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Singles Awareness Day
By Erin Ann McBride
and Juli Hiatt Caldwell
Today is Singles Awareness Day
… Because you’re not quite aware enough of just how
single you really are.
How to Make Cookies
Let’s say that you were given
an assignment to make cookies. You have the perfect recipe,
you’re wearing your apron, the beaters are in the mixer, and
the bowl is ready. All your ingredients are laid out nicely
on the counter, measuring cups and spoons are gleaming, clean,
maybe even sanitized, and ready to measure. You are beyond
excited because you know you have all the ingredients and
tools necessary to make the best cookies ever. You even shelled
out for the nice, expensive chocolate chips … you know, the
kind from a chocolatier in San Francisco, milk chocolate that
makes you start to salivate before you even open the bag.
There is absolutely no doubt
in your mind that anyone else’s cookies could ever top yours.
And it is essential to make this batch of cookies, because
you can not accomplish anything else in the kitchen until
you have finished. You have everything you need to make the
best cookies ever … except the oven. That’s a bit of a problem!
No matter how prepared you are, you can’t make those cookies
because you just can’t find that one necessary item to complete
the recipe. There are simply no ovens to be found.
As other people drop by to ask
how your cookies are coming, the intoxicating smell of their
own perfectly completed batches wafts over you. They offer
advice on how to get an oven of your own, or tell you why
you need an oven. The problem is that you already know all
these things. You ordered your oven awhile ago and it just
hasn’t been delivered, or maybe you already cooked a batch
and it broke down. So, for now, the chef must wait. Other
people telling you that you must make the cookies won’t help
you finish your cookies. Other people telling you how to
make cookies won’t bring you the oven. You just have to wait
for the Master Chef to schedule your oven delivery and hope
it comes soon, in the meantime doing all you can to be ready
so when it comes, you can get cooking.
Keep Following Us Here …
We used this analogy because,
quite frankly, we’re both addicted to chocolate chip cookies.
Also, we can equate this to marriage and support it using
some of the emails sent in by you, our amazing readers. No
married person offering advice, even really great advice,
will ultimately get a single person married. It doesn’t matter
if you’re 20, 50, or 80 when your time is right. The Lord
has an individualized plan for each of us, and getting married
at 20 may be right for Jane but completely wrong for Jen.
The problem lies in the fact
that, whether we mean to do so or not, those who have not
yet married or are divorced feel quite alienated at times
because this church is very family oriented. One of our apostles,
Russell M. Nelson, even said, “The Church exists to exalt
the family.” So where do we fit in an organization that exists
entirely for the family? Do we truly belong there if we’re
single? Of course we do! If it seems that singles are a
little bitter about being single — well, it’s not intentional.
In the end, we want to have a family just like everyone else
but must wait for the right person at the right time. Seeing
your happy family just makes us more keenly aware of what
is missing in our lives.
We also received many letters
offering advice or anecdotes on how the married folk found
the right one for you. As always, we love to hear these stories
and feature them regularly — the more entertaining, the better!
However, we must point out once more that hearing how Juli
snagged her man won’t help Erin Ann find one.
Rachel wrote:
I was a young
bride, and though I don't recommend it to all, I know that
it was in the Lord's plan for me. I had all kinds of plans
for my future, things that I had always wanted to do. But
the Lord brought a young man into my life that was the right
one for me. It was not my timing; it was not in my ‘perfect
plans’ for a degree, travel, and a mission. But marriage is
a sacred, beautiful thing that should not be avoided for worldly
things. If the Lord says it's time, it's time!
I now have a beautiful family of many children and my joy
is great. I have a husband who is my partner, best friend
and ardent lover. I have never done a greater thing than when
I said yes to him thirteen years ago. I listened to the Spirit,
and the Lord has blessed me because of it. I learned at a
young age that putting others first and becoming an equal
partner with my husband is an amazing blessing in my life.
No degree or other worthwhile experience can compare to the
education I have received as a young wife and mother.
An anonymous reader in Utah wrote:
Just because
one is young does not mean one cannot make a lifetime commitment.
Just because divorces are more common these days does not
mean that we should criticize our young people for marrying
young. I have never heard such attitudes over the pulpit.
(But I have heard encouragement for those who aren't married
— particularly the young men — to do something about that!)
Young men who come home from missions are often in that mode
of now looking for a spouse. It would make sense,
then, that their prospective brides would be young. It's really
quite simple. Marriage is the goal at that point, so we shouldn't
be surprised that they get married young. And we shouldn't
be critical of it either. It's the way things are supposed
to be.
I don't want
to sound mean, but it was interesting to me that the most
(if not all) the negative comments about young marriages and
receptions were from single people! Why are they
criticizing those who are married -- I mean, getting married
is a good thing, right? Such cynical attitudes don't
help someone who is single anyway!
These last two letters illustrate
perfectly what mid-singles today are up against. Yes, the
comments we featured in our last column, from an independent
online forum, probably sounded like ‘sour grapes’ to some
people reading them. Mid-singles and single adults very possibly
have taken a defensive attitude toward marriage, since innocent
questions asked about dating and love lives from well-meaning
friends just make it more apparent that they don’t have what
they know they should. Well, why aren’t you married? You’re
so great. You start to wonder if you really are that great,
since everyone seems to be married except you.
In our Latter-Day culture, it’s
expected that we will marry young and have many children.
One wrathful reader went so far as to suggest that getting
married later is all part of an evil plan to destroy the family.
We have no comment on that — we’d have to see supporting data
first. If you had the opportunity to marry young, then if
it’s right for you, you should certainly take it. The great
thing about our church is that we know the Lord knows and
loves us as individuals, and He has a plan for each and every
one of us. If this plan includes having to wait for the right
one to come along, all you can do in the mean time is stay
faithful. It’s so hard to remember that even when the ingredients
are all laid out and ready to use, we still have to accomplish
what our loving Father expects of us on His timeframe. Not
mine, not Mom’s …His.
Quick! Head for the Fallout
Shelter!
Who among us knew that running
comments on marriage would bring such diverse feedback from
our beloved readers? When we say diverse, we’ll just come
out and tell you that you either loved what our featured mid-singles
had to say about marrying young, or you sent us such scathing
rebukes that we’re still dousing the hard drive with water
to keep the smoldering to a bare minimum. Erin Ann’s mother
herself sent the most thought-provoking response, declaring
that she would have much better luck finding a husband by
wearing a dead skunk around her neck than by writing a column
about being single. (Personal note to Sister McBride: since
nothing else seems to be working, we’ll try the skunk next.)
Some thought perhaps that that
mid-singles (meaning singles over 30) judged those who married
young. Here is just a bit of what our married readers, most
of whom married young, had to say.
Jaime from Canada said:
I myself am
married and have been for some time (two days ago was our
8th anniversary). [Congrats, Jaime!] I know that 8
years is a drop in comparison to eternity, but I feel that
I must say something in regards to the marriage way too young
article. I [married at] 20. I moved out when I
was 17, and went to Ricks and saw what little tricks women
play. I was repulsed but stayed to graduate. On
my 19th birthday my parents called to ask me what was wrong
with me as I was not married yet. When I turned 20,
I met my husband. We started dating and we were married
6 months later. Two years later we had our first child.
We now have 3 and feel that we are well on our way.
Now I give you
the background because while I feel that the ‘present grab’
that exists in the Mormon culture (at receptions) is
repulsive ... I also believe that we have been given something
that has not been mentioned in this article — the Holy Ghost.
My husband and I went to the temple several times to find
out if our union was acceptable. Why wait if you know
that it is right? That is my question. Just because
we were relatively young (20 and 22), why wait if you know
it is right? I was at a place where I had been living
on my own for 3 years, had a degree and was working full-time
in that degree. Why wait if you know it is right? I
am thankful that I have such a wonderful husband and I know
that it was right.
Some people really do know, and
get married even when, according to the world’s standards,
it just doesn’t make sense. Who else but us would get married
at 20 or younger to someone you’ve known a few months? Jaime
brings up an excellent point that since we have the gift of
the Holy Ghost, we are more likely to make the right decision
based on that guidance.
L.R. ranted a bit about wedding
guests expecting to be entertained:
Do people realize
that a wedding reception is not to entertain guests?
It is a time for friends and family to come and congratulate
the newly married couple and, yes, bring them presents.
The presents help the young couple set up a home in a way
they could not if it weren’t for loving friends and family
who wish to help them. Mormon weddings tend to be less
extravagant because we realize it is something we can’t go
into extreme debt for. People invited to wedding receptions
need to stop thinking of what they are going to get out of
it and more about what they can contribute to it.
What type of reception each couple
has is a personal choice — or just as often, the mother’s
personal choice. We have been to some amazing sit-down dinner
receptions that cost a great deal, and were very classy.
They truly made each guest feel part of a wonderful celebration
of the couple’s love and new eternal union. We have also
been to receptions in the cultural hall that made us feel
the same.
We have discussed this before
in our columns on manners, but we’ll say it again because
it bears repeating: guests at the reception fully expect
to contribute something to help the new couple start their
home together — this is a given. We as guests feel rather
offended (not just these two columnists, but droves of readers
who have emailed us on this topic) when we pull out the invitation
and three registry cards fall out. It is just plain tacky
(harsh words, sad but true) to tell people where you are registered
in the wedding invitation. Please do not include cards, and
never, ever include it on your printed invitation. This is
what makes people feel like the reception has become a present
grab. Registry information is for the bridal shower! If
a wedding guest would like to know where the couple is registered,
a quick phone call to the bride, groom, or any family member
of either will answer the question. This way the guest signals
his or her intention to attend, and the couple can be assured
of receiving something they both need and want.
Eric told us about the most beautiful reception he ever attended. He said:
I think they
really did it right because the emphasis was on the sealing
in the temple, and the reception afterward was very much secondary.
Being present at the sealing was indeed a very special experience
in my life. The reception afterward consisted of the people
who were present at the sealing, only about 25 or 30 guests.
The reception consisted of a very modest lunch and everyone
in the room shared some special memory of the couple. It hadn't
ever occurred to me that a wedding reception could be a spiritual
experience. But it seemed that since the primary focus was
on the sealing in the temple, the reception [was] much more
meaningful.
That is what
it all boils down to: the start of another eternal union.
We celebrate and feel joy for every last one of us who creates
a new eternal family unit by marrying in the temple. Everything
else that happens afterward is just icing on the cake that
the happy couple smashes into each other’s faces.
The Part Where You Offer Advice
Lynnece wrote in with a plea
for a little advice:
Hey girls, I
love your column!! It always makes me laugh and realize that
there are more people stuck in the same boat as me and we
are just having fun bailing.
I have a dilemma,
though. I've known this guy I am currently dating for a little
over two years. We tried dating in the beginning, and then
it turned into just really good friends. We've both lived
apart from each other at different times, and over the years
we always seem to come back to each other. He has wanted something
more the whole time, but I have always pushed him away, until
recently. He was dating someone, and it hit me how I
would feel if he really did disappear from my life and I never
even gave him a chance. (Sounds familiar I know — just like
that movie My Best Friend's Wedding)
So, anyway,
we have been dating for about two months now and I felt like
my heart was really into it this time, but recently I've had
second thoughts. Just as you were saying in your column, he
is such a great guy, in fact the kind of guy I want to marry
— just not him. Well that is kind of how I feel. I went out
with a mutual friend of ours to the movies the other night,
(a guy) and after having such a fun night, I realized
that maybe I am not as ready as I thought to give myself to
him. Am I just being stupid or should I have reason to doubt?
I don't want to just settle because he likes me so much and
he is a great guy. I don't want him to ever think that I
settled, but that is how I feel sometimes. A little help?
What do you think? Anyone have
a little advice for Lynnece? You know where to send
your advice or comments: erinandjuli@meridianmagazine.com.
We can’t wait to hear from you!
Thanks and have a great week!
Click
here to sign up for Meridian's FREE email updates.
©
Meridian Magazine.
All Rights Reserved.
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| About
the Authors: |
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Authors Juli Hiatt Caldwell and Erin Ann
McBride share a combined total of 20 years of dating and 14 years
in singles wards. Between them they count more than 15 ex-boyfriends,
8 singles wards, and at least 5 email addresses. Friends for much
of the past decade, they share many of their personal experiences
as the character “Annie,” their combined alter ego. As they like
to remind each other, “All stories depicted herein are mostly true
and will resemble characters living and deceased. Some names and
facts have been changed to protect the innocent, make the reader
laugh, and in some cases preserve the dignity of the authors. Although
the authors are pretty sure they surrendered their dignity long
ago.”
Juli
Hiatt Caldwell was born in Anaheim, California, the fourth of seven
kids in a very rowdy, loud family. She met her husband on a quick
trip to Utah, and they were married six months later in the Bountiful Temple. They have been married six years. They are the proud
parents of the two most adorable little girls on the planet, Cali, 5, and Andi, 2. Her girls
are the proud mommies of a four fantail goldfish and a cat named
Leo who is determined to eat them all. Juli and her family live
on Florida’s beautiful Space Coast, where she enjoys yoga classes
and working out at the gym. She is currently at work in her ward
as choir director.
Erin
Ann McBride is a native of the Washington, DC area. She is an
events and party manager, currently putting her talents to work
as a gun show planner. When she is not busy planning dates, parties,
and weddings for her friends, she can be found volunteering at the
local fire department, where she is a certified fire fighter and
EMT-B. Erin Ann loves to travel and visit third world countries.
She graduated from George Mason University and holds a B.A. in Political
Communication and Broadcast Journalism. She also enjoys romantic
dinners, moonlit walks on the beach, a good .357 magnum, chick flicks,
roller coasters, and professional sporting events.
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