Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This board is full of women whose greatest (and perhaps only) accomplishment was getting married. They literally can't understand women who didn't make The Ring their one and only goal.
Before I married, I had secured a successful career, published bylines in The Washington Post, presented at am international academic conference, earned a Master’s degree, developed close friendships, maintain close family relationships, learned three languages, and traveled the world. And yes, now I also have a husband and children.
Sorry to burst your jealous bubble.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know a number of forever single women who refused to settle. I envy them. -divorced
This.
The lie is that women hit a wall - did anyone see the Friends reunion? All extremely wealthy people in their fifties, and the women looked farrrr better than the men.
The cat lady myth is perpetuated to keep women accepting poor behavior from men, just so they won’t be single.
Look, if it's working for you, terrific. No one owes anyone else a date. If your romantic options are worse than being single, you should be single. (Although maybe also think about how you can improve your romantic options.) But for whatever reason - and we don't need to agree on why - young women have substantially more options than young men, and this reverses with age. Of course there is variation person-to-person. But if you're looking around as a 35-year-old woman, and you want kids, and you don't like your romantic options, they're probably not going to get better as you get older, so you should figure out your priorities and be honest with yourself about them.
On the plus side, older single women do a lot better socially and health-wise than older single men.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know a number of forever single women who refused to settle. I envy them. -divorced
This.
The lie is that women hit a wall - did anyone see the Friends reunion? All extremely wealthy people in their fifties, and the women looked farrrr better than the men.
The cat lady myth is perpetuated to keep women accepting poor behavior from men, just so they won’t be single.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This board is full of women whose greatest (and perhaps only) accomplishment was getting married. They literally can't understand women who didn't make The Ring their one and only goal.
YES. And, there is a lot of insecurity ~ think about it, single childless women at 37 probably look a lot better and are way more financially independent than the average DCUM SAHM posting on here all day while her husband is off at the office (with old, attractive, single hussies like the OP) ~ so a lot of it is insecurity.
A single woman who didn't have to "make the man her plan" is an outlier, a threat/challenge, and always a target.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know a number of forever single women who refused to settle. I envy them. -divorced
This.
The lie is that women hit a wall - did anyone see the Friends reunion? All extremely wealthy people in their fifties, and the women looked farrrr better than the men.
The cat lady myth is perpetuated to keep women accepting poor behavior from men, just so they won’t be single.
Anonymous wrote:I know a number of forever single women who refused to settle. I envy them. -divorced
Anonymous wrote:People on this board like to be snarky at times. You have to take the bad with the good.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This board is full of women whose greatest (and perhaps only) accomplishment was getting married. They literally can't understand women who didn't make The Ring their one and only goal.
Before I married, I had secured a successful career, published bylines in The Washington Post, presented at am international academic conference, earned a Master’s degree, developed close friendships, maintain close family relationships, learned three languages, and traveled the world. And yes, now I also have a husband and children.
Sorry to burst your jealous bubble.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, have you even read this site? Every hour people are making snarky comments about others…women who SAH, women who WOH, wives who gained weight, dads who work long hours, men who don’t earn high salaries, people who live in PG county, parents who send their kids to public school, people who enjoy vacations at Disney…the list goes on. Try having the self confidence to not care what random losers wasting time on the internet have to say about your choices.
It's not that I take it personally. . But why is it okay to be casually misogynistic? I guess you must partake in it since you want to downplay it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This board is full of women whose greatest (and perhaps only) accomplishment was getting married. They literally can't understand women who didn't make The Ring their one and only goal.
Before I married, I had secured a successful career, published bylines in The Washington Post, presented at am international academic conference, earned a Master’s degree, developed close friendships, maintain close family relationships, learned three languages, and traveled the world. And yes, now I also have a husband and children.
Sorry to burst your jealous bubble.
I am not who you are responding to...but me too...same as you (published widely, masters, career, master's etc.)...you got lucky in founding a mate though. I'm divorced. It was an awful marriage and biggest mistake I made. Ironically, I did not aim to get married to begin with. I should have stayed single. Not everyone gets lucky in the mate department--even if it looks right on paper or in public.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This board is full of women whose greatest (and perhaps only) accomplishment was getting married. They literally can't understand women who didn't make The Ring their one and only goal.
Before I married, I had secured a successful career, published bylines in The Washington Post, presented at am international academic conference, earned a Master’s degree, developed close friendships, maintain close family relationships, learned three languages, and traveled the world. And yes, now I also have a husband and children.
Sorry to burst your jealous bubble.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have friends IRL who insist they want to get married and have kids, ask to be set up, etc., and then make various choices that make it less and less likely every year that this will happen. This drives me nuts. These are women who would make great partners and mothers, in addition to the other things they are doing in their lives. I want them to find what they want. And I don't feel like I can say to them, "hey, what are you doing?" Heck, there are men I feel similarly about -- they have somewhat less of a clock, but it's still there. Online, where there's anonymity, is the place where you are more likely to have people tell you the truth about the behavior you're engaging in and how it's not consistent with your professed goals. That there are trade-offs, and trying to check off all of your boxes is likely to keep you single - which is fine if you're ok with that.
What are they doing that is getting in the way?