Setting the Scene

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Consider the following scene:

OPEN ON A COLLEGE BAR/FRATERNITY/DORM ROOM. TWO PEOPLE, A YOUNG MAN AND A YOUNG WOMAN, SIT TOGETHER, TALKING AND LAUGHING, OCCASIONALLY DRINKING. THERE’S A FUN, CASUAL, FLIRTY VIBE IN THE AIR, PALPABLE TO ALL. ALL BODY LANGUAGE POINTS TO ROMANTIC POTENTIAL.

YOUNG MAN:
So, there’s something I’ve been meaning to ask you.

YOUNG WOMAN (hopeful):
Um, sure.

YOUNG MAN:
Well, we’ve been hanging out for a while now and I really like you.

YOUNG WOMAN (putting herself out there):
I really like you, too. I’m having fun. You’re great.

YOUNG MAN:
Thanks…I’m really glad to hear you say that. Because I have a question I wanted to ask…

YOUNG WOMAN (nervously gulps from beer in preparation, wonders if this might have been a bad idea because she now has beer breath):
OK. Ask.

YOUNG MAN:
Your roommate…is she single? And since you think I’m great, could you try to get her to go out with me?

AND END SCENE….

And then repeat like ten times. That’s what college looked like for me, and probably for others.

I’d love to hear from people who successfully navigated from the disappointment of rejection through to acceptance. How were you able to be happy for your friends with a full heart, even when your heart feels broken? Is the secret time? Space? An overwhelmingly altruistic and beatific streak? Faith in the universe or God or something else?

Single Woman’s Nightmare Redefined

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Even if you’re not a “Sex and the City” fan, you may be aware that the quintessential single woman’s nightmare used to be “eaten by her own cats.” But today’s news eclipses that scenario and substitutes a more horrifying situation: not only dying alone in your apartment, but no one noticing you’re missing for 42 years:

Hedviga Golik made herself a cup of tea and sat down to watch some television in her hometown of Zagreb, Croatia. Sadly, she died in her chair. This was in 1966. She was just found, 42 years later, in her time capsule mausoleum where she’s been sitting ever since. She never finished her tea.

That’s some powerfully lethal tea in Croatia. But seriously, folks, this has all the marks of an urban legend, as people pointed out in the comments: no one noticed she was missing? there was no rent to pay or electric bills, or anything like that? no mail piling up? But a peripheral search of the internet revealed no listing on Snopes, and many citations of this story in the general media. So…true or false? What are your thoughts? And if this isn’t your “worst case single scenario,” then what is?

In Honor of the “Sex and the City” Movie

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satc-girls.jpgAs you may have heard if you are not among the Underrock Dwellers, this week marks the release of the “Sex and the City” movie. In Israel, we’ve already had controversies about the seemingly benign movie posters–they say “Sex V’Ha’ir Hagdolah”–Sex and the Big City–but the word “sex” on a sign is too much for some Jerusalem and Petach Tikvah residents who have demanded that the signs be taken down:

The billboard company’s desire to respect the sensibilities of the religious comes after a similar incident several years ago when advertisers replaced a poster for the “Sex and the City” TV show with lead actress Sarah Jessica Parker wearing an immodest dress with a poster of Parker in more modest clothing.

Such a compromise, according to Arye Barak, the Israeli spokesperson for Forum Films, is impossible this time.

“We told them, just as you don’t remove the word ‘Coca’ from ‘Coca-Cola’ and just leave ‘Cola,’ we can’t do it in this case,” Barak told The Associated Press. “It’s ludicrous.”

Apparently there is no sex in Jerusalem.

And in other SATC story tie-ins, I thought I’d conduct a poll of the JDA readers: who is your favorite SATC man? Maybe you’re a “Big” fan (I am decidedly not), or think Carrie should have ended up with her high school boyfriend who was in a sanitarium (David Duchovny) or that Berger, pre-Post-It-breakup, was the perfect man.

But allow me to suggest an alternate favorite, Harry Goldenblatt, played by the very funny Evan Handler (profiled by the Jewish Journal’s Naomi Pfefferman in this week’s J. — the San Francisco area Jewish paper). Charlotte’s loyal, flawed Jewish husband on-screen, Handler off-screen is grateful for what he has in his life and career, and reveals his pre-SATC battle with cancer (the reason for his permanent baldness, which never bothered most of us). Interesting stuff.

Who’s your favorite SATC man? Please report back to the group, especially those of us who are in Jerusalem. Because the missing signs are a sign that we’re missing something.

Last Hurrah: “First Person Singular”

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I wrote the thing weeks ago, but then found myself in Tmol Shilshom, a Jerusalem restaurant where the theme is books. Surrounded by the works of famous Hebrew and English authors, I finished the final column. I usually don’t reprint the entire thing on my blog, but it will be the last time, so I wanted to share.

    (And yes, columns are still available for reprint.)

Thanks to everyone for their support for the column over the last four and a half years, as well as your commitment to this ongoing conversation. Discussion on this and other singles-related issues to continue here, of course. :)

“Know When to Walk Away”
by Esther D. Kustanowitz

How does one become a Jewish singles columnist, anyway? On recent reflection, it has occurred to me that perhaps I’ve only found myself here, an untrained sociologist Jane Goodall-ing it in the singles jungle, because of the metaphorical significance and transformative power of transit.

Several years ago, during a work trip to Israel, I had been picked up at the airport by a taxi and was traveling to Jerusalem when the driver began making Hebrew conversation. It started innocently, with a “welcome to Israel” and “what are you doing here?” and ended in a question I didn’t quite understand. “At revakah?” he asked. “Revakah?” I asked. “Revakah zeh lo nesuah (‘revakah’ means ‘not married’).”

I had never heard the word before. Most of my Hebrew was biblical, and most unmarried biblical women were referred to as betulah, which most English Bibles translate as “virgin.” Where, linguistically, could “revakah” have come from? I tried to “shoresh it out,” parsing the word and looking for a root. Since it was unlikely that the resh-vav-kuf could be read as “rock,” the best logical word origin I could find was the word reyk, meaning empty. If Genesis was right and it was “not good for a person to be alone,” then was it a huge leap to identify a person who hadn’t found their soul mate as, to an extent, empty? The Hebrew language seemed to think not. In that moment, an idea began its path of transit.

More recently, I was on a bus, spiraling down the West Coast. The sea was out of sight, and clouds sagged low over the mountains, which rolled past the windows as if they were on a conveyor belt, and I was the one who was standing still. I knew it was an illusion; the bus moved, and the scenery passed, but instead of feeling like an active participant in our progress, I felt detached and stagnant. Noticing the vast expanse of Northern California land, I felt the solitude descend, a curtain closing on a dramatic chapter.
At the end of that trip down the coast, I found myself thinking about journeys, the constant wandering of being in transit, and — because I was headed to Las Vegas — the song lyric that urged me to “know when to hold ‘em, know when to fold ‘em.” I knew I wasn’t quite at “know when to run,” but “know when to walk away” began to resonate strongly. I don’t like leaving my destiny to chance — heading off into the great unknown has never been an area of comfort for me. But it became clear that any more hands of solitaire or broken gambling metaphors, and I would risk the erosion of the parts of me that I’m most proud of, precisely the ones I’d hoped to one day share with a family.

My four years writing this column seem commensurate to an academic degree in relationships, yet somehow I’m ABD, and without the coveted “M.R.S.” degree. Perhaps I need to concentrate on field work, move beyond the theoretical into the actual. This column has been the longest relationship of my life. But I can’t marry a column. The transition will be one of the hardest things I’ve had to do, but I think that it’s time.

I don’t know what is or isn’t in the cards for me. If God is calling the shots, I’d like to believe that the Deity wants me to be happier than I am, if only selfishly, for the strengthening of my faith weakened by staying single. I’d still like to be able to contribute to the expansion of the nuclear family I’m already so blessed to have. Or perhaps I’m committing hubris — an English major’s favorite sin — by thinking that I’m on God’s agenda at all. I’m aware that my life has been a series of unique opportunities that have been both humbling and a blessing. It may make me selfish, but I’d still hoped to have more.

There has to be more than just the illusion of progress. It’s a gamble, but every change is. It’s time to put one foot in front of the other, fix my eyes on the future, and walk away from what’s comfortable, into what might, one day, be possible. I’m in transit again. Let the chips fall where they may. And next time an Israeli taxi driver asks me to define my status, whatever it is, I intend to celebrate it.


Esther D. Kustanowitz thanks her editors, readers, family and friends for their support of this column and her obsession with Hebrew. In her “retirement,” she will be working on her book about living Jewish and single, and will continue to blog at MyUrbanKvetch.com and JDatersAnonymous.com, among other places. You can always reach her at jdatersanonymous@gmail.com.

“Lost,” Popular Culture and a Love Affair With Hebrew?

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In honor of Israeli Independence Day, I’ve written a singles column that runs the gamut. I didn’t think I was going to be able to relate Jack Bauer to Hebrew, but I did it. An excerpt:

My father recently sent me an e-mail consisting only of a list of numbers. I called him to discuss and asked, “So, do I have to enter these numbers every 108 minutes or the hatch blows up?” While that question is made up of English words that everyone should theoretically understand, it really only makes sense to those who watch “Lost.”

There’s something about a secret language, whether it’s a literal language or an insider’s slang full of references to popular culture or shared experience that creates an instant bond. Audiences for slangy, relentlessly contemporary films like “Juno” and TV shows like “Lost,” “24” and “Heroes” go from observers to loyal adherents; they form a community because they have a shared passion for the characters and because they speak the unique language of that special (albeit imaginary) universe. They’ll talk about “saving the cheerleader to save the world,” or a roadblock that must mean Jack Bauer is setting up a perimeter and asking someone to holster his weapon.

“Star Trek” fans might have started it all in those pre-Internet days, seeking out understanding and community on the convention circuit as they donned Spock ears and kvetched about the trouble with Tribbles. A common language is a vital component to the creation of any community, whether it’s an assembly of thousands or a society of two.

Shared language creates an intimacy, even among people who have never met before. They feel chemistry in these moments of cultural confluence. When a couple is really getting along, experiences and speech patterns often sync up until both members develop a kind of special language — from the “aww, you’re my schmoopie” exchanged nauseatingly in front of single friends, to callbacks to prior experiences or the familiarity they’ve established.

My longest linguistic love affair to date is with the State of Israel. Israel, now 60 (or older, depending on how you’re counting), is the December to my May, and we communicate in Hebrew, of course. My educational background gave me a head start. Because my vocabulary came from Hebrew literature classes and from the classical texts we studied, my language developed as vital background toward understanding Israel: the equivalent of Googling Israel Hebraically to learn everything I could before we met, and establishing an instant history. (Not that anyone would ever do that for a potential romantic partner.)

Read the rest of “Language of Love,” here.

Happy Birthday JDaters Anonymous!

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ernie_4.jpgThat’s right. JDA is four years old today.

Which means it’s time for a retrospective…

2004
The first post
A desperate plea no one listened to

2005
Pondering technology, not for the last time

2006
The power of paying, or “the issue that won’t go away”
On being a woman among men

2007
The “Single Semite of the Month” category, by now all-but-abandoned
A resolution

2008
A week in Jewish singles stories

Thanks for joining me on this journey. Here’s to more productive discussion and good times.

Making Some Changes

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In the next few weeks, hopefully there will be some changes here at JDatersAnonymous. Details on that to come, but meantime, for a general update about what’s going on for me professionally, check out this blog post on MyUrbanKvetch.

Wishing you–or at least those of you who are celebrating–a happy Passover.

Jewish Girls, Generalizations and Stereotypes

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Generally speaking, I hate generalizations. I try not to use them, although they are every singles columnist’s folly: “men do this,” and “women like that,” even if we preface them with “generally,” we do no one a service with collective assumptions. Statements like “women aren’t funny” make me cringe, almost as much as all the exasperated grunts of “I officially hate men!” do.

This is why, especially absent of verifiable data (whatever that means), I hate it when people make generalizations, and not surprisingly, I hate it the most when Jewish men do it about Jewish women. For every guy I find who says “I love Jewish women, I don’t know what those guys are talking about,” there seems to be four who can rattle off a list of reasons why Jewish women are not worth the effort: “superficial,” “snobby,” “after a man who’s rolling in the Benyamins.” Some of these men are also the ones who whine about being rejected for their height or hairlines, and who turn around and reject women for their body type. Are there some women (Jewish and non-) who are superficial and only judge by appearances and wallet size? Of course. But I’m not ready to generalize that out to apply to an entire population of single women, just like I’m not willing to call all Jewish men wimpy, nerdy and boring.

I also hate trying to defend every Jewish woman to people who are never going to believe me no matter how persuasive I am. And if I ever find myself fitting into one of the stereotypes in my dating or writing life, even for a minute, I make the conscious choice to pull myself out of it. I don’t want to be judged by a generalization of a perception, but I also want to be myself.

And I really don’t like it when friends make “neutral observations” that are in in no way neutral and–as much as they are meant as compliments–sound in fact like insults. Like, “East Coast Jewish women are too difficult, too challenging, too spoiled and difficult to please….it’s no wonder Jewish men choose different women to date. I’m not saying that about you, specifically, just generally.” Nice. Usually, it’s followed up with some sort of “some of my best friends are Jewish women” comment that says “hey, I’m not the bad guy here–I’d like to see Jewish women get married as much as the next guy, but it just ain’t gonna happen if they continue to be the way they are.” And yes, that last part (italics) is a direct quote from a friend of a friend.

It seems to me–generally–that such generalizations and stereotypings are only permitted because most of the time, they’re uttered by Jews about other Jews. Coming from other people, this kind of talk is either called racism or anti-Semitism, or Woody Allen-style self-hating neurosis, or misogyny. Or something.

Italics Guy asked a friend of mine to find out the answer to the following question. “Why do you think so many American Jewish women over 30 are still (disproportionately, as compared to other women their age) single, and can’t find someone to marry”?

Obviously, I’ve been writing columns about this for years. What’s your take?

Is 2008 the “Year of the Matchmaker”?

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There’s compelling evidence to suggest that 2008 is the Year of the Matchmaker. There seems to be a coalescence of various iterations of matchmaking happening, which I chronicled in “2008: Year of the Matchmaker?” last week’s article in the NY Jewish Week.

An excerpt:

2008 was about a week old when the influx of matchmaker-related services started hurling themselves like Anna Karenina on the tracks of my singles-columnist life. “Are you a matchmaker?” a reader from Israel queries. “Have you ever used a matchmaker?” asks a friend in Arizona. A matchmaker emails, not about a match, but to insist that I remove a benign blog announcement about one of her events. She is attempting to cleanse the internet of all mentions of her that aren’t glowing testimonials. The e-mails are constant — from SawYouAtSinai and JRetromatch; from individual matchmakers; from articles in newspapers, from blog posts, and of course, from my Facebook friends. Is 2008 the Year of the Matchmaker?

Year of the Matchmaker?” one friend snarked. “Is that like the Year of the Rat?” (Um, sometimes.) As the year continues, so does the trend. A newspaper requests a comment about matchmaking. A magazine pegs me to do an in-depth story about matchmaking, for virtually no money. (No thank you.) I get an e-mail about the “Make-a-Shidduch Foundation” name, which is only a “Shidduch” away from the “Wish” that another organization grants to kids with cancer.

And then there are the stories: Friend 1’s matchmaker told her she isn’t attractive enough for that yenta’s clientele. Friend 2 tells me of her matchmaker’s assessment: that — even though her salary is at least triple mine — she is unmatchable because she doesn’t have a college degree. Friend 3 notes that her matchmaker has matched her with men incapable of basic conversation, “not appropriate for her on any level.”

I know it works for some people, and God bless them. But I admit my bias: I don’t love matchmakers. I had a very lovely matchmaker on Saw You at Sinai, but no successful matches resulted. An offline matchmaker with a religious clientele first expressed horror at my “single, never-married” status (“What? Not divorced? Not widowed?”), and tried to match me with secular men opposed to Shabbat and kashrut, because in her book, that’s what Conservadoxy was. One religious blogger I know reported that her friend had uploaded a new photo to her online matchmaker, and received a note back from the shadchan with the word “EW” in the subject line and a body text that included “berating and ridiculing remarks regarding this woman’s picture.”

Thanks to everyone who helped out with this. I protected your identities, but am happy to identify you (with a link if you’d like…) with your permission…Read more here.

“‘Bad’ Jewish Man” Confesses to Forward

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In this article in the Forward, West Hollywood resident David Seidman writes about the commonly held–and commonly expressed–belief that there are “no good Jewish men (or women) out there.” In the piece, he reviews some of the major tropes and cliches of Jewish single life that any dater (or reader of any singles column) will be familiar with:

I’m short. I don’t make a lot of money. At 49, I’m too old for much of the Planet of the Jewish Single Women. And — this will be a shock, coming from a Jew — I’m neurotic and insecure. Is it unfair or sexist to say that these traits seem to cool the desires of most women? Maybe. Nevertheless, the fact still stands: I am bad.

Now, at this point in the confession, you might expect the next sentences to be, “But I’m a really nice guy if you get to know me,” or “Don’t I deserve love like everyone else?” But comments like those are a way of saying, “Treat me like I’m good” — and I told you, I’ve quit arguing that case.

I don’t expect to talk women into changing their desires and standards. Women are what they are.

So are men. I’ve run into too many Y chromosomes who gripe just as much that there are no good Jewish women. Ask these guys about the one they met on JDate, or Friday Night Live, or your friend’s wedding, and they’ll tell you why she’s too much like their mother, or the girls they went to Hebrew school with, or that she’s not young enough, or that her body isn’t perfect enough.

This is like the beginning of a summary of what’s wrong with Jewish single life. In particular, he calls out the cliches and generalizations as damaging to singles, which I clearly agree with. I’m almost tempted to call for a ban on the phrase “there are no good men out there.” And then after the article ends, some commenter comes along and makes the following statement:

Let’s face facts…there are only two types of Jewish woman. Before marriage…and after marriage. Before marriage…everything is fine. After marriage…fuhgeddabout it. They “settle”…because they believe they can change us. And when they can’t…you guys know the rest. Thank G-d for shixahs.

The voice of one, speaking for the many, perpetuating the very stereotypes and cliches that the author rails against in the article. I’m not going to parse the one comment with Talmudic detail–talking about the generalizations about the types of Jewish women, the invocation of the “s” word and the other “s” word, etc–but I wish that the “other bad men” had written in with similar confessions, praising the author for his call to eradicate the cliches of Jewish dating. But instead, we get this comment, which despite the efforts of the author, gets us all thinking about what kind of men (or women) are really out there.

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