Monday 19 March 2007

I Think, Therefore I am

I don't think I think too much. Rather, I like to think things through. Which is why I'm here. I want to make sense of the things that I see, touch and hear. I want to make sense of this journey; Christianity and being single. And I hope that this blog will enable me to do that. Much has been written about the cathartic effects of writing. Well, I hope this blog will help me do just that - be catharticised.

The tears came again yesterday. After church, I headed towards the underground. By the time I got to my platform - journey total between my church and underground; 5 mins - I had tears in my eyes. Recently, this walk seems representative of my faith and single life. I know I'm on a journey. I know where I'm going but I don't know where I'm walking to.

I hate leaving church after the service in the midst of all the families and couples. I always feel like they're watching me leave and thinking, here she goes again, all by herself. So I sit in the pews until I'm sure the crowd outside has thinned before making my way towards the underground.

Yesterday, as I stood on the platform, waiting for the tube, an overwhelming sense of loneliness just hit me. Standing there, on that platform, was the sense of being utterly alone. I stood still for a moment or two, berated myself for being very foolish before straightening up and looking determinedly ahead. What happened to your pride, girl? I think it had something to do with the young couple I saw in church. The wife was pregnant. Seems like only yesterday they were married. Took me back to a scenario I found myself a few months ago. Everywhere I looked, friends were making planning plans to have child Number Two and there I was, nowhere close to even meeting someone. And just like I did on the platform, I straightened up and looked determinedly ahead to my future.

Three months ago, a friend sent me an email. Perhaps you should recommend x book to your single friends, he wrote. I sent him a reply: firstly, I don't read dating or courting or preparing for marriage books for the same reasons I don't go to 'singles' conferences; they are headed by a married person with no conceivable idea of what it means to be Christian and single in the 21st century. I don't want anyone telling me I'm whole and single because I know that I am whole and single. I don't anyone telling me that I should be making full use of my time as a single person because all that will go when I'm married which never fails to piss me off as assumptions about my time are wont to do. And thirdly, I don't like people telling me that I'm single because I want to be. After all, if I wasn't so choosy, so full of myself, so blah, blah, then I would be married or at the very least, be with someone.

Needless to say, he didn't respond. He probably thought I was being sensitive about the whole 'singles' thing, which is wrong. Because I'm not. I just want people to understand the complexities of today's dating world which when coupled with the teachings of charismatic Christianity has left millions of people - male and female - scratching their heads and wondering how in heaven's name matters have come to this; hurting, single people in the pews.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'm a christian and single too, and I think you were being just a bit too defensive in your email. There is no need to have that attitude of "You don't know how I feel so get lost!". For goodness sake, there is more to you than labelling yourself as "Christian and Single". Granted some pentecostal churches do make single people feel like there is something wrong with them. But I don't think you need to stop reading good relationship books or attending wholesome singles seminars. You won't grow as a person if you are not willing to continue learning from others, and secondly, you don't know where any chance meeting will lead you to. A friend of mine recently proposed to his girlfirend and guess where they met? At a picnic organised by a singles fellowship in London!
Each of us is on a journey through life and getting married is only a small part of that journey. Whatever happens to our relationship status, we still have our lives to live as God's people on earth. Find some fulfillment in that: your own destiny is not the same as mine, neither is it the same as your married friends. Find some happiness in knowing that you are exactly where God wants you to be at this particular point in time. The fact that you are single is a very small part compared to the totality of your existence on God's planet.

Jerusalem said...

Tola, you're right. Being single is really a small part of who I am but I also have a valid desire to meet someone of my own. That's what this blog is about; that small part.

As for singles seminars, conferences, books etc. I have never read a singles book, nor attended singles seminars, conferences, weekends or whatever constitutes the latest marketing in singles merchandise.