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"So Why Have You Never Been Married?": A Case Study in Accidental Singlism

"So Why Have You Never Been Married?" That's the title of a book sent to me by its author, Carl Weisman.

Questions like that push my perversity button, and I can't help generating Q & A sequences. For example:

Clueless Question: "So why have you never been married?"
My Perverse Answer: So why have you never been an accountant?

Clueless Question: "Why aren't you married?"
My Perverse Answer: Why aren't you a Christmas tree?

Clueless Question: "When are you going to get married?"
My Perverse Answer: When did you last have sex?

Clueless Question: "Will you ever marry?"
My Perverse Answer: Maybe if I get hit on the head with a rock and turn into a different person.

Seriously, though, I was delighted to get Weisman's book, not because I'd ever stand behind it, but because it is so (inadvertently) telling about what it is like to be single in contemporary American society. Weisman's interest is in single men, but what I find so intriguing and disappointing about his book is relevant to single women, too.

I ended a previous post with the question, "Why is there such a disconnect between the negative perceptions of single men and the actual life experiences of those men?" Readers contributed some thoughtful answers to the comments section. Weisman's book provides another set of responses. The author did not mean to address that question, but wow, did he ever leave some delicious clues to those who are not content to take what they read at face value!

First, I'll give you some background about the book. Then I'll provide some examples that I found particularly intriguing and ask whether you can see the accidental singlism in them. Then, after each one, I'll tell you what I think about it.

About the Book
Carl Weisman, the author, is 48, heterosexual, and has always been single. He wanted to know how other men similar to himself - over 40 and (in his words) "never married" - would answer the question, "So why have you never been married?"

He collected responses to an online survey from 1,533 men. Then he interviewed 33 of them by phone, for at least a half-hour.

Upfront, Weisman tells his readers what he thinks: Marriage isn't for everyone. "I just wish," he adds, "that was the prevailing sentiment in our culture today, rather than what it is: that there is something wrong with you if you are not married or have never been married."

If that is truly his wish, I think he undermines it at just about every turn of the page. He's practicing singlism, albeit unintentionally. Here are eleven examples.

Accidental Singlism - the Examples

EXAMPLE #1
The title of the book is "So Why Have You Never Been Married?"

The author said he wanted to answer two questions for himself:
1. So why have I never been married? and
2. What's wrong with me?

Question #1: What (if anything) is wrong with the title of the book, and the author's two goals in writing the book?

(Think about your own answer, then read on.)

One possible answer (mine) to #1: The singlism in the author's second question is obvious, and even he recognizes the "built-in negative bias" that he has created. But I object to the "why" question as well. As I said to Weisman when he first offered to send me his book, I don't think any single people should have to answer the question of why they are not married.

The "why aren't you married" question teeters on the assumption that if you are past a certain age and still single, you have some explaining to do. I don't buy it. To me, the question is akin to the infamous "when did you stop beating your wife" in its presumption of wrongdoing.

EXAMPLE #2
The author said he wanted to make sure he "investigated every possible factor that may have had an influence on the men to get them to avoid or postpone marriage."

Question #2: What (if anything) is wrong with the author's framing of this goal?

One possible answer (mine) to #2: I'll make my answer personal. I'm not "avoiding" marriage, I'm living my single life - fully and joyfully.

EXAMPLE #3
Here is a list of topics covered in the author's online survey:
• Demographic information (age, race, education, salary, do you own or rent).
• Information about family and friends (e.g., are your siblings, parents, friends married? divorced? Do you have kids?)
• Information about past relationships (e.g., how many sexual partners, cohabiting partners, serious love relationships?)
• Information about current situation (e.g., are you currently in a love relationship? Are you afraid of marriage? Why have you never married?)
• Outlook for the future (e.g., will you be married some day? Do you have any regrets about not being married?)

Question #3: What (if anything) is missing from this list of topics? What else would you want to know if you were interested in all of the important factors in a single person's life? (For now, just consider the overall categories. Later, I'll get to the question of what is missing within the categories.)

One possible answer (mine) to #3: Even if I answered every question that the author posed, he would have no idea why I love my single life. He asks nothing about my work, nothing about my passions, nothing about what I appreciate about the texture of my everyday life. There is no place to tell him that I enjoy socializing and I also cherish my solitude, and as a single person with a place of my own, I can have both.

EXAMPLE #4
Weisman's online questions about my siblings include only the following: How many do I have? Are they younger or older than me? Have they been married? Have they been divorced?

What (if anything) is wrong with that?

One possible answer (mine): I'll start with an anecdote. Coincidentally, while I was studying the items in Weisman's online survey, I got a call from my "baby brother." (That's my term of endearment for him; actually, he's in his mid-40s.) I adore him. Just about every time I finish a conversation with him, I'm in a better mood than I was before.

But Weisman's questions in his online survey do not offer me an opportunity to mention any of that. If Weisman had interviewed me by phone, I think he would have asked me something like the following: How does it make me feel that my younger brother is married and I am not?

Here's my answer (and I think it is safe to say that it is not the one Weisman is expecting): It makes me smile. My brother likes being married; I like being single. We're both happy.

EXAMPLE #5
Weisman's online survey includes one question about my physical living situation: Do I own or rent?

What (if anything) is wrong with that?

One possible answer (mine): It is true - I rent. I wish I owned the place where I live. I did own a home when I lived in Virginia, but I can't afford one out here in California.

Now here's what I don't get to include in my response to the online survey: The place I rent is a beach house with a spectacular view of the Pacific Ocean. I've lived here for eight years and I never habituate to it. Every day when I wake up, I look out the window and I am in awe of my great good fortune.

EXAMPLE #6
One of the men interviewed for the book was Martin, a 54-year old who, for the past 10 years, has been caring for elderly relatives. The author tells us that the care-giving experience has made Martin realize that he is a selfish person.

What (if anything) is wrong with that?

One possible answer (mine): Martin has spent a decade of his life caring for elderly relatives. He wishes he did not have the obligation to provide this care, and that's why he sees himself as selfish. But he IS providing the care. That is not the least bit selfish. And, because he is doing this care work, others (perhaps siblings or other relatives) are not. I wonder if they see themselves as selfish?

EXAMPLE #7
Here's how the author described one of the men he interviewed: "Ryan is a forty-two-year-old sculptor from Wisconsin who wanted to be an artist from a young age, which distracted him from forming any real long-term relationships."

What (if anything) is wrong with that?

One possible answer (mine): If Ryan has wanted to be a sculptor since he was very young, then maybe art, to him, is not a distraction - it is a passion.

EXAMPLE #8
Donald told the author that if he were to marry, he would miss the ballgames, the golf, and all the other experiences he shares with his friends. The author muses (to his readers, not to Donald): "Even if [marriage] is about giving things up and sacrificing, surely we get things in return." For example, Weisman says, we get companionship.

What (if anything) is wrong with that?

One possible answer (mine): Donald already has companionship. He values his friends and the time he spends with them. The author seems to imply that the only companionship that really counts is kind that comes packaged with a romantic partner.

EXAMPLE #9
Sandy told the author that he is in a relationship with a woman who is emotionally and physically abusive. She is getting no professional help. Sandy thinks that maybe she is getting better.

Here's what the author says to his readers: "Sometimes it's one thing, one character flaw, that keeps the ball from crossing the goal line. It's that way for Sandy and his girlfriend. He wants her to win and he is rooting for her, so there is hope they could succeed."

What (if anything) is wrong with that?

One possible answer (mine): Apparently the author is rooting for this couple, too. But should he be rooting for them to marry, or for them to not even consider marriage until the woman gets professional help? Is this an example in which the mythical tug of marriage is so compelling that (to some people) even abuse should not stand in its way?

EXAMPLE #10
The author acknowledges that some men have no desire to ever marry. He's sure there are women like that, too. His conclusion: "these two groups should do their best to find each other."

What (if anything) is wrong with that?

One possible answer (mine): Okay, author, let me spell it out. I'm single. I want to be single. You acknowledge that. You also recognize that there are men who want to be single. Yet your conclusion is that you hope we find each other?

EXAMPLE #11
The author notes that before he even started this project, he was confident about one of the things he would find - that the fear of divorce would be one of the reasons why 40+ year-old men had never married. After interviewing 33 of the men, he concluded that he was right all along. Some, for example, had parents who divorced; others had parents who should have divorced.

What (if anything) is wrong with that?

One possible answer (mine): The author articulated an utterly conventional point of view: the assumption that "broken homes" (as the author calls them) produce adult children who stay single for life. He doesn't tally the numbers (even within his own unrepresentative sample) or cite scientific research. He just found some men whose stories seem consistent with the conventional wisdom, and that was good enough.

I don't know of any relevant studies, either. But I wonder what the author would make of my story. My parents were married for 42 years, until the day my father died.

That's just an example, not a piece of evidence. But here's my point: Why is lifelong singlehood seen only as something bad, that needs to be explained by damaging or distressing experiences? Why not at least entertain entirely different possibilities?

Maybe, for instance, some parents are secure enough to live the life that works for them, without assuming that the same life would work best for each of their children. Maybe what parents can give to their children, that is more valuable than just about anything else, is faith in themselves and the confidence to live an authentic life and not just an expected one.

Well, I have pages of additional examples, but you've probably already read more than enough. I'm not saying I'm right about these men. Weisman interviewed them; I did not. But by asking the men one question after another such as
• What is your biggest fear about being married?
• What is your nightmare scenario?
• Do you think you have a commitment problem?
the author made it quite clear what he believed. He also aptly represented the prevailing societal view of single life: Wanting to be single is not a plausible option.

If there were men in the author's study who feel as joyful and unconflicted about being single as I do, I think they may have had a hard time making their true feelings known.

Until authors, reporters, parents, friends, and everyone else can accept "I'm single and I like it that way" as an answer, there will continue to be a disconnect between perceptions of people who are single and their actual life experiences.

Comments

Why is this article on

Why is this article on directed for men? Is there something wrong with a woman not being married?


it's referring to that book...

This particular article refers to that book mentioned by Weisman, which was written for men. Nothing wrong with a woman not being married, as you will see in DePaulo's other articles! It's just not the focus of today's post.

This book makes me think of my mother's reaction when I told her about a good friend of mine, a single 38 year old man. "Has he ever been married?" she asked. "No," I said. "What's wrong with him?" she said. "Nothing! He just doesn't want to get married!!!!" Ugh. And NO he doesn't have commitment issues either...

P.S. A funny retort I used for that question the other day was "No one's good enough for me" (which is true). Or to be more polite (and not "arrogant", which I was accused of being): "I'm not looking to get married. I have more important priorities in my life."


yes

Thanks for answering the previous question. Yes, that was the reason -- the book I was describing was about single men. But as I mentioned in my post, I think some of the same points apply to single women.

Interesting about that "arrogant" reaction you got. That is always a risk for singles who will not tow the desperately mate-seeking line: we will get called "arrogant" and worse.


Not so fast...

Bella, I'm usually a fan of yours, but frankly you come across as a little mean-spirited and defensive in this one. Obviously this guy isn't a researcher but it doesn't sound like his book was meant as a scientific or philosophical treatise on being single. Just a guy curious to talk to other guys about being single who was nice enough to share with you because he valued your opinion. (By the way, I'm not the author! and never heard of this book before.) And here you are making a fool of him. But I think it's backfiring: your arguments are ex post facto, people "choose" to be single just as often as they "choose" to get married ... either way they justify and reason about their actions after the fact. I was single long past most people my age, happy enough without anything feeling missing, passionate about work and solitude and reading and all that, and then I met someone, we clicked, and got married. It's that simple. I don't think anybody's bothered by the fact that you're single except for you, but I guess that's your schtick?


points taken

Thanks for your observations. If I had run this by you before I posted it, and gotten your feedback, I would have written it a bit differently. I'll try to keep your points in mind in the future.


Also singled out

I know this book was geared more towards men, but as a woman I have the same problem. I live in Kentucky (bible belt) and I get asked if I'm married and when I say no I get looks like there is something wrong with me, or I hear "you'll meet the right man eventually". I get this and I'm only 29 and people around here act like there is something wrong with a woman being single and independent. I also get a lot of comments about not having children, and about the fact that I don't want any. People in this area assume that the only things women have to live for is getting married have having children. It has gotten so bad that I have even told people I'm sterile and that is why I don't have kids. I enjoy being single, I mean I'm in a committed relationship and have been for 3 years now and I don't want to get married, there is really no reason to (at least to me) there is nothing you can do married that you can't do single. Well I don't get tax breaks and cheaper car insurance....*shrug* but who cares


question I'm often asked

Your post reminds me of a question I often get at my readings and talks: Are some parts of the country (or some countries) friendlier to singles than others? I think the answer is yes, but there's a lot more work that could be done.


I read the book too

This review and your comments are very disappointing. I agree with "Not So Fast" above, the only difference is "I read this book". While I would like get on my soap box and defend this book, I'd rather focus on your Q&A and Examples. First, I assume that you know a little about online surveys? Most aren't meant to be free form where you can mention how much you love your brother or describe the wonderful ocean view from your window. My question to you is this...what relevance does that have when collecting statistical data? The list could go on and on..."I hate my sister", "I have a mountain view". Then you keep posting examples and stating "What (if anything)is wrong with that?" Well, I don't remember the author ever saying anything was wrong with these men. And in your EXAMPLE 7, was it Ryan or the author who made that comment (I wish I had the book in front of me...but I bet it was Ryan who felt that his path distracted him from focusing on a relationship - not the author). Then in reference to your EXAMPLE 10, what is wrong with like minded people coming together? If you have two people who both feel no need to ever get married, don't you think they will save a lot of the heartache and pitfalls that some people run into when one wants to get married and one is of the firm belief that they never want to? Wow, Bella DePaula, your insight isn't very intelligent or enlightening. But, this is your forum.


yes, could have done better

Thanks. I think you are right that I could have done better. Let me try again to clarify what I was trying to do. Here's an author who thinks he is defending these men who have stayed single (on p. 5, he says he tried not to defend them but did not succeed), yet, in my opinion, he ends up reinforcing stereotypes. I'm saying that negative views of singles are so culturally ingrained and unquestioned that it is hard for people to think about singles in any other way -- even when they want to be open to ways that are not negative.

I'm trying to show how the very questions that are asked -- or are not asked -- can prejudge the responses you get. With the questions this author used, he stacked the deck in favor of getting stereotype-confirming responses from his participants.

And yet, I don't think that would be obvious to most people reading the book. That's because the assumptions about singles are so widespread that the questions the author asked seem like the obvious ones.

Still, I take your points (and those of Not So Fast). I did not make my points very clearly.


yes you could have done better.

Great job Bella! I understand what you're getting at. Years ago I heard about a book which claimed to describe the great lives of single women. When I read it I was disappointed to find the real slant of the text--how these women are "coping" without men! Ahh! What a let down! It always referred back to their dating or marriage history, how long it had been without Mr. X and how this or that woman was managing. I can't wait to buy and read your book! It sounds like a real celebration of the single life! Thanks so much!


thank YOU, Louise!

Sounds like you have been enlightened for quite some time! Great to have you as a reader of this blog and Singled Out -- the book is a tribute to people like you.

--Bella


kettles and pots?

"There is no place to tell him that I enjoy socializing and I also cherish my solitude, and as a single person with a place of my own, I can have both" Hm. So I'm not okay because I don't have a place of my own? ;)

I think this book sounds like a curious bit of fluff for a cafe coffee table. I'd never buy it myself because, as you point out, it's brimming with insecure stigma. I'm 40, single and content-ish (not particularly happy or sad about it). Other things, as you say, make us "feel".

If I wrote a book, "Finally! Childless, Happy, Rich Man With No Responsibilities Whatsoever!" - and filled it full of positive comments on how I like to serially date women and make money - would that be considered reactionary?

Let him write. It's extremely hard to get published and extremely easy to criticise someone who is.


statistical data?!?

"I read the book too" wrote "what relevance does that have when collecting statistical data?" A ton. One of the first things I learned in a marketing research class: GIGO. Garbage in, garbage out. How you ask questions and what you ask is extremely important. Given what Weisman was trying to find out, open-ended questions would make a lot more sense than multiple choice. The data collected with an online survey is not going to provide any statistically representative data, so you might as well use it to explore the subject in more depth (by at least offering open-ended options). Bella showed in this post that Weisman (unintentionally) biased the survey by the way he asked the questions. This bias influences the answers he got and the conclusions he draws from these results.

And "not so fast," I don't think we're bothered by being single. We're bothered by the singlism thrown at us that tries to imply that there's something wrong with us. And, yes, we do internalize some of those messages, which can bother us, too. This makes it even more important to point out how the assumption that marriage is the best way to live is trickling into a book that purports to accept that marriage isn't for everyone...


why aren't you married?

I was reading my niece a bedtime story and the fairy tale actual had princesses asking the main character Princess Bubble that question!

I just cracked up! The princess was also told she would wear her bridesmaid dress again.

I guess the next generation will be ready to be single and older thanks to stories like Princess Bubble.


why aren't you married?

the real problem I have with this question is something a little different than what bella addresses. Bella's answer is "because I don't want to be." Which is great, but the problem I have with the question is that it calls for a REASON to explain something that might not have a reason. I don't care if I get married or not- if I meet someone I want to marry, then yes I will want to be married. But if I don't meet someone I want to marry, then I'm happy being single. When you ask "why aren't you married?" it's 100 percent a choice, and it also assumes that marriage is the goal, not the person you want to marry, so everyone should just marry whomever they happen to know who is single. How can anyone want to get married if they don't have someone they want to marry? I didn't start dating until I was about 24 or 25 and the first guy I dated kept asking me "why" I hadn't- is it because I was raised catholic? was it because I was too into my studies in college? was it because I was too shy? No, no, and no. I don't know WHY I didn't, I just DIDN'T. No one I was interested in happened to be interested in me, and I wasn't interested in anyone who was interested in me. The point is, some people, for whatever reason, just don't happen to come across a person they want to marry or get together with them. And that has to be acceptable. In fact it should be MORE acceptable than just picking anyone off the street to marry, which is sadly, not the case in our society. When someone asks you "why aren't you married" answering "because I don't want to be" is great but answering "I dunno, why should I be?" should also be a good answer.


it IS a good answer

Hi Lauri,

That IS a good answer! Many thanks for adding it.

Bella


my experience ...

My experience with being single is analogous with being a social misfit. The emphasis on procreation seems a little out of place in a world with 6.5 billion people of which only a fraction have adequate food and water. However, the fact that I've come to accept is that the "proper" thing to do is to get married and have children. If you do not, society will make you pay. I'm 43 years old. I've never married, and I've only cohabited for a few years of my adult life. I was active in the Boy Scouts as an adult leader until the community made it clear that they did not trust a single, adult male with their kids. Obviously, there must be something wrong with me. There are times when I start to buy into that rhetoric, and it can take it's toll. I'm a reasonably sociable person. I enjoy spending time with people, on my terms. I can say, without reservation, that I am the most honest, conscientious person I know. I am sure I'm a good person, and all of my friends reassure that I am. I lead a very productive life and I give back a great deal to my community.

The point I'd like to make, here, is that this barrage of negativism and suspicion towards single men is not harmless. It can be psychologically damaging and socially and financially limiting. When I worked at IBM, I was told I would get larger pay increases if I had a family to support. The benefits package was largely tailored to suit families. I was asked not to take vacations when they would conflict with another employee who had a family. And, of course, I've always paid more in taxes. Some people have actually suggested I get married to reduce my tax burden. ?????

Ok, I hope I've offered some insight into my experience as a single male. The lifestyle itself is fine, but dealing with the stigma can be quite frustrating.


important points -- thansk

You've captured so many important points about why singlism matters so much. I've noticed for years how people simply want to dismiss singlism as unimportant. I thought about that for a long time, then decided to open my book, Singled Out, with a thought experiment. What if all of the ways in which singles are stigmatized and discriminated against were reversed, so that the targets of the inappropriate treatment were married people? I doubt that marrieds and the media would find that dismissable.

Some of the things that have happened to you should be illegal.

Thanks for sharing your thoughts. I doing what I can to challenge the widespread bias against singles, and I think others are doing the same. So maybe things will eventually improve.


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