Yea, feel free to insert a laugh track there.
The thing is, I have practically nothing figured out. It took me months to figure out my life with
a dog in it, it’s not like I’m flexing giant change-is-easy muscles. Plus, it’s being in a new situation and time
in my life, just when I thought I had undergrad figured out, boom, here we are
in grad school and I’m 5 months away from job hunting for reals. That’s what scares me, learning to live a
healthy adult life, learning how to do all the stuff I want to and having the
guts to go for it without falling apart.
I have a lot to explore and do, I’m not sure what direction I want to go
in, where I want to apply, where I want to live, what is really important to
have where I live for my first job. For
the first time in college, I am not drooling over the idea of being in a
relationship.
Now, this is actually the topic of this blog post, because I’m
figuring out some stuff about that. I feel
so up in the air right now that I want to be selfish; I want to figure out what
I want without any influence or pressure from an outside obligation. Unless it’s from Sherman. But let’s be real, he’s requests are that we
go for lots of walks and that he gets 10 Greenies a day. I just want to survive
this year and wade through the possibilities of where Sherman and I will live
next year, and that’s it. In fact, when I
was asked last week if I was married, I didn’t even feel an inner qualm about
saying I was single.
Granted, I’ve done a lot of thinking about what I want in
that regard, and while I want a family in the future, I know I am not
guaranteed to ever get that. I do not
want my identity and self-esteem tied up in something that isn’t guaranteed to
happen, and I definitely don’t want to be so desperate for it that I don’t wait
for the right person. I want to be
completely alive in my own life, out and doing things and meeting people and
laughing and loving my friends and family.
That way I figure, if I’m totally alive and available, love will find
its way in when it’s the right time.
So that’s the base I’ve built up from, and while I’m disappointed
my program isn’t entirely made of single men (well who wouldn’t dream of that,
right? ;), I don’t feel like my quality of life is suffering from it. In fact, what actually bothers me is that the
people who are single in the group
seem very depressed about it. I was
under the impression that the early 20’s were fun and flirty and for exploring
the dating world. And then my Facebook
feed started filling up with white dresses and babies and I realized… whoa, we’re
at that age??
And a lot of my friends are feeling it. I regularly weather the transition from, “let’s
go out and have fun and flirt and kiss boys!” to a soul-searching gaze and “do
you think I will ever get married??”
Friday night, I had a friend tell me it was ok and fun to be single now….but
by the time we’re 30…
Now, my response to her was that her self-confidence in
singledom shouldn’t have an age expiration date. She skeptically agreed, and I spent a few
days frustrated that girls do that to themselves. Later, I realized that while I deal with my
insecurities over what I want for myself living-wise in the next couple years,
my friends are dealing with insecurities about ever finding love. It’s like this program is preying on our
weaknesses, we get tired and stressed and fall down into pits of doubt about
something in the future. We’re all just
growing up, and dealing with different aspects of it.
In fact, one of the books I’m reading has a scientific
explanation for what’s going on. Go
science! And it’s a hormone, of course,
one called oxytocin. Turns out that men
and women react different under stress.
According to Mackie Shilstone and his (her?) book, The Fat-Burning Bible,
“Men usually respond
with the classic fight-or-flight behavior, increased arousal, and greater risk
taking…it is now becoming clear that women more often manage stress by seeking
out bonding activities…Oxytocin buffers the fight-or-flight response in women
and instead encourages them to care for children and bond with other women…These
tending or befriending behaviors cause the body to release more ocytocin,
producing a further calming affect.”
Anyway, here we are, we get stressed and men want to be all wild and crazy and women want to cuddle stuff. Add to that the fact that the people in my program are all working in schools and intensely caring for the lives of over 100 students and it only makes sense that we glom onto the idea of love and relationships, or get dogs and cats, or feel that it might be socially acceptable to ask strangers if they want to be friends.
Hormones. In a way,
they’ve made me on the same page as my middle schoolers, or at least reminded
me to have more patience with other people’s struggles as we deal with our own
interesting and complicated age. So here’s
to you early 20’s, you confusing, contradicting, cesspool of fun!