Dropping Hints
By Erin Ann McBride and Juli Hiatt
Caldwell
How
does a family ward handle the singles among their ranks? Think
of the Borg in Star Trek: “Resistance is futile. You
will be assimilated …”
Almost Perfect
Catherine
is a very accomplished individual. She is smart, intelligent,
fun to be around. As a convert to the Church, she somehow finds
a way to blend her religion with her cultural heritage (she
is the daughter of Chinese parents). She’s just graduated from
college, attending her family ward while going to activities
at the nearest singles ward, two hours away. She faithfully
attends FHE at the stake center every week as well. She has
somehow managed to maintain a 4.0 GPA in spite of all of this
and is exploring options for grad school. As far as women go,
it’s hard to find one better.
But
here’s the kicker: the well-meaning sisters in her ward have
absolutely no idea how to relate to Catherine. She is not necessarily
the fly in the soup … they love Catherine. How could they not
love such a sweet, determined girl? A girl whose testimony
is so strong? A girl who always lends a helping hand? A girl
who has no children, and therefore a girl whose reference point
in life is so dissimilar from theirs?
Sooo…
So
what does the ward do with a girl like this? They make small
talk with her, asking week after week about who she’s dating,
how school is going, things like that. Now Catherine is very
willing to befriend these women, but when she needs to vent
about the guy she’s dating, instead of a friendly listener she
gets a few sympathetic “tsk, tsks” followed by the declaration
of how happy they are not to have to deal with that dating mess
anymore. And when the women in her ward start friendly banter
back and forth, she would love to join in, but when you’re young
and single with no children, how do you make an appropriate,
intelligent contribution to a discussion on potty training?
Still
Catherine perseveres, going to all her meetings and doing the
things she should. She makes a monthly appearance at Enrichment
nights. She even attended the night that the two offered lessons
were on prenatal care and menopause. (Talk about dedication!)
Someone even kindly said to her that night, “Well, I guess you
will get to use this information someday.” We’re sure
the person meant to be nice … we’re fairly sure this kind sister
had no idea that it sounded a little condescending at the time.
Catherine
had been attending the ward’s temple prep class, where all the
young singles had been going for Sunday school, but the class
ended and the ward created a new class, with the bishop asking
her to attend. What was this new class Catherine had to attend?
Marriage
and Family Relations.
Talk about dropping hints!
First
pre-natal care and menopause, (we never did find out which class
she picked that night), and now marriage relations? Catherine
is a good sport and has gone faithfully to this class just as
she has been asked. Still, you know the married women folk
were wild with speculation when the single girl showed up in
the marriage class. Was she engaged? Was she getting married?
Had all of their unfettered advice worked? Why had they never
seen this young man, the reason for her attending this class
in the first place? Or what if she really wasn’t dating anyone?
Did she need to learn something so she actually could snag
a man?
It’s
like dropping a tootsie roll in an ant hill — she had no chance
going into it. The bishop had thought about sending another
young single man into the class (since she is the ward’s only
young single sister) so she wouldn’t feel alone, but Catherine
begged him, pleaded with him not to do it. The last thing she
needed was speculation that he was the reason she was there
in the first place.
All
we can say from here is, Good Luck Catherine!
My Name
is Nate, I’m 32, and the Last Singles Activity I Attended Was
Attended Only by Seventy-Year-Old Women.
Not
every family ward is indifferent to the plight of their singles.
Some wards have more singles than others. A recent statistic
in a Washington, DC area stake showed that 60% of the stake’s
adults were single. (That number did not include divorced individuals.)
And yet, that stake did not have a well-functioning single adults
program. It is sad but true that too many people just “don’t
know what to do with the singles.”
Allow us to make
a few suggestions.
- Stop thinking of the singles as
foreigners from a strange land. You were single once too,
even if you have forgotten what it was like way back in the
day. Granted, things have changed since the last time you
brushed off your bell-bottomed pants and egg-shell shirt.
For starters, we no longer think the words “boogie” or “disco”
are cool. And dancing is rarely considered a way to meet
someone. Most people prefer to go dancing with someone they
already know and feel comfortable with. Don’t use dances
as your only activity. Think outside the cultural hall!
And please, no line dance cha-cha-chas.
- Include the singles in all of
your ward programs, just as you would any other person. One
idea is to hold monthly potluck dinners for the whole ward
to take part in. Families can open their homes to other families
and friends, and invite the singles in as well. “Family”
activities can easily include the singles if you stop thinking
they have the plague, or a hot date on a Sunday evening.
We can attest from experience that this is rarely the case.
- Many young couples or empty nesters
don’t hold family home evening since it’s “just the two of
them.” Why not make a few new friends and invite a few of
the singles to join your family on a Monday night? Of course,
families with children may enjoy having a new friend as well.
And the singles will enjoy feeling a part of a family sometimes.
Think how great it will be to have an extra set of hands when
you have to tag-team the toddlers to get them to stay for
family prayer!
- Create a single adults council
in your stake and allow anyone who wants to contribute to
participate. Designate a certain day each month to be the
singles activity day. The McLean Virginia Stake has adopted
“Singles Second Saturdays” as the one day a month all singles
can plan on having an activity. They know to save that date
for the rest of the year.
- Somewhere around age thirty many
singles begin to go inactive. They feel like they have no
place in the Church. More than half of all singles will be
inactive by age 40. (Warning: These statistics are based
entirely on one author’s math and a stake roster.) Many singles
become more and more alienated in their 30’s. Consider recalibrating
your singles program to adjust for this. Are your singles
falling away because you have your thirty-two-year-old male
attending potluck suppers with 65-year-old women? Maybe a
mid-singles program would help incorporate the thirty-somethings
before losing them to inactivity.
We
are truly weary of explaining to people “how to treat the singles.”
It shouldn’t be so complicated. We’re all human and we all
came to this earth single. We hope that atrocities such as
this will soon be solved so we can get back to the important
journalism we love to share. Topics out there such as, “How
to Date a Jedi,” “When Your Man Goes to the Dark Side- How to
Bring Him Back,” and “How Not to Kiss a Wookie,” are just waiting
for us to tackle them. But we can’t bring you that hard hitting
journalism while we are still covering such simple basics as
“Don’t Ask a Fat Lady When She’s Due,” and “Hey Single Guy,
Why Aren’t You Married Yet?”
“You Should Take a Marriage Prep
Course,” and Other Awful Mistakes People Make
Do
you have a story of equally awful proportions that you want
to share with the world? Send it erinandjuli@meridianmagazine.com
! We love to hear your horror stories.
Thanks
and have a great week!