. And perhaps, the most important of all: The power to choose.
The power to choose the person you commit yourself to will be fully developed when you’ve defined the type of life that you want to live. The identity that you create for yourself. The path that you want to follow.
Without establishing these inner truths and making your own free choices, it is very easy to fall into a pattern of pleasing others that takes you away from your passions and ambitions. It is one thing to be flexible and compromise; it is an entirely different thing to sacrifice your self-worth and dignity for the sake of being in a relationship.
So, be not ashamed of being single. Be not embarrassed to sit alone at the holiday dinner table. Be not afraid to do things alone. To explore, to discover, to create the life you want to live.
Because only when you truly understand who you are, do you truly understand who you want, desire, and deserve to be with.
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This post was originally published on jamesmsama.com, and is republished here with the author’s permission.
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