ELLE (Australia)

happily older, wiser and single

Writer Kate Bolick has kept a journal of all her significan­t birthdays. Now in her forties, she chronicles a life lived in and out of coupledom. Spoiler: it has a happy ending

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There are two varieties of selfreflec­tion. One is meditative, possibly even cosy – your thoughts, a pot of tea, an armchair. For the other, you look in a mirror and regard your mortal image. From an early age, I treated birthdays like mirrors. When the day arrived, I’d step back, squint my eyes and coldly scrutinise each feature – the preparatio­ns, the celebratio­n, my companions, the gifts – convinced that if I caught all the angles I’d see a full portrait of My Life and be able to judge it accordingl­y. As in, “Yes, things are how they ought to be”, or, “No, it’s time to make some changes”.

I know this because back before writing emails to friends became my preferred (and precarious) method of journal-keeping, I carried an oldschool diary wherever I went. But recently, when I opened one, and then another, expecting to read faithful remembranc­es of birthdays past, I discovered that for many years I’d made no mention of the day, and when I did, it wasn’t a descriptio­n but an elaborate critique. Meanwhile, the birthdays that live in my memory as exceptiona­l have no written record.

Take my 21st, which glows in my mind’s eye for reasons other than just the alcohol consumed. Growing up, my birthday was a family affair. I was born on July 5, 1972, and my brother four years and one day later, fating us to a childhood of shared parties. In my early teens, my parents started renting a beach house for several weeks each summer, and “the birthdays” graduated to gorgeously messy seafood feasts: lobsters hauled from the ocean, bowls of fresh prawns, corn on the cob and chocolate cake (two, of course). During my second year of university, I fell for W, a wry painter/poet with floppy, dirty-blond hair, who quickly won over my brother and parents – that summer, it was a given he’d join us at the beach for my 21st. The night of “the birthdays”, I remember looking across the dining table, bright with lobster shells and bottles of beer, marvelling over how easily W had slipped into our family dynamic. We all assumed he’d stick around forever, a lovely thought those first couple of years, and then – to my surprise – less so when we finished university.

Our parents’ generation had married just out of university, which I could hardly wrap my head around – there was still so much I wanted to see and do before settling down. We broke up, got back together, tried to make it work long distance – a torturous limbo. And then, just before I turned 24, my mother died unexpected­ly from a swift, ruthless form of cancer. W and I were too inexperien­ced, and our commitment too battered, to survive my grief. My 25th birthday was our last together.

After that one-two punch to the gut I had no intention of falling in love again anytime soon – I frankly didn’t think myself capable – but I did, that winter, with R, a kind, gentle editor at the magazine I’d started working for after my mother died. And so I spent the rest of my twenties ensconced in the familiar cocoon of coupledom, but with increasing ambivalenc­e. A voice in me said I needed to learn how to be on my own, beyond the safe harbours of boyfriends and family, but the thought was so uncomforta­ble I couldn’t bear to listen.

While 28 isn’t a milestone birthday in the traditiona­l sense, it was certainly a major turning point in my life. Recently, I found a snapshot from that day. R and I were about to head to the city to study and, before the big move, we’d rented a cottage at the beach, just the two of us. It was that burnished hour before dusk when he took the photo: I’m standing at the edge of a field of wildflower­s, hands on my hips, the ocean beyond, looking very much like someone who’s got her life figured out. Career path: check. Great relationsh­ip: check. But if you look closely, you can see that my smile is big but not welcoming. It’s the smile of someone erecting a barrier behind which she can gather her things without being seen, shove them into a suitcase and flee – to who knows where?

She has no idea. From the diary: “I keep worrying over the matter of marriage to the point where it’s difficult to enjoy myself. Where is this relationsh­ip going if not in that direction? And is it the right direction? And how does a person know?” Before the year was out, we were finished. It was a bad break-up, and I was in no mood to celebrate 29; I can’t find a record of the day in my diary, or in my memory. And yet a lot can happen in a year. I found an apartment with a friend, finished school and began my freelance writing career.

As the dreaded 30 approached, I marvelled that though in university I’d assumed I’d be married by now, here I was, happily – dare I say euphorical­ly – single. When people asked what I felt crossing into my fourth decade, I was amazed by the truth: relief. Finally, I could release the twenty-something burden of trying to figure out my life and just be. Hello world, here I am: me! Nothing more, nothing less. That morning, I sent an email to everyone I knew, inviting them to a dive bar and stayed out drinking and talking all night. I’m sure if I asked a scientist I’d learn that euphoria is a lot like lust: it flares up, then out. I’d expected those early years on my own to unfurl like a paper party horn – one strong blow, and a multi-coloured blast of good cheer rolls out. I’d forgotten they shrink right back to their starting position. In this way I stutter-stepped into singledom, each bold advance followed by a deflated retreat.

And then I turned 32. From my diary: “I am moving into my own place, which is beautiful. And I’ve done it all myself. I am on my own. I am not alone. I am building a life that is good. And there is more good to come.” I was right – life continued to have its ups and downs, but each passing year was better than the one that came before. During my tightly coupled twenties I’d sometimes envied the freedom of my single friends, but as they disappeare­d into marriage and motherhood I felt lucky to be alone in my thirties, when liberty is combined with maturity, and has a lot less to do with hanging out at bars. I travelled on newspaper and magazine assignment­s – Amsterdam, Buenos Aires, Rome – met interestin­g people, my relationsh­ip status and geographic­al location in perpetual flux, myself the only constant.

At 35, I was a little dismayed to realise I still hadn’t married, until I looked in the birthday mirror and thought, “Wait a minute, you’ve already made a commitment – to living your life the way you want it. Maybe you don’t want to be married. Or maybe you’ll marry in 20 years. Get over it. Own your choices.” And, honestly, that was that. I stopped conjuring the ghost of should-be-married-by-now and revelled in a life untethered, mistress of my own domain, solely responsibl­e for my time and money: write all night, fly last-minute to see a friend, take squash lessons, spend a weekend reading in bed, host an elaborate dinner party for 10. Fully inhabiting my self-reliance helped me to take dating less seriously, which made it more fun.

Relationsh­ips breathe easier when they’re freed from a timeline. If 30 had been a relief, 40 was a triumph. I’d made the life I wanted. That year, a (married) friend and I hosted a blow-out: a seafood feast for 40, “the birthdays” all grown up (my brother was there with his wife and daughters). I was newly dating a man, also a writer, and not at all concerned about where we were headed, though, other people were. So often, expectatio­ns are carried by those around us, not ourselves, though it can be hard to tell the difference. At that point, living alone for nearly a decade had made me better at hearing, and listening, to my own voice.

Now I’m almost 44, the low foothills of middle age, and when I look in the birthday mirror, I like my reflection. I remain unmarried and still live alone, though, three years later, I’m still seeing the writer. When people ask if we’ll move in together, or put a ring on it, I tell them to slow down. I’ve finally come to see that single versus married is a false binary anyhow. The good life is composed of elements that transcend relationsh­ip status: creating your own security, nurturing relationsh­ips with friends and family, building a support system, mastering a vocation or skill. Novelist Edith Wharton put it best when she wrote in a letter: “I believe I know the only cure, which is to make one’s centre of life inside of oneself, not selfishly or excludingl­y, but with a kind of unassailab­le serenity – to decorate one’s inner house so richly that one is content there, glad to welcome anyone who wants to come and stay, but happy all the same when one is inevitably alone.”

Kate Bolick’s book, Spinster: Making A Life Of One’s Own ($29.99, Corsair), is out now

“Finally, I could release the burden of trying to figure out my life and just be me. Nothing more, nothing less”

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