I'm sitting in a pub at golden hour, next to a guy I knew in a past life, when I realise that I’m doing something strange. I’m tilting my head at what I hope to be a flattering angle. I’m laughing too much. I’m lightly grazing the man’s arm with my hand. I am, I’m shocked to say, flirting.
Why is this such a big deal? Because when I chose to become a solo mother by choice two years earlier – conceiving my son via donor sperm – I felt like one of love’s losers. At the time, the poem Couples, by Australian writer Kate Jennings, played over in my mind: "Lose him, weep him, couldn’t catch a man / much less keep him."
I’d failed at finding a man who would love me enough to have a baby with me. I was a kid again, in the schoolyard, staring at the ground, praying to be picked for the netball team while others around me peeled off into a joyous game of togetherness.
In this story of failure that I told myself, I conveniently ignored all the men that I’d rejected on my dating path. It was, I reasoned, squarely my fault that I hadn’t met the one. I didn’t even believe in the one, unless of course I met them, in which case I’d convert to being a believer overnight.
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