Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts

Saturday, June 29, 2013

Auntie Facebook Just Won't Let It Go

Facebook keeps asking me to declare my relationship status.  About once a week, when I sign on through my smartphone, a little panel pops up, urging me to finish my profile, but the only thing missing is the state of my lovelife. Facebook is like that annoying relative who keeps asking about every detail of your life and then gets huffy when you don’t want to answer. I don’t know why they’re so keen to have that information, and if they are, I don’t know why they don’t allow me to choose “Other” as they do with Religious and Political views. They provide a menu of options, but none fit my situation. I don’t want to put Single because the unspoken connotation is “Single and Looking, Gentlemen!”. I don’t want to select “It’s Complicated” because it really isn’t.  It’s very, very simple: I’m a Singularity. Introvert. Spinster. Quirkyalone. Unattached. Solo Mio. Autocratic Overlord of my own Sovereign State. Stubbornly independent to the point where I will sometimes place my well-being in danger. I hesitate to use the word “Loner” because while I do very much enjoy my solitude, I also like hanging with friends. I’m not ANTI-social, just selectively social. I’m not a hermit, because I leave my house all the time. And I’m not Anti-Couple, unless the couple in question is insufferable, condescending, or insistent that I join the Smug Couple Kingdom by letting them set me up with their neighbor/brother/coworker.  In many cases, one of the members of the most vehemently self-righteous couples will confide in me privately that their partner drives them nuts. Misery loves company, I guess. I don’t know the right label to describe my status, but Facebook doesn’t have it on their pulldown menu.
There just seems to be no way to say that I’m single and very happy.  Many people read that as, “You’re not happy, you’re just resigned to it, right? Have you tried eHarmony?”  Arggh! I’m 47 years old, and I’m fully content with my life. And when I think of my future, it is one of solitude, and that’s good! Really. I promise you, I’m good with that. It’s my plan.  If I didn’t like the idea, I would be on the prowl constantly for someone to pair off with. I just don’t want to. How else can I state that? Perhaps a list of reasons as to why I am fulfilled would be helpful.  Here’s why I like being, and will continue to be, single:
Freedom to do what I want, when I want, and not having to make sure it’s cool with someone else
Not having to deal with another person's drama
Not having to deal with another person's hangups
Not having to deal with another person's pouting
Not having to deal with another person's body odor or icky laundry
Not worrying about someone else putting up with my drama, hangups, pouting, body odor, and icky laundry
Spending my hard-earned money on myself, rather than things another person wants or needs
Being able to make decisions based solely on how the outcome will affect me, and just me
Making plans to do what I’m interested in doing
Being able to break those plans if I change my mind without ruining someone else’s plans
Sleeping in without being disturbed
Staying up late without disturbing someone else
Taking a nap
Watching what I want on my TV
Turning off the TV and being able to read in silence
Listening to what music I want to
Not being disappointed by someone
Not disappointing someone
Not having to assure someone that nothing is wrong, when all I want is silence
Being able to go for a walk or a drive, and not having to explain to someone that I just want to be by myself
Eating what I want, when I want. If I want to eat spaghetti four days in a row, well then, that’s what’s for dinner four days in a row
Letting the dishes sit overnight if I don’t feel like doing them
Not having to pretend I care about someone's sports team or job
Cluttering up my home with things that I find aesthetically pleasing, and not having to bargain for space to do so
Did I mention doing what I want, when I want? It bears repeating, because it is the central point of my life paradigm.  Simply put: I want to do what I want to do.
I could go on and on. Facebook will just have to keep bugging me to pick an answer, because what they want is too hard to explain.  I am who I am, and the most important word there is “I”.

Sunday, November 20, 2011

It's Alive!

I haven't written anything here for months. It's gotten to the point where I think about deleting this blog altogether, because it vexes me that it sits idle. It's my Frankenstein's monster, a being I created, then abandoned. The reason I don't delete it is because I fear it will chase me around the globe and wreak revenge on me.  (Sorry. Lit nerd joke.)  In actuality, I don't delete it for the same reason people keep their dust-and-laundry-covered StairMaster in the living room. If it sits there long enough, surely I'll use it eventually out of shame, if for no other reason. But I wonder why I haven't been compelled to write for so long, and I've come up with a few theories.

Reason #1 - I have nothing to say.  I really don't. I don't have an angle, or voice, or obsession to draw on as a starting point. I'm not a mom or a wife or even a militant single. I have opinions about society and politics, but not well-developed enough to build a pundit platform. I don't stand out particularly as a teacher, and I refuse to devote a blog to the foibles and follies of my students (a petty thing to do, plus EXTREMELY detrimental to one's career.) I don't have any interests that burn within me so fiercely that I must, or can, write about them. I'm a self-centered, quirkyalone slacker/dilettante, but I'm not SO self-centered that I think people would be interested in reading my thoughts about me. So I stare at the blinking cursor, then give up.

Reason #2 - My job. As a teacher, I feel like if I have any downtime, I should be grading papers, and if I don't have any papers to grade, I need to think up some assignments to give out, so I'll have some papers to grade.  When I do have a window of legitimate free time, I devote it to reading or watching TV.  I have stacks of books I want to read and a DVR full of shows and specials to watch.  And then there's evil Netflix, which offers me even more time-wasting opportunities, right here on my laptop. It's a delicious luxury to be able to sit and turn off the teacher brain. Writing is active, and I need my passive time.

Reason #3 - Social media. Facebook has taken away my urge to write.  BFB (Before Facebook), if I had an observation or insight, I'd write about it and post it on my blog.  Now, I can jot it onto my status update and forget about it, rather than expanding on it. This is unfortunate, because there are some things I post on Facebook that have a story behind them, but there's not enough time or space to explain.
But I do often feel a burning need to be creative, and as I'm not artistic or crafty, writing is the most enjoyable option for me. So maybe Facebook can be my idea notebook.  The thought process that makes me want to share my garbled view of a fellow shopper or a cheesy story about my dogs may be parlayed into a spurt of creative writing beyond a few sentences, and will feed the blog beast and scratch my creative itch. I need to not worry about boring any readers I might have, and think of this as more of an intellectual exercise for myself.  I'll try to make a habit out of it, and set aside some time each week to string some sentences together in a cohesive form and post them here with more regularity.
But only after I watch eleven archived episodes of Doctor Who and read my September Harpers Magazine.