| Top 10 Reasons Why We Are Unmarried
By Anonymous
A
single 29-year-old New York based woman lawyer explains
the single season.
Dear
Parents, We know that our unmarried status generates
its own trauma even beyond our respective communities.
Accordingly, we feel compelled to tell you right here
what we long to tell you at uncomfortable dinner table
conversations, or on family trips where we are held
hostage in the car to your lectures and emotional blackmail.
Ready for our 'real' reasons for not tying the knotty
knot?
10. We fear we might be gay or we are gay. The problem
is that we can't tell you. You know why? Because there's
no word for "gay" in our language. And if we simply
say "gay" in English, we fear you'll think we're "happy"
and press us further about why we're not married yet.
9. We are disgusted at the way the boy's family treats
the girl's family even in the 21st century. The son's
parents often act rude, obnoxious, or play dirty little
games (even if they have unmarried daughters) during
the "getting to know you phase." They act uninterested
even though they are interested; they send third parties
to give us mixed messages; they keep bragging about
how tall their son is, and how fair he is. The shorter
and darker we are, the more they must brag about their
son's height and skin color. Shouldn't it be the other
way around? A man doesn't give up much in a marriage.
He just has to exist, and the girl's parents adore him,
and feel grateful that he married their daughter. No
matter that it's the daughter that works herself to
the bone keeping up family obligations, cooking five
meals a day to visiting relatives, putting up with their
snide, irrational behavior, raising the children, or
making her career the source of "flexibility" rather
than his. Shouldn't the girl's parents be the ones playing
power games with the guy's family, since she's the one
providing not only the "goods" but also the "services?"
We feel if it's this bad before "I do" what the hell
will become of us after "I did?" Just ask our mothers
and grandmothers for the answer.
8. The "attitude of gratitude" is not reciprocal. Let's
face it: it doesn't take much for a young man to qualify
as an "eligible" bachelor. And we use "eligible" in
the best sense of the word. He just needs to have a
job and have no felony convictions. And the bachelorette?
She must pass "qualifying" exams to even get to the
point of being considered. And the standards for passing
are ever so arbitrary. She must have no sexual history
(remember, rumors = truth), she must have the perfect
family; if someone in her family was scandalous five
generations ago, she's not in the running anymore.
She must be a certain height, be fair even if the man
is bald and dark as cow dung. Until recently, a man
could rest on laurels such as his professional qualifications
and so-called "family background" (synonymous with how
much money the family has, and not the functionality
of the family). Us girls are no longer impressed with
qualifications and family background- "assets" we already
have. We are gold-diggers of a different kind - we want
him to be our friend; we want him to be egalitarian.
We are not to be "drafted" into his family to be efficient
cooks and housekeepers, or sacrificial dress-up dolls.
Nor do we want to be the very qualified women he can
brag about, yet stay at home so he get the best of both
worlds. We want a man to choose us even if we can't
cook, can't keep house, and won't give up our identities,
maiden names, or careers for them. We certainly marry
(and have married for centuries) men knowing they cannot
(will not) cook, don't have "time" to keep house, and
will not give up their identities or careers for us.
7. Many of the men we have been introduced to have poor
hygiene. The lack of attention to hygiene could be attributed
to the man's assumption that he can rest on his professional
laurels and family background to win us over. Times
have changed. And how. Deodorant and breath mints are
not optional. Bad hygiene is reason enough for us not
to see one of your sons again.
6. Many of the men we meet cannot handle "dialogue."
They wax poetic about how they want their partners to
be their best friends, and how they crave "mutual understanding."
This is often one-sided. One bachelorette found the
young man across the table impressed with her until
she mentioned she will keep her maiden name after marriage.
At this point, even though our bachelorette had spent
a lot of time and money traveling to meet this man,
he nixed all plans (though she had taken unpaid leave
from her job), refused to converse with her any further,
and left her stranded in her hotel room for the three
days.
Only because he had different views. This often happens
with many issues that are unrelated to the health and
functionality of a marriage. How does a person's desire
to keep her maiden name after marriage, or the fact
that she has different political opinions going to make
her a less loving, less dutiful partner? Many of us
have close friends that have views that vastly differ
from ours. But do we ditch the friendships on these
grounds? Exactly.
5. Many of us have toxic parents, who are actively involved
in selecting a groom for us. Many of our mothers are
female misogynists, and our dads are the poster-boys
for the "keep patriarchy alive" movement. These parents
clearly consider everyone's feelings paramount - except
for ours - even though we are the ones getting married,
and we are the ones who will have to rough it out in
our new families. The girl is supposed to acquiesce
to any guy because of what the family thinks, or because
the parents won't get sleep until she gets married,
or because the parents don't want to insult a millionaire's
son or because she has "no right to be selfish." Toxic
parents will use any pernicious tactic to get their
daughter married under the guise of doing "what's best"
for her. We don't want the toxicity to leak into our
marriage choices, so we dread going home for vacations,
lie to survive, and keep meeting recommended men for
coffee to keep our parents at bay.
4. Many of the men we meet aren't entering the marriage
game conscientiously. We are especially suspect of the
men who say they are doing this because they couldn't
find anyone else, or because they want to please their
parents. We'll never feel secure in this type of partnership,
because we'll never feel he's marrying us for us. We
could be "any woman" and we want to feel like the "one"
or at least one of the few "ones" in the universe.
3. Some of us women don't believe in marriage, and we
are going to keep avoiding it as long as we can. It
is not a crime to remain unmarried. Kanya power lives!
2. Some of us are dating someone non-Indian. We want
to take our time dating this person, because we grew
up with the "wisdom" that these marriages spell "trouble"
and will ultimately end in divorce. Hence, we don't
want to reveal our love interest to you unless we have
thought about the situation from every angle (including
yours), and we are stalling for that reason. We ourselves
are also struggling with the question of whether defying
our parents is ultimately "worth it" or going to cause
too much pain.
1. Some of us genuinely want to marry Indian men, but
haven't found the right one.
Some of your Indian daughters
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End Of Article.....
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