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A Loss That Is Not a Loss - Part 2

A Loss That Is Not a Loss - Part 2

Hudson Russell Davis

Crosswalk.com Contributing Writer

Prolonged singleness can seem like the magic of being sawn in half without obvious wound.

It is like a cut that hurts but does not bleed. It is like falling from a great height without only internal injuries. Prolonged singleness is a loss that is not a loss, and thus it is a pain that we are not allowed to feel or mourn.

Here, in the ‘tween’ time, we who are single must face the difficult task of resting and hoping, of contentment tinged with dissatisfaction. What seeks to unearth us is the uncertainty of our situation. Life seems to involve few answers and a multitude of questions. We stand on a Rock that is Christ but our fears, howling with the wind, cry out:

“Will I ever be married (again)?”

“Does God WANT me to marry?”

“Is God punishing me for my past?”

“Should I wait for so-and-so or should I move on?”

“Should I just settle for anyone?”

“Are my standards too high?”

“Am I already too old?”

And the most brutal of all …“What’s wrong with me?”

The questions are the seeds of frustration that only deepen over time. Time marches on, and we battle not only the loss of hope but also the loss of “what might have been.” Because, to marry now is almost certainly to never have a marriage of fifty or forty or thirty years in which memories on memories are stacked and stowed away for rainy days.

It means never having the husband or wife of our youth because our youth is behind us. It means giving up some dreams like children of our own. It is a loss as any loss and perhaps more perplexing for its very ambiguity—it is a loss that is not a loss.

It does not count as a loss because it cannot be tallied, cannot be weighed, cannot be measured, scanned, or sorted and yet it is real. Somewhere in the heart of each of us the future is as real as the present and the past. We each live life purposed towards things that are as yet—not REAL! For those living in prolonged singleness, each year seems to steal from a storehouse of hopes and dreams of what might have been.

Ambiguous loss stems from the uncertainty of the loss, the uncertainty that accompanies a traumatic event that has no closure. Pauline Boss, the author of Ambiguous Loss, wrote, “Most people need the concrete experience of seeing the body of a loved one who has died because it makes the loss real” (26). It seems that our dreams have died but where is the body? We have no closure because, while we live, hope still exists.

The single suffers a real dying of sorts, a real hoped for life that, in dying, must be mourned. But it is the ambiguity of the situation that makes this process so difficult. We dare not be premature in making the funeral arrangements. We dare not prepare the eulogy while hope exists. Yet life is lived perilously if it is lived in the in-between—in that gap between what is real and what is hoped for.

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Most Recent User Comments
actorguy282
1/3/2009 11:04 AM
First of all I wanna thank Hudson for writing this,I really think it hit my feelings on the head.Now for the lady who says that she doesnt agree with it I rejoice for you that you can feel like being single is a choice and it's one she can live with but don't presume to tell those of us who feel like what we are going through isnt a loss.I sure didnt choose to remain unmarried all this time rather it was foisted on me and I dont like it not one bit and I am tired of people telling me it is such a blessing,it isnt.
sara1477
11/18/2008 8:43 PM
I'm single and I love it! I see a lot of unhappy married people around me. Being single to me means not loss but hope for what might be. I think this article is a major downer. Anyone else out there who agrees that a person who lives a godly single lifestyle can be just as happy as someone who is married?
rolusola
11/18/2008 11:22 AM
I'd be careful to discount the pain that someone feels because you think they are not supposed to or because it was by choice.

When Job was going through all that he went through, his friends tried to tell him why he was going through what he was going through and how he was supposed to be. They tried to make sense of his situation, but they just could not. It was Job's pain, not theirs.

You may not feel the pain that most do, but please be careful not to discount it by saying "it is not a loss," therefore implying that they just ought to get over it. It may not be "a loss," but to many, it feels like a loss, it hurts like a loss, they mourn as though it were a loss, and they question God as if it were. I believe that God honours that. It is real, it is honest, and it is theirs.

If I were you, I'd try to comfort those who mourn rather than tell them how they ought to handle hoping for something they may never have.
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