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Being single is difficult. For everyone but the single woman, it seems.
Tired of being treated with pity and suspicion for being 30 years old and happily single, I decided to have a “wedding” celebration just for me.
By Michaelie Clark.
Sometimes, when I tell a non-single woman that I’m single, I get the feeling that my words undergo a kind of radical transmutation between leaving my lips and reaching her ears.
“I’m single,” I say.
“I have leprosy,” she hears. Her eyes fill with pity and her throat bobs as she swallows a guilty mouthful of sudden awkwardness. She feels sorry for me, but clearly there’s something very wrong and she really shouldn’t get too close.
Read more: Single Aussie men are not as scared of feminism as you might assume.
“I’m single,” I say.
“I’m going to lure your husband into my libidinous embrace,” she hears. Suddenly, she’s on her guard; who knows what sort of nefarious ploys I might use in my quest to get my hands on her man.
“I’m single,” I say.
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