And That’s a GOOD Thing!
By Mary R. Dittman, M.B.A.
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Author Alison Armstrong says one of the biggest problems men and women have is that men see women as overly emotional men, and women see men as big, hairy women.
We’re in a culture that tells us that men and women are interchangeable. While I’m all about equal opportunity and equitable pay, men and women are NOT the same! Besides the biological differences, there are psychological differences that are hard-wired into our physiology. Understanding these differences will help you in all of your relationships with the men in your life.
Women feel good when we connect; men feel good when they fix things.
As women, we feel better when we talk things out. Sometimes we call this “venting.” We don’t analyze to arrive at a solution, we analyze to feel better in the process of the analysis.
For men, the purpose of analysis is to arrive at a solution. Therefore, when you are telling him for the 47th time about what a jerk your bo...
How to Save Yourself From the Terror of Singleness
by Mary R. Dittman, M.B.A.
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Is there someone for everyone?
One of the popular sayings we hear as singles is, “There’s someone for everyone.”Â
Another favorite: “Every pot has a lid.”Â
If you’re in the Christian community, people will quote Psalm 37:4: “If you delight yourself in the Lord, He will give you the desires of your heart.”Â
We wander through our singleness, wanting a relationship, always waiting for that one person who will “complete” us.  Thanks, Jerry Maguire.
What if there ISN’T someone for everyone?  What if your pot doesn’t have a lid?Â
What if God never gives you the desires of your heart?
One of my girlfriends always wanted to be a wife and a mother.  She is a dutiful daughter, a respected nurse, and a beloved friend.  She nursed her father through his cancer, and has taken care of her mother in the years since his death.  She is a wonderful “mom” to her fur-baby (a dog), and she teaches the 4-year old Sunda...
One Foot In Hope, The Other in Despair
By Mary R. Dittman, M.B.A.
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Recently, my dad shared an article with me from Pepperdine Magazine - the alumni publication from Pepperdine University.
In the article, Kelly Haer, a licensed marriage and family therapist and director of the Relationship IQ program at the Pepperdine Boone Center for the Family, proposes that one of the difficulties singles face is the ambiguous loss that comes from grieving the spouse they don’t have while still hoping they will marry.
Grief and loss are more clearly understood if your married and your partner dies or leaves. But, the complex grief singles experience that comes from not having found the relationship they desire or the fear that it will never happen.
The article states that for Christians, relying on God’s faithfulness eases the pain, but my experience has been that believing God is “keeping me single for a greater purpose” is far from comforting!
For singles who do NOT wish to marry, this is ...
But This Only Matters If You Want a Man!
By Mary R. Dittman, M.B.A.
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A friend of mine in one of my online dating groups was lamenting her poor luck with online dating. She is 55 and hasn’t been asked out on any dates at all.
After looking at her profile photo, a few of us commented that her short, grey hair, glasses, and no makeup is probably keeping her dateless. Her response to this was that she probably just needed to give up on love and get used to being alone.
Hold it!
Whether or not we like this, it is a biological fact (and a truth of evolutionary psychology) that men value youth and beauty. It has to do with a man’s DNA knowing that a young, attractive woman has a better chance of having many healthy children. Even men who have had vasectomies value youth and beauty. Even gay men value youth and “beauty”in other men.
In the same way that women are programmed to value resources and provision in a man, men value youth and beauty. You can call them shallow or “dogs,”...
If You’re a Successful Woman, You May Be More Masculine Than You Think
By Mary R. Dittman, M.B.A.
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Most of the women I know want an alpha male. Sadly, if you’re a successful, single woman, much of your success is probably due to you being an alpha female at work.
This is why Dr. Pat Allen says, “You can’t get laid and paid.” Meaning, the skills that get you paid are the same skills that WON’T net you a relationship.
Dr. Allen says you can’t have two feminine energies in a relationship, and you cannot have two masculine energies. This isn’t about gender. If you have an alpha female, a beta male is the counterpart. For an alpha male, a beta female is the best match.
Almost all of us are in our masculine energy at work. How can you tell? Masculine energy is giving, driving, accomplishing. Feminine energy is receptive, creative, and open. Masculine is doing; feminine is being.
I’m a teacher. Yes, I am very feminine, but when I’m at work, I’m in my masculine energy. That’...
You're the Prize -Â Start Acting Like It!
By Mary R. Dittman, M.B.A.
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I recently heard Steve Harvey tell a woman, “Quit acting like he’s the prize!  YOU’RE the prize!”
She was trying to figure out how to get this man to want her, and Steve said, “Ladies - y’all need to quit acting like men are the prize. YOU are the prize!”
That really hit me.
In this demographic, there are more single, professional women than single, professional men.Â
Women all over the country complain about the dearth of good men. In this setting, it’s easy for women to get into the mindset that we need to “find a good man.” We say our girlfriend is “lucky she found such a great guy.”Â
We’re willing to negotiate and settle for less than we truly want because we’re afraid something better may never come along.
We put up with men who are disrespectful; men who won’t commit; men who don’t call when they say they will; men who cancel dates or stand us up; men who won’t plan dates; men who drink too much, ca...
Learn to Receive!
By Mary R. Dittman, M.B.A.
One of the mistakes I’ve made in past dating relationships has been giving too much.Â
Marianne Williamson says, quoting A Course in Miracles, “Only what you are not giving can be lacking in any situation.”
I took that to mean that if I wanted a man to compliment me, I should compliment him. If I wanted a man to be generous with me, I should be generous with him. If I wanted a man to feel cared for, I should do things for him to make his life easier.
This was a complete misunderstanding of what Ms. Williamson was saying.
While it’s true that women are nurturers, in a male-female relationship, it’s the man who gives. Think about sex: the man “gives,” and the woman “receives.”
The same is true outside the bedroom.
When women initiate the giving, or give more than the man gives, that is masculine behavior.Â
Dr. Pat Allen says you can’t have 2 feminine energies or 2 masculine energies in a relationship. Even in gay relationships, you...
And What I Believe Now that Has Brought Me Peace
By Mary R. Dittman, M.B.A.
I used to believe that my singleness was beyond my control. Perhaps I was “meant” to be single for some cosmic reason. Or, there was just something wrong with me that I couldn’t identify (and couldn’t fix). Maybe I just had bad luck.
 Today, I believe my singleness is an outcome of my own beliefs and behaviors. Because I had beliefs about being single that didn’t serve me, I behaved in ways that were guaranteed to keep me single (even though I didn’t recognize that at the time).Â
A Course in Miracles says that, “The ego’s dictate in love is to be always seeking, but never finding.” That phrase really resonated with me.
 I’m well over 40, and one of the perspectives age brings is the ability to look back and see how our behavior has created consequences that we didn’t anticipate.Â
I wasted years in relationships with men who told me early on they didn’t want to get married. I stayed in the relation...
 The Ambiguous Loss of Singleness
By Mary R. Dittman, M.B.A.
Â
Recently, my dad shared an article with me from Pepperdine Magazine - the alumni publication from Pepperdine University.
In the article, Kelly Haer, a licensed marriage and family therapist and director of the Relationship IQ program at the Pepperdine Boone Center for the Family, proposes that one of the difficulties singles face is the ambiguous loss that comes from grieving the spouse they don’t have while still hoping they will marry.
Grief and loss are more clearly understood if your married and your partner dies or leaves. But, the complex grief singles experience that comes from not having found the relationship they desire or the fear that it will never happen.
The article states that for Christians, relying on God’s faithfulness eases the pain, but my experience has been that believing God is “keeping me single for a greater purpose” is far from comforting!
For singles who do NOT wish to marry, this is a moo...
How to Recover Your Confidence and Self-Respect
By Mary R. Dittman, M.B.A.
The only thing worse than the pain of rejection is looking back on the rejection and realizing you torpedoed your self-esteem, dignity, and any chance you had at making him realize you are a high-value woman. Â
If you adopt these strategies, you will increase your confidence, your self-respect, and your value in your own eyes (and therefore everyone else’s).
If you're in need of emotional first aid, look at this.
Given that you’re hurting, you MUST follow this plan. You won’t FEEL like it, but trust me - you’ll be glad you did.
Cut off communication. He’s probably used to you being at his beck and call. He also thinks that if he graces you with a phone call, a social media post, or a text, you’ll immediately answer.Â
But think about it: if you got fired from your job, would you continue to spend money at the place you used to work? Hope not.Â
He has let you know that he doe...
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