Flying Solo (pilot episode)
In December last year I found myself
on my own after a nine year relationship. My thirty-fourth birthday
was approaching and the break-up precipitated a move back to London
from Singapore. When I landed in Heathrow, to the welcome of the
British winter it hit me; I was suddenly single.
It wasnt being single at my age that bothered me, it was
the fact that the man I thought I would spend the rest of my life
with didnt want to spend the rest of his life with me. And
although I knew I would get over him, and move on at some stage,
could I ever employ my own judgement again? It didnt have
a glowing track record and there was a shortage of decent references.
I could barely remember the last time I was single, but I was
in my twenties and I was a very different person then. I was always
happy to trawl bars and the clubs with my girlfriends, meeting
men and having flings which I sometimes hoped would lead to a
relationship, (and others hoped would be permanently erased from
my memory). Basically I kissed a lot of frogs. And then I met
my prince.
NOTE: Frogs are sometimes very adept at disguise.
I wasnt scared of being single.
Dont get me wrong I was scared. But being single isnt
a disease, and it can and does happen to the best of us. Were
born single, after all, its not like we pop out of the womb
desperate to be coupled off. And we spend a lot of our lives single,
so really, we should be good at it.
Of course, while its OK to be single when youre twelve,
it changes when you get older. Youre expected (I am really
not quite sure by whom exactly) to achieve a certain level of
relationship success. And I had complied by this rule to a degree,
so despite a broken engagement and a broken heart, it wasnt
being on my own that scared me. Quite the opposite infact. What
frightened me was being with someone else. What actually had me
terrified and quaking in my new Vivian Westwood boots was looking
for someone else; the very idea of dating again.
There were a number of distressing
obstacles in my way, not least my state of mind and the length
of time it had been. I was also totally clueless. I didnt
know where you went to meet men. Had we moved on from waiting
for them to call? I had no idea how long it was appropriate to
wait before you slept with a man. And did men still pay for dinner?
Most of all the burning question that kept flying through my mind
was, would I ever be ready?
I received some friendly (and unasked for) advice when I found
myself up for grabs once again, and from what I gathered, in nine
years dating had changed. I was informed that there were no rules
to abide by; I felt like a born again virgin dater.
All this made me want to either run back to the unwelcoming (and
perhaps already full) arms of my ex, or join a convent. But once
my initial panic died down, I thankfully did neither. Because
although I knew nothing, maybe the whole knew education that stretched
in front of me would be fun, or at the very least interesting.
I might not know what I was doing, or who Id be doing it
with, but that wasnt so bad. It might even be exciting.
NOTE: I am terminally optimistic.
At some point I would dry those
boring old tears. I would ensure that I always looked my best.
I was already embracing the fact that I had a fantastic group
of girlfriends around me, (many of who were also single), and
I was already having a love affair with London since my return
which kept me busy.
As much as stepping off the cliff of dating was scary, it might
also be filled with wonderful opportunities. I just had to keep
telling myself that as I stood on the precipice waiting until
the time was right.
And I began to feel it would be soon. The hurt stays with you
for a long time but it fades. The familiarity you miss and it
lurks in the background. But Im not one to wallow and Im
not the sort of girl to let life stand still. All it would take
was a lot of courage, and a hell of a lot more wine.
I was about to embark on my own voyage of discovery; my debut
into new fangled modern relationships. I knew that in order to
start dating I could really do with a life-jacket and an instruction
manual, (at the time I found the concept as confusing as trying
to put flat-pack furniture together). But despite all that I would
soon be ready to kiss some more frogs. I just wasnt sure
that I believed in princes anymore.
copyright 2006 Faith Bleasdale, all rights reserved.