Posted on 05/15/2015 2:39:28 PM PDT by BJ1
Even though Kate Bolick makes a solid case for older women on their own, the tropes and mindsets of the past are hard to overturn.
You are born, you grow up, and you become a wife.
But what if it wasnt this way? asks Kate Bolick, the author of Spinster: Making a Life of Ones Own.
What if women did not have to worry about getting married, or agonize about when and if it will happentwo questions, Bolick claims, that will hound a young girl into her adult life, regardless of where she was raised, or her religious association.
Men dont have the same problems, she argues.
And shes right. They dont.
So what if women were like men? What if marriage was not an end goal, but simply a choicea choice to not settle, a choice to not search, or even the choice to forgo waiting for Mr. Right to magically appear?
What if women could save themselves and carve out a life of their ownon their own terms, and be content with that choice, or at least free from the judgment of others?
Bolicks book, which reads more like a memoir than a manifesto on the single life, manages to deliver an honest confession about the perils of being alone. She does not gush. Instead, she tells.
She recounts childhood and puberty with a wry and self-deprecating fondness, honing in on how young girls are quickly evaluated on their looksand marketability. Then, there is the confusing joy of hormones and high school, and the gradual transition into college, and the debauchery and free love that follows. From that, women come to a point where they can settle, push on, or wait. Does one venture out into the real world, where solo cups of beer and parties are not always present or available? Or should we resist and go our own way?
For all of the focus on womens empowerment and the new feminism, spinster still has a sting to it.
In Spinster, readers will find a voice that is honest about her ambivalent relationship to marriage. She admits that she has had moments of anxiety about ending up alone. Spinsters are human after all!
Bolick complements her memoir with a tribute to her literary heroes, who she refers to as her awakeners. Maeve Brennan, a staff writer for The New Yorker, Charlotte Perkins Gillman, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Edith Wharton, and Neith Boyce, who penned a column for Vogue, called The Bachelor Girl in 1898 all make up this impressive roster.
Although the passages about her literary influences the women who made her look outside of herself and question the status quoare enjoyable [everyone likes to know where a certain writer gets his or her influence], the best passages are her own her recollections, where her voice comes through a voice that is sure and, yes, feminine.
For Bolick, spinster-hood is a choice, not an inevitability.
Nor does it start to loom until one actually becomes an adult, which she claims is not until youre 40.
And, if youre 40 and unmarried? Have you missed your chance?
Not for Bolick. She threw a party, celebrating her independence. Prior to her 40th birthday, she had written her 2011 claim-to-fame article, All the Single Ladies, in The Atlantic. The article caused a firestorm of debate about whether women were truly content to be alone, leaving behind the traditional roles of wife and mother, to become contented spinsters. And it led to a book deal for Bolick.
Questions surrounding the decline in women getting married or getting married later surfaced. Was this a trend or a result of women becoming more successful than men? So why settle? Or were the pickings too slim by the time you are in your 40s, or even your 30s? Or was there something else at work in her article?
So four years later, we get Spinster. Not the single lady, waving her hands to Beyoncés anthem. But for all of the focus on womens empowerment and the new feminism, spinster still has a sting to it. Sure, things have changed, making the much pitied spinster a thing of the past.
But has the stigma really gone away in our feminist-enlightened times? Dont we still conjure images of the neighborhood cat lady, or the porch-rocking crank, resentfully taking care of one parent or both parents when the word (which we all reflexively avoid) is uttered? Have things really changed since Neith Boyce wrote her Bachelor Girl papers for Vogue more than a century ago? Probably not.
Why?
Because spinsterswhether they are confined to the country, or a stuffy apartment, are still a part of society, and in every community and family. And society still judges womeneven women who claim they dont care.
Bolick was judged in 2011 with her article in The Atlantic, and so was Anne-Marie Slaughter in 2008, with her Atlantic article, Why Women Still Cant Have it All.
Slaughter had been a rising star, and important and well known player working alongside the most powerful woman in American politics, Hillary Clinton. Then she walked away, not in retreat, but assertively and unapologetically, and then lived to write about it. It was her choice.
Bolick may differ from Slaughter in that she is not married and has no childrenbut she is similar in that her decision to remain alone has been her choiceand she has made this choice unapologetically.
Like Slaughter, she recognizes how culture can quickly shape a womans view of herself. And part of that view includes marriage. Her awakeners certainly had their own view of themselves. They were not silent or submissive in their decision to question the status quo or to fulfill some expectation. They could be disappointed with themselves, but themselves only.
You’re living the dream Old Grumpy!
not going to add my opinion or advice just my experience as a guy.
I was good at dating- meeting/attracting girls seems to be a family trait. I NEVER planned on getting married, I did what I wanted, dated who and how many at once on my terms; don't like it? leave.
Whilst out on the town to somewhere I didn't even know existed with a few girls I was seeing , I met the woman that made me realize; "oh, there you are".
I married at 40, had a child for our first anniversary and have never wanted another like I want my Wife.
what does it mean? To me, don't "look", but remember, that if you do the same as always, go the same places, do the same places, you will meet the same people.
when you do something different, different things happen.
I guess that is my 2 cents
I love your post.
Somewhere, I picked up a quote; can’t remember where. It goes:
“If you want to have something that you’ve never had before, you’ll have to DO something that you’ve never done before.”
However, I would change that last clause to:
“You’ll have to THINK something that you’ve never thought before.”
-JT
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.