The Single Games: May the odds be forever in your favor

The Single Games: May the odds be forever in your favor

Right, so I have to pretense this with the following:

I am not currently a participant in the single games.

I think my post on couple’s cohabitation made it clear that I am in a relationship that teeters in favor of being very functional and successful 90% of the time (save a few chewing habits).

But this is all new to me. Two years ago I thought the ideal long-term relationship would involve separately owning two different houses on the same block, and participating in adult sleepovers three times a week. In short, I was horribly commitment phobic and REALLY liked my space.

Now I live in a condo the size of most people’s living rooms and only have internal freak outs about it once every 3 months or so. That folks, is what we call PROGRESS. This boy of mine I tell ya; he really Mr. Miyagi’d me.

This is not to say that I was previously unlucky in love. Prior to my current live-in life partner, I participated in some all around fairly fantastic past relationships. And although not right for either party in the long run, I shared these relationships with some really fantastic dudes. I don’t think breaking up and moving on necessarily requires slamming the exes; failing to obtain that elusive happily ever after doesn’t negate the high caliber of these individuals or the journey we took with one another. I only am who I am in a relationship because of everything I learned from them, and for that I will always be thankful.

Yet between those five great humans I would ever think to title with the word “boyfriend,” I too spent many a year treading the field of landmines that is being a single in Toronto.

And, to condense these years into one summary sentence: I LOVED IT.

Cue all my single friends shaking their fists at yelling obscenities at me.

I had a lot of fun when I was single. And I’m not talking the, “Stumble out of a stranger’s bed” kind of fun. I hold no judgment against those who enjoy a little roll in the proverbial hay with someone whose name they don’t know, but being a born and raised Torontonian my world in this city is so obscenely small that one-night stands were never in the cards for me. The way my world works, said stranger would have turned out to be my ex-boyfriend’s cousin’s best friend, they all would have shared a detailed account of my naked bod over a toast at a Jewish wedding, and I would have had to move to Uzbekistan to escape it all.

No, I reveled in singlehood not for the naked dance parties, but because I believed inherently in the importance of becoming a fully developed person with a keen sense of self before I attempted to coexist with another human.

Selfishness is so often given a bad reputation. Yet for most of us, our 20s is the last time in our lives we will get to choose exactly what we want to do and when without having to take the considerations of another person into account; sometimes it’s ok to be a little selfish.

When you’re single any experiences are uniquely yours. All the mistakes are yours to make, the serendipitous discoveries are yours to enjoy and the insights are only yours to savor. I think it’s pivotal to get fully behind the “I” before you attempt to develop the “We.”

Plus, as a girl who just recently got hugely excited to quit her job with no plans of what to do afterward, it’s clear I like not knowing where each day is going to take me. There’s something thrilling about that little corner of your brain that gets to wake up every day thinking, “Who knows, maybe today lighting will strike.”

But then again, this keen sense of optimism comes from someone who hasn’t actually had to navigate the single world in two years. It also comes from someone whose bulk of singlehood was in their early to mid-twenties; a time when you’re either too drunk or too distracted to realize someone is attempting to play games, or to care if you do notice. These are the years that you’re so new and full of unjaded enthusiasm, still operating under the misguided belief that world is full of good men and women and that respect and chivalry is alive and well.

Navigating the single world in your 20s is a breeze. Very few people are seriously contemplating their future at that point, we are all the best looking and most carefree version ourselves that we’ll ever be, and why hunt for a soulmate when there is an overflow of good-for-right-now’s?

Dating within the large and diverse dating pool of your 20s is akin to a game of Candyland where everyone is skipping merrily along Rainbow Trail on the way to Gumdrop Pass; it’s an age and a time in life where relationships are easily won and lost, careers are giant question marks and everyone you meet offers new experiences and lessons learned.

Then people hit 30 and Shit.Gets.Real.

The common consensus from my adult friends navigating those same singlehood landmines in their 30s is a resounding, ”You have GOT to be freakin’ kidding me!”

The game of Candyland has been swapped for Battleship, with everyone exhausted from learning and relearning the same tired lessons. Those first dates and first texts that were once enjoyed and laughed at are now forensically combed through for any trace of douchebag or evidence of a girlfriend/boyfriend/family/recent divorce.

My idea of singlehood being “fun” is now met with eye rolls or death threats, and the common consensus – both male and female – is that my friends would rather slowly impale themselves on a tree branch than subject themselves to another first date.

Much like a slow death by unstripped wood, other metaphors for adult dating I’ve heard in recent months include:

  1. “Trying to date in Toronto is like searching for a steak at an all-you-can-eat salad buffet.”
  2. “You know that feeling you get when you sit too close to a bonfire and smoke and ash gets in your eye and for a second you are in such excruciating pain that you forget anything good in the world exists and all of you can think is that this pain will never ever subside?… Ya, dating is a lot like that.”
  3. “First dates are comparable to 3 hours of repeatedly stubbing your toe. Dating is the raised floor board in the big toe that is my life.”
  4. “Dating is lot like that movie Jurassic Park. You think you’re going to an amusement park but instead you get eaten alive by a bloodthirsty prehistoric animal with a small… arms.”
  5. “I feel like I am stuck inside an endless loop of job interviews for a job I don’t actually want, but at least it looks good on a resume, you know?”
  6. “Is this a SICK JOKE?!”

I feel like my friends are continuously drowning in a pool of low expectations. One of my best girlfriends used to have such incredibly high standards for men. There was a time she said she would only marry a doctor that looked like 2001’s Paul Walker and who would gladly agree to sell his car to buy her a completely unaffordable rock of an engagement ring.

Last week this same friend went on a first date, and when I text messaged her to ask how it was going, she said:

“Dude, he helped me put on my jacket. I think I’m in love.”

Screw a medical degree and a personality. As long as he doesn’t have a secret other family and seems to fulfill the basic human function of replying to a text message within 3 days you best LOCK THAT DOWN.

The bar has been set so low for the male population I think to be declared husband worthy you just have to follow these steps:

  1. Walk in a straight line;
  2. Have the ability to walk and talk at the same time;
  3. Do not introduce yourself to a girl by sending her a picture of your penis over any form of social media;
  4. Remember her name;
  5. Open a door. Literally any door. Just once. Extra points if you hold it while she walks through it. Or, I don’t know, crack a fucking window and she’ll probably be impressed.

Similarly, for girls,

  1. Don’t be batshit crazy;
  2. Repeat step 1 for at least 3 months.

Listen, I am not negating the struggle of being single, or valuing the difficult experience of one gender over the other. Just because I happen to be in a relationship now doesn’t mean I don’t empathize with how sadistic the world can seem and how difficult it can be to find someone you genuinely connect with. Male or female or somewhere in between, times are tough out there.

But I also happen to think all of my friends and most of my non-crazy acquaintances are huge bloody rockstars who should never again settle for one of the good-for-right-now’s. The road of relationships is a long one, and those people who seem ahead of the love curve now may be miles behind in two years. Life has a way of blindsiding you at the precise moments that you think you have it all figured out.

By that I mean, to all those single people surrounded by smug friends with fiancées, husbands, wives and live-in-partners: Statistically speaking, for every two weddings you go to this year that someone patronizingly says, “Why are you still single?” one will end in a fiery pit of hate and despair.

There…feel better?

E.

“I hate the way you fill ice cube trays,” and other adorable things you find yourself saying when you live with a significant other

It was back in July 2014 when my boyfriend and I decided to embark on the ultimate young people’s social experiment. After a mere year of dating, we made the leap to move in together.

I wish I could say this decision was made purely from a place of deep romance and poignancy; that we were so enraptured by one another we immediately dumped our roommates out of a desperate, passionate need to share a bathroom.

But alas, we were the dumpees.

My beautiful and spunky former roommate decided she would prefer to live every day accompanied by above-zero winters and an ocean view and moved to Vancouver to live with her boyfriend.

She now wakes up to cartoon birds and mice that enchant her with high-pitched songs as they dress her in only a jean jacket because apparently that’s all you need to survive a west-coast winter.

Traitor.

Similarly, the boyfriend’s roommates decided they both wanted to become fully functioning adult males and live in their own places with bizarre home décor contraptions like doors…and curtains.

I tell you all of this because it is important to note that when it comes to relationships, I am more of a wade veryyyyy slowly into the water, turn and bolt out, skulk along the shoreline and then finally begrudgingly dip a toe in, than I am a dive-right-in sort of gal.

Another less delicate way to put this is that I only make important decisions on relationship commitment and progress when forced into a corner, and then kept in that corner for an extended period of time with a gun to my head.

In this case, the gun came in the form of…gulp… LIVING WITH A BOY.

To prepare myself for this dramatic change in my life I made a lot of both mental and physical lists. Things like, “Worst case scenarios” and “Ways that I am more mentally prepared for the zombie apocalypse than for living with my boyfriend” and finally, “The pros and cons of keeping a completely full ready-to-go storage locker in case I have to quietly slip away into the night.”

It has always been the case with me that I operate better in situations when I prepare myself for the worst possible outcome, and then anything that differs from that outcome is deemed a pleasant surprise.

SPOILER ALERT: It’s all been one GIANT pleasant surprise. I mean, pleasant in that way that’s it’s almost been TOO easy a transition, and that most days I have more difficulty choosing between light or regular cream cheese than I have living with him.

That being said, let’s be honest, no one really wants to hear about some perfect couple made of rainbows and honey that falls asleep every night holding hands on a bed of clouds. Life isn’t like that; I would never want it to be.

The most beautiful part of life lies in its imperfections, and in caring about someone enough to continually enter the battlefield together.

And oh how we’ve battled.

Living with someone is the equivalent of placing all your worst habits, insecurities and characteristics on a platter and then offering them to another human to accept. And not only do we expect them to be accepted, we are somehow insane enough to believe that this other human should them endearing. Like we should all just be walking around uttering a continual stream of, “Oh babe, I think it’s cute you’re the spawn of Satan first thing in the morning, and that pizza box that’s been sitting by our front door for the last 3 days is friggin adorable. Awww, is that a recently clipped toenail on the floor? How charming!”

All the pretense of dating, the ability to be the best version of yourself when you’re out with them, all of that disappears. There is no acting; that other person is going to see you for all the sides of your personality, and from unfortunate angles you’ve probably never even seen yourself.

On that note, word of advice for both sexes: if you want to keep the fire alive, never put on socks naked if the other person happens to be sitting directly behind you.

So naturally, this dropping of the curtain can cause some pretty ridiculous friction. I mean think of all the absurd things you couldn’t possibly imagine having a disagreement on (e.g. cracker brands, toilet paper costs, what temperature the room is set at).

Yep, you’ll argue about all of them.

Take for example the below nonsensical differences of opinion we’ve engaged in:

  1. Why I am the only human who’s ever deemed the microwave an appropriate place to bake a potato. (I’ll tell you why – 3 minutes BEGINNING TO END people. It takes 20 minutes just to heat up an oven. I would much rather spend the extra 17 minutes trying to find just one pair of matching socks in my closet. It’s called PRODUCTIVITY)
  1. His remarkable ability to make the bed in the exact wrong way on a daily basis. You’d think with 2 throw pillows and 1 quilt there would be a maximum of 5 ways to screw it up but no, I’ve been the witness approximately 62.
  1. My refusal to walk 10 feet to the recycling chute of our building. I prefer to create an elaborate Jenga-esq pile of boxes and tin cans under our sink. The taller it gets, the easier I am able to detach myself emotionally from its existence.
  1. His use of our communal bath towels to shower with after hockey. Have you ever smelled post-hockey hands? I feel like it’s a serious issue that probably comes up often in marriage counseling sessions, and the smell rubs off on EVERYTHING. I’d rather host a condo bonfire than have to get close enough to wash them.
  1. My general inhuman behavior before I’ve had coffee in the morning. This is less an argument in itself as it is the trigger of almost all of the above arguments.
  1. A mutual dissatisfaction with each others’ inability to refill the water jug in the fridge. This isn’t even some fancy Britta-type situation where you have time to conceive and birth a child while the water trickles through a filter. No, we have a dollar store jug that we fill with tap water to keep it cold. Yet neither of us has developed the aptitude to complete the two-sstep process of turning slightly to the left and turning the tap on to keep it constantly refilled.

Now who wants to come over to our party pad and enjoy a baked potato and some room temperature H2O?!

And yet, here is what I can tell you in short: Sharing an 800 sq ft condo with a significant other has been one of the best experiences of my life. And it’s been so fantastic not in spite of the above arguments, but because of them.

Because if you can’t stand the way someone makes the bed, the way they leave every door in the house ajar, and the way they chew food like they are sound checking for Madison Square Gardens; if you hate all that and you still want to stick around to see what new annoying habit they develop next…well, that’s love baby.

And I haven’t even come close to using that storage locker.

 

E.