I couldn’t even imagine what it would be like to be single at my age (40–shhhh). I am so happy to be married (and happily married at that) with two kids who are amazing. I sometimes forget how lucky I am.
My best friend is about a year older than me and isn’t married and doesn’t have kids. Both things she wants. She is beautiful, funny, loyal and smart. She is a catch–she spent 8 prime years in a relationship that wasn’t a good fit and didn’t end the way it was supposed to. That relationship ended when she was in her early thirties. She is career-driven. She is a doctor and was the head of her department at USC for years–the hours were long and LA is a hard place to meet people.
My best friend met a new guy and needed a wing man last night. I was telling my husband that I was going to be her wing-man. He asked me “What does a wing-man do?”
“I haven’t been out in the market since I was 25–how the hell do I know?”
“Well then why are you going?”
“There will be wine drinking and talking.” Why else would I go out on a night that where I traveled home from Kansas City for a meeting then to a family dinner? Wine and talking with my best friend.
So, turns out we were going to this “private” club, where it is byob. So, I bring a nice ($65) bottle of wine and this club provides solo cups. So, my best friend and I sit and drink our $65 bottle of wine out of solo cups and sit in a room where we are close to, if not, the youngest people in the room, so she could talk to a guy. A guy who worked the door, then left early because his son needed him to.
It’s funny when I say it out loud. I am so glad that I am not single and I don’t have to worry about signals and how my ass looks in my jeans and what it means when someone does or doesn’t kiss me and how they do it, etc.
It is really tough to be dealing with this stuff as a grown-up! And from what I recall (single in my early to mid 30s, with a child), LA is one of the toughest places around to be single. Primarily because it is apparently the homeland of the 40-year-old teenager, of the male variety. If I had a dollar for every DB bag who found out I had a good job and eagerly told me he wanted to be a professional layabout….
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yup, it pretty much sucks. welcome to my world.
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Joy,
I sympathize with you. My best friend (who I have been best friends with for 27 years) struggles. She wants a husband and kids and had thought she found that person–gave him 8 years and then he just dumped her– and he is now married with kids. It shouldn’t be so hard to meet people.
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me too and it is so hard. you are very blessed. 🙂
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