Where’s
Waldo?
By Erin Ann McBride and Juli Hiatt
Caldwell
Does
the challenge of finding someone to date remind you of a
live action “Where’s Waldo?” game? You know Waldo has to
be out there, hiding in the picture somewhere, but he is
so camouflaged in a huge sea of little men with striped
shirts and red hats that you can’t pick him out. You turn
page after page, thinking sooner or later you’ll spot him.
After all, everyone else seems capable of finding him. You
scan the crowds for hours, but just can’t find a Waldo with
a good sense of humor, decent table manners, and the motivation
to go on dates. How often have you heard yourself, whether
inside or outside of your head, yell out “where have all
the good ones gone?” Where is Waldo?!
(I
don’t know that I would really want to date somebody named
Waldo though. I fear I would spontaneously laugh out loud
every time I lost him in a crowd. Could you ever yell,
“Hey, where’s Waldo?” with a straight face? But I digress
…)
The
dating game gets more and more complicated as you try and
figure out where Waldo is mysteriously hiding. You think
you have found him, jump for joy, and then find out, no,
he was just an imposter. There are no “good ones” left.
All the Waldos have left the building. You think it would
be so much easier if the remaining Waldos would wear red
hats with knobby things on top to let you know they are
the good ones. “I have a knobby red hat, I am not afraid
of commitment! I like asking girls on dates! I even pay
for dinner!” But alas, real life dating is never that easy.
All of the real Waldos have disappeared into the woodwork
alongside of the liars, jerkfaces, creeps, and complete
morons.
You
try over and over again to meet new people. You search
for Waldo in a crowd, turn the page to a football game,
a picture full of men, spot an interesting fellow, try him
out, but upon closer consideration, discover he’s not wearing
a knobby red hat. Instead he’s wearing a red bowler hat,
which is not only the hat only a commitment-phobic serial
dater would wear, but a very bad fashion accessory at a
football game to boot.
Waldo
is getting so hard to find that you decide you need reinforcements.
You call in your friends, neighbors, mother, and others
to help you spot Waldo in the parade scene. Man after man
marches on by, but you can’t recognize an authentic Waldo
for anything. Your mother, however, seems to be capable
of spotting dozens at a time. Your girlfriends attempt
sit side by side with you watching the Waldo wannabes walk
past, blinded by their striped shirts, unable to spot a
knobby red hat. And your grandmother, well, we won’t even
mention what your grandmother is able to spot. But let’s
just say, he’s not even close to
resembling your ideal Waldo.
Where have all the good men gone?
And
of course, the men are wondering where to find a good woman.
Here’s the sad law of inverse proportions: the single people
who really need to know where to look are clueless, while
people who have no need to look know where to find just
the right person for you. This law states that the more
certain the interfering party is that this match might be
eternal, the more likely you are to have a terrible time
on the blind date you agreed to after months of polite refusals.
So Where Do We Go Now?
Blind
dates were just the start. Now there are websites, and
even billboards? How far will our families go to get us
married? People are desperate to meet a good member of
the opposite sex. We have to admit, even from way up here
in our lofty thrones, peering down into the world of singles,
we’re having trouble finding the good ones too. They are
hard to spot amongst the commitment-phobes, superegos, drama
queens, jerks, divas, spineless jellyfish, and wimps. From
the outside, most of them look the same.
Where
is Waldo anyway?
Well,
we here at a Single Thought Headquarters have decided to
help you out a bit. We figure if Lance can have a website
(and we know this because many of our readers sent us the
link to his website, which we admit we first thought was
a cruel joke), and Anmarie gets a billboard, we can have
a hybrid billboard and website. But rather than advertising
just one person, we are going to help everyone. We want
to find the good ones out there and share them with the
rest of you. We are going to find Waldo!
Before
we go much farther we have to say this one thing. There
is nothing wrong with being single. In fact, we wish more
people would try to enjoy their single years a little bit
more. Our problem lies with the people who think there
is something wrong with being single. But we’ll save that
for another day.
We
now open our humble inbox to all the good ones out there.
We invite all the well-meaning friends, brothers, sisters,
fathers, roommates, cousins, and co-workers to say what’s
so great about your friend/roomie/child/sibling. There
are a few rules we must abide though, and here they are:
- First name only, and location
if you like. These are not advertisements in any
way. We are just showing all the great singles out there
that there are a few left to choose from.
- Tell us why this person would
make a great eternal companion. Quirks are included.
We love quirky! Unique = personality.
- We won’t guarantee anyone a date,
because we repeat again, these are not real ads! This
is just for fun. However, if you make your friend’s (or
your own) ‘personal ad’ funny, you have a better chance
of getting it posted next week. “Take my daughter, please,”
does not qualify as funny. Neither does the sorry bit
about the fisherman listing for a wife, asking that all
applicants send pictures of whatever fishing vessel they
might have.
- Please don’t tell us why the
person you are nominating for a Single Thought ad is so
amazing, then finish it all off with, “but he’s single.”
This one phrase does not negate all the other great qualities
you just listed. The term ‘single’ is full of potential.
It is not a liability!
- “I just don’t understand why
she’s not married at 26,” won’t work either. There’s
still a lot of life to be lived, regardless of age, rank,
serial number, weight, height, or acrobatic ability.
These ads are celebrations of the great things your single
has to offer the world, not just a marriage.
- We are giving Erin Ann away as
the grand prize. No kidding, guys! She’s all yours if
you can come up with a clever by-line. How often do you
get the chance at a date with a world-famous author?
Her mother went into hiding to recover from the embarrassment
when we announced this contest, so if you hurry, you might
not even have to deal with a mother-in-law! You won’t
find this offer in any store. Act now!
Send
your imaginary ads to erinandjuli@meridianmagazine.com.
Multiple submissions are accepted, welcomed, even desired!
Singles Speak
Doug
sent us an email this week that reminds us how hard it is
sometimes, to be a single man in a church that exists to
exalt the family. He said, “Yes, I often feel judged for being single ... like
it's somehow a sign of spiritual weakness. I'm sure it's
tough for single women for all the obvious reasons, but
for single men in the Church we have the added burden of
being frequently reminded that we are not fulfilling our
priesthood duty. People love to quote Brigham Young,
who apparently said that any single man over the age of
27 is a menace to society. Did he really ever say
that?
“It's
hard to feel like a worthy priesthood holder if being single
means you're not doing your duty. Like we don't have
all the other 'being single' issues to deal with already
(loneliness being only one of them) ― but now pile
on guilt.”
G.L.
wrote something along the same lines, reminding single women
that sometimes guys feel like we feel (even if they don’t
often express it), and they are not alone. He said, “What
I'm looking for is someone who has similar life
experiences to me. I'm not very experienced with women.
While I've had pseudo/online relationships with women before,
I've never had what you would call a steady girlfriend and
have done a fairly decent job at behaving myself when I've
been with a girl. I want to find someone who has common
sense, is aware of the world around her and enjoys learning
things. She also needs to have a sense of humor and
love to laugh, because life is very drab if you can't laugh
and laugh at yourself.
“Because
of my age (30) and my standards, I do have more pressure
to get married. I may put more pressure on myself
than anyone else does, but the pressure is still there.
I go to my home (family) ward because I don't feel like
I fit in the singles ward and there are no single women
in the family ward. Because of my sometimes poor self-image,
I have a hard time extending myself out to new groups.
If someone comes up to me and starts a conversation or the
conversation is started mutually, I have no problem talking
to them. Needless to say, right now I want friends
and then the girlfriend/wife will follow after that.
I guess I'm just impatient.”
Jay
wrote in to remind us that even though ultimately marriage
is the long-term goal we’re all shooting for, it doesn’t
always have to be the immediate goal. He advises dating
to be friends first. He said, “If friendships
form, then I would see if there is something more there
potentially. All this relieves the stress of thinking,
‘could this one be the one?’ or worrying about marriage
on the first date. That is such a downer
and gets in the way of the goal.” He also let us know
that prayer should be part of the dating process.
He
also suggests praying to know who to ask out, and advises
asking out all kinds of women,
even the ones you think might say no, if they are modest
and set a good example. Try gauging your own standards
using the Strength of Youth pamphlet. Would you
want to go out with yourself? Just remember that Elder Oaks
recently advised adults that using this pamphlet as a guide
on how to date are misguided. Once you are an adult, don’t
date like the teenagers. Group dates are a blast,
and we all love them, but if this is the only way you date,
you’re doing it wrong. Date publicly, double with friends,
but spend time with just each other.
Finis …
Special
thanks to the guys who wrote this week. We often hear from
men who want to hear more about the other single men in
the Church. Any ideas you have for them is greatly appreciated!
The
ball is in your court, readers. Any response
to any of the above? Be thinking of your funny ads
and send us your best and worst at erinandjuli@meridianmagazine.com.
We can’t wait to hear from you!
Thanks
and have a great week!