This is kind of a follow-up to my other question about being single:
How would you describe your single life?
Voluntary? Involuntary? Fun? Boring? Financially easy?
Involuntary. Sometimes it’s convenient, but I wouldn’t describe it as “fun”. Boring? No, there are far too many things to do for life ever to be boring.
Financially, it’s very difficult. In this part of the world, cost of living is sky-high, and it really takes two salaries to manage comfortably, without struggling. I don’t eat out, go to movies, or go on vacation, and I don’t have any of the currently popular electronic “toys” (and I’m typing this on a ten-year-old-plus PC that’s running Windows 98 and living on borrowed time.

). I can’t afford to live where I work (housing costs are too high there), and I can’t afford to work where I live (salaries are too low here), so I spend a lot of time on the road, commuting. Most single people I know share housing with their parents, if that is an option for them.
Do you see your friends a lot? Or only a few times a month/year?
I see my fellow Franciscans often (they are absolutely top-notch!), but other than that – no. Sadly, many people are simply not welcoming enough of including single people in their lives. Since I don’t have children, and many married people I know have lives that revolve almost completely around their children (or grandchildren), there’s a big disconnect – we really don’t have a lot in common. All I can contribute to the conversation is talk about my cats, and most parents aren’t that interested.

Similarly, I have little interest in, or tolerance for, endless chat about diapers or toddler discipline problems.
How much are you involved with your church?
I’m in the Choir, and active in the Secular Franciscans, and occasionally try to make it to retreats or to Lectio Divina, but I would like to be more active. Unfortunately, between my job, and having to do all of the men’s work as well as all of the women’s work at home doesn’t leave me with a lot of spare time (who started the myth that single people all have bucketloads of free time?

)
I don’t date at all (and haven’t for years). First of all, I loathe the whole concept of dating. It doesn’t help that I grew up at the height of the so-called “sexual revolution” (gag me, please), in a time and place where if you didn’t sleep with a guy on the first date, you didn’t get a second date – that negatively colored the concept of dating for me. At my current age, I am invisible to men (better odds of getting struck by lightning, twice, than of getting married). I don’t encounter many unmarried men my age, and those I do encounter are either older widowers who don’t wish to marry again, men who are discerning a second vocation to the priesthood or the religious life (off-limits!) or men who are looking for pretty women who are still young enough to have children.
Strangely enough, I don’t really experience loneliness very often, and when I do, it generally takes the form of wishing I had someone to share some special event with. Secular Franciscanism is about 50% active life, and 50% prayer and contemplation, so that actually works pretty well with being single.