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Playing House

There are times when a single person is forgotten and left by the curb.

There's the dinners out with all the couples that they eventually forget to invite you to.  There's the Sunday brunches around the kitchen table while you are scraping the remnants of last nights mascara out from under your eyes under the harsh flourescents of your bathroom mirror lights.  Then it's the camping trip away for the weekend in their two-by-two pup tents while you shiver in a sleeping bag without someone's warm body to suck heat out of snuggle with. 

You know you are done when everyone in your group is sharing jokes and canoodling at concerts and being like the animals on the Ark and pairing up and setting off and leaving you on the dock.

Alone.

But possibly one of the worst abandonments of a single person is when a couple becomes a triple.  Yep, the moment that a third little person enters their lives, a single friends friendship is tested, and rarely does it make it through.

When two become three...what does that mean for me?
Photo Credit: Getty Images - Purestock

Now the important thing to realize is now that your friends have this huge adjustment to their lives and are completely pre-occupied in the world of the new baby, they have infinitely more important stuff on their minds.  You've gotta realize that they have far surpassed single shenanigans and even cute coupley crap. 

But the most important thing is that you've got to remember that even though you might feel like you are six steps behind the learning curve on this whole "growing up thing" you are still worthy of their friendship and attention and inclusion.

I've gone down both paths with friends who had kids.  The path where all we do is hang out at their house watching bad TV dramas.  The path where you listen ad infinitum to their stories of poop diapers while you silently go to your happy place that somehow involves everything BUT bodily function.  The path where you relish in the time with your old friend, but not only is it not the same but it's like you've become a dead branch on the tree that used to be their friendships.

Don't get me wrong.  Being 30 and single I've gone through this transition more times than I can count on all my fingers and toes a few times over.  And I completely understand COMPLETELY UNDERSTAND that life has changed and you've gotta change with it.  But I'm still not sure how it came to be that the single population has to "give" 100% and the parenting world just wait for them to come.  They aren't building a Field of Dreams, they're just having kids, right?

Last I checked, somewhere deep inside, there still is that person that USED to be your friend.

But fortunately I'm also blessed to have friends who have lives that turned COMPLETELY UPSIDE DOWN when they had kids, and still managed to find time to fit me in somewhere amongst the rubble.  Like the couple that piled their baby into their Jeep stroller (PS - Best thing EVER to carry around all your junk!) and spent the day wandering around a town fair eating fried dough and french friends and watching firehose competitions.  It probably helps that their kid is so frickin' cute I *might* just steal him away to Canada one of these days.

And then there's my friend who is five years younger than me and still light years ahead.  She told me the night of her 24th birthday "I feel like this is going to be a big year for me."  Sure enough, over the course of the next 12 months she met a boy, fell in love, moved in, got married, got pregnant, had a baby, moved to Washington D.C. and got a VISA to follow her military husband overseas with their new family.  When she came up for a week to visit earlier this month she adamently wanted to do something that would involve her son but still give us time to catch up, since we only see each other once (maybe twice) a year. 

Insert Greenlight Studio, the coolest place for parents to meet up with other parents (or even their single kid-tolerant friends!)  An indoor playplace with approximately 1 bajillion things for kids to do (it's true, I counted) and more importantly a full coffee/smoothie/gelato/organic yummies bar with tables and couches and adult space to chat and catch up while your kids play house or color or dress-up or drive a Pirate ship.

I figure karma will probably catch up to me, and eventually when I have kids I'll be eighty times worse than my worst of parent friend offenders.  Also, please be prepared for the fact that my kids will probably kick strangers in stores.  I don't think I have a corner market on parenting, I'm fully aware of the terrors and challenges and complete unknowns in store.

But I also implore you coupling and tripling up folks to just remember us little single people.  Once upon a time you liked hanging out with us.  And we thought you were pretty swell, too.

Let's not forget that?  Ok?  And I promise, I'll try to restrain myself from stealing your kid away to Canada.

Do you have friends who've made the leap and now are bringing up baby?  How do you cope?  Any good activities or compromises you've found?

Elisa Doucette can always be reached for chatting over coffee, venting over brews, celebrating over dirty bird martinis and much more at elisa(at)opheliaswebb.com.

2 comments

 
Vanessa wrote 4 weeks 21 hours ago

I got married and had a baby

I got married and had a baby before my bestfriend. She's still single now. Although we hardly see each other nowadays, but we keep up through the net. And she never really think that she was left out or something. And she adores my son! It's a good thing that our friendship was tested through the years and even gets better through the passing years and hopefully, for the years to come. from Vanessa of Tongkat Ali 

 
David wrote 5 weeks 4 days ago

Once again, you’re

Once again, you’re reading my mind and stealing blog posts out of my skull! I’ve sat down on several occasions attempting to write about this very subject, but never finished because it brought up too many FEELINGS that I don’t want to deal with. And I’m so sick of all my stupid, injured FEELINGS lately!

Instead of all my friends having kids, it’s my family (my sisters), which actually is more painful to be an outsider to. I no longer have anything in common with my own family because I’m not married and don’t have any kids. So why would they bother to include me in things? Or so I assume that’s how they must feel because I never hear from them. They will make plans with the kids and invite along the Grandparents (our parents) like it’s a big family outing. Then a week or two later, I’ll hear about it. Or I’ll invite my Mom to dinner and if there’s a small chance the Grandkids may stop by her house, then there’s no way she wants to risk hanging out with me and miss out on seeing them.

Don’t get me wrong. I love my little niece and my nephews. And it’s not that I’m jealous that my parents and sisters are consumed by them. It’s just that hey, last time I checked I’m still family. Seriously, I might as well not exist. The only time I hear from them is when they need me to do them a favor, usually involves babysitting or fixing a computer.

My Mom wonders why I’m apartment shopping in NYC. She asked why I would want to move there and won’t I miss my family. Umm, you don’t talk to or see me now and I live here! So what difference does a couple hundred miles make?

And now I sound like the baby, whinning.

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