Relationships, Weddings, Babies. I’m Getting Left Behind!

Your friends are pairing up, getting married and starting families. What's a single person to do?

Picture of a bridemaid doing up a bride's gown
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Once you’ve bid farewell to your awkward phase, those trying teenage years and young-adulthood, life as you know it is pretty much set in stone, right? You find “the one,” get married and have children.

It may sound like happily ever after, but what if you are on the path less traveled? Whether it is your choice to remain unmarried and child free or the family life just hasn’t happened for you yet, it can be hard to witness the evolution of your peers with grace, especially when the outside world is expecting you to catch up.

When the couple waves from their “Just Married” limo or your best friend is pregnant with her third, how do you cope with the feeling that you’re getting left behind?

The Friendship That Once Was

In college you were inseparable. The two of you lived together, took the same classes and sat next to each other during graduation. Now that she’s a mom you hardly see her. When you do manage to get together, you feel as though you are the only one of her friends who’s not married with children.

It may be hard, but try not to take it personally that your college bud has a gaggle of new Mommy buddies at the park or invites a crop of married couples to her dinner parties. It’s only natural that newlyweds and/or new parents will seek moral support from peers who are in the same place in their lives.

When you feel like you are the last item on your friend’s priority list, the important thing to remember is that your friend still loves you.

The New Parents

Watching friends become parents can be difficult for people who are very close to them. As “the old friend,” it can be hard to accept that your once integral position in their lives has become a less-needed role.

The feelings are contradictory, and that’s what makes it difficult. On one hand, you are happy for your friend, you love her baby, but you can’t help but feel a sense of loss. After all, you used to hang out at least once a week. Now it seems you’re lucky if you see her once every six months.

Stop feeling guilty, because your feelings are completely natural. It’s okay to allow yourself to grieve the passing of the old relationship or the way things “once were.” So maybe you aren’t gossiping over martinis on the porch until dawn. You can still bond with your friend during Gymboree dates with her charming toddler.

Renegotiating

When your contemporaries are immersing themselves in the family life, feeling as if you are getting left behind is a normal response. Akin to the empty nest syndrome, you may feel that you are no longer needed as much in their life.

Witnessing the people you care about move on to a different life than you once had together is scary, but inevitable. But look at it this way: these changes are happy ones. These amendments will serve as evidence of how you can roll with life’s unpredictability and of the value of your relationship.

In truth, your relationships will change, but not necessarily for the worse. It may prompt a reevaluation of your life choices or affirm them. But keep in mind that everyone has his or her own timeline and path in life. If everyone around you is going in the same direction, but not necessarily your direction, it’s understandable that your confidence in your choices may waver.

But remember this: just because you aren’t subscribing to the same schedule doesn’t mean you are destined for loneliness or that you will somehow realize what you have been missing when it’s too late. Pay attention to what is right for you and your lifestyle and your goals. Just because everyone is doing it doesn’t make it right for you, right now.

Rate this article:
starstarhalfstarunstarunstar
(Avg: 2.2 out of 5)
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Comments

27 comments on “Relationships, Weddings, Babies. I’m Getting Left Behind!


Leave a Comment

YOU WILL BE PROMPTED TO REGISTER OR LOG IN WHEN POSTING

Watch this topic

Recent comments on this article

Read all comments

Posts: 1

See Profile

I am surprised by the amount of time some of these blogs dedicate to the idea of marriage. Marriage is not a prize that you have somehow missed out on. It is simply another label. Just because your friends are married and having children does not mean that they are happy or happier than you. It just means that they are married. Nobody knows what life has in store for them. Some couples will live happily; some, or a lot, will find themselves in a lawyer's office hammering out their divorce; some will be in an unhappy marriage for years; and some might have affairs. A wedding ring is not a seal of approval or a binding assurance that you will be happy. You may or may not find someone. Who is to say, but you do have to live with yourself and the only way to do that is to like yourself enough to be happy with what you have and stop wishing for what you don't. And as for the dying alone part, we all die alone. If you are worried about how you will die, well then you aren't living enough. Even if you have someone holding your hands in the last moments, you still have to do it on your own. It is your conscience that will be on your mind and you will have to answer the question, "did I live my life to the fullest or did I waste my time wishing for it to be different?" This is your life; not a dress rehearsal until you get married. Stop waiting for him/her; they may never show up. Stop looking around thinking that married people have some gift that you wish you had. Stop and think about how many times you heard about a couple breaking up that you thought was perfect together. Every one has problems. Everyone. Stop and ask yourself if you have the guts to live your life however it may reveal itself-married, single, divorced. If you can deal with that uncertainty, then maybe when a person comes into your life will you be emotionally mature enough to handle it. If not you might find yourself married and wishing for something else to make your life feel better. The Rolling Stones almost had it right, but their lyrics should have been, "You can't always get what you want, but if you try sometimes you just might find [you already have what you] need."
- July 26, 2008 07:49 AM

Edmonton

Posts: 133

See Profile

omg this story is bogasFoot in mouth

In what way?

- July 22, 2008 03:33 PM

Edmonton

Posts: 133

See Profile

Enjoy the single life and don't worry about everyone else. This is when you get to focus on your life and who you want to date. Especially with your friends having their time to settle down. So you get free time to hang out with other singles and head out for a girls' night and have some single fun! Smile

I agree - the harder you try to find someone to marry and have babies with, the less likely you'll find someone. You'll come across as too anxious to be with someone. If you do find someone, that person may end up making your married life more miserable for you than your single life was.

Husbands and children put a lot of demands on your time and you'll end up wishing you were single again. Just enjoy the free time you've got and use it for yourself and your own needs.

- July 22, 2008 03:29 PM

27 comments so far » read more