Lonely Becky Says Yes To The Dress & Marries Herself

UniquelyDivine

Well-Known Member


A Woman Marries Herself
People are single and lonelier than ever before. During a recent listen to an NPR radio segment, it was reported that 45% of the adult population in America is single. People are using social media and dating apps more than ever in their search for love.

Some folks, like the lady in the video below, feel all they need is there own hands to keep them warm in bed at night. Those people end up like the lady in the video below…



 
Is it? This is from last year...

ht_yasmin_elebi_wedding_03_jc_150129_16x9_992.jpg


Yasmin Eleby sent an invitation to friends and family asking them to come celebrate her 40th birthday in a "unique way." Why was it unique? Yasmin Eleby had arranged a surprise marriage ceremony ... in which she married herself.

"I’d been saying a few years that if I hadn't gotten married by the time I was 40, I’d just have a wedding by myself," Eleby told ABC News today. "I decided I didn't want it to be a joke. I wanted to have a celebration of myself. My wedding was going to be about me making a commitment to love myself, to honor myself and to know my self-worth."





So Eleby got in touch with event planner Darrel Colone, who said she was the easiest and hardest client he ever had to work with.

"She's a kindergarten teacher in Saudi Arabia, so she's only in the Texasarea once or twice a year," Colone told ABC News. "We planned everything mostly through email, Facebook message and text."

Eleby said she started planning her Jan. 3 "wedding" during late-July 2014.

Colone said he loved that Eleby decided to plan such an unconventional event, so he chose an equally unusual venue -- the Houston Museum of African American Culture.



ht_yasmin_elebi_wedding_07_jc_150129_4x3_992.jpg
Eric B. Blackshire
Yasmin Elebi, 40, married herself in a wedding and reception hosted at the Houston Museum of African American Culturemore +


"We were allowed to choose an exhibit to have in the gallery area, where guests would arrive, and we chose 'Women of the New Tribe,' Colone said. "They were pictures of strong African American women in the country that reflected the strong, independent, cultured and well-traveled woman Yasmin was."

When Eleby arrived at the museum, guests were escorted to the ceremony space complete with candles, purple ambient light and beautiful flowers.

"Everyone was so amazed when they saw the room," Colone said. "They were like, 'Is this a wedding? A wedding? What's going on!'"

That's when Eleby said she came dancing down the aisle to Stevie Wonder's "Isn't She Lovely," along with her mother and bridesmaid. She was wearing a purple gown because purple is her favorite color. The dance ended at the altar in the center of the room. Colone said he arranged for Eleby to be in the middle of the guests arranged in a circle because he wanted her to be the center of attention.

Three ministers -- her eldest sister, a niece and friend -- then asked together, "Who thinks Yasmin is 40 and fabulous?" Colone said. He added that the 160 guests in the room chimed, "We do!"



ht_yasmin_elebi_wedding_05_jc_150129_4x3_992.jpg
Eric B. Blackshire
Yasmin Elebi, 40, married herself in a wedding and reception hosted at the Houston Museum of African American Culture.more +


The ceremony's mood changed, Yasmin said, when she started saying her vows to herself with the help of her ministers. They were on committing to forgive, love and honor yourself, she said.

"The advice and speeches given during my vows weren’t just for me," Eleby said. "Everyone there started reflecting on their life on how you have to forgive yourself for the past and know you are a worthy human being worthy of love. You first have to love yourself. The more love you have yourself, the more you can love others."

There was barely a dry eye in the room, Colone said, especially when Eleby sang, "I Believe I Can Fly," at the end of the ceremony.

Eleby said she was overwhelmed and started crying herself when she sang the second verse: "There are miracles in this life that I must achieve, but I know first that it starts inside of me."

The tears were quickly wiped away by the lavish reception afterwards, Colone said.



ht_yasmin_elebi_wedding_04_jc_150129_4x3_992.jpg
Eric B. Blackshire
Yasmin Elebi, 40, married herself in a wedding and reception hosted at the Houston Museum of African American Culture.more +


"Her first dance was a line dance strut with her Delta sorority sisters," Colone said. "The reception was amazing. She had everything -- four food stations with all the food anyone could possibly want, a photo booth, a live band, a D.J., and even a 5-foot-tall elephant ice sculpture. The kids even had their own room, so the parents could enjoy their adult fun on the floor."

Eleby is now back teaching kindergartners at a multinational school in Saudi Arabia. She said she recently had a second, smaller wedding and birthday celebration this past weekend with her friends there.

Though some people have tried to say Eleby's marriage to herself is ridiculous, she said she doesn't let it get to her.

"If they don’t understand the concept of self-love, I really don’t know what to say to them," Eleby told ABC News. "I have no words but, 'I am fabulous.' What I want people to take away from this is that they are worthy of love and forgiveness no matter what they've done in the past."

Eleby also revealed to ABC News that she is dating someone right now.

"I don’t know if marriage is in the future or not," she said. "I've thought that about my past relationships, but they all ended amicably because they just weren't going."

Two of her exes actually attended her wedding in Houston.

"This is something you'd do, totally up your ally," Eleby said they told her.
 
The way both talk they are extremely into self anyway... narcissists.

And this statistic is startling. Wonder if ot means no SO at all? Or with an SO but unmarried? hmmm

it was reported that 45% of the adult population in America is single. People are using social media and dating apps more than ever in their search for love.

Some folks, like the lady in the video below, feel all they need is there own hands to keep them warm in bed at night. Those people end up like the lady in the video below…






And this one invited her ex boyfriends to her self-wedding?!o_O
Is it? This is from last year...

ht_yasmin_elebi_wedding_03_jc_150129_16x9_992.jpg


Yasmin Eleby sent an invitation to friends and family asking them to come celebrate her 40th birthday in a "unique way." Why was it unique? Yasmin Eleby had arranged a surprise marriage ceremony ... in which she married herself.

"I’d been saying a few years that if I hadn't gotten married by the time I was 40, I’d just have a wedding by myself," Eleby told ABC News today. "I decided I didn't want it to be a joke. I wanted to have a celebration of myself. My wedding was going to be about me making a commitment to love myself, to honor myself and to know my self-worth."





So Eleby got in touch with event planner Darrel Colone, who said she was the easiest and hardest client he ever had to work with.

"She's a kindergarten teacher in Saudi Arabia, so she's only in the Texasarea once or twice a year," Colone told ABC News. "We planned everything mostly through email, Facebook message and text."

Eleby said she started planning her Jan. 3 "wedding" during late-July 2014.

Colone said he loved that Eleby decided to plan such an unconventional event, so he chose an equally unusual venue -- the Houston Museum of African American Culture.



ht_yasmin_elebi_wedding_07_jc_150129_4x3_992.jpg
Eric B. Blackshire
Yasmin Elebi, 40, married herself in a wedding and reception hosted at the Houston Museum of African American Culturemore +


"We were allowed to choose an exhibit to have in the gallery area, where guests would arrive, and we chose 'Women of the New Tribe,' Colone said. "They were pictures of strong African American women in the country that reflected the strong, independent, cultured and well-traveled woman Yasmin was."

When Eleby arrived at the museum, guests were escorted to the ceremony space complete with candles, purple ambient light and beautiful flowers.

"Everyone was so amazed when they saw the room," Colone said. "They were like, 'Is this a wedding? A wedding? What's going on!'"

That's when Eleby said she came dancing down the aisle to Stevie Wonder's "Isn't She Lovely," along with her mother and bridesmaid. She was wearing a purple gown because purple is her favorite color. The dance ended at the altar in the center of the room. Colone said he arranged for Eleby to be in the middle of the guests arranged in a circle because he wanted her to be the center of attention.

Three ministers -- her eldest sister, a niece and friend -- then asked together, "Who thinks Yasmin is 40 and fabulous?" Colone said. He added that the 160 guests in the room chimed, "We do!"



ht_yasmin_elebi_wedding_05_jc_150129_4x3_992.jpg
Eric B. Blackshire
Yasmin Elebi, 40, married herself in a wedding and reception hosted at the Houston Museum of African American Culture.more +


The ceremony's mood changed, Yasmin said, when she started saying her vows to herself with the help of her ministers. They were on committing to forgive, love and honor yourself, she said.

"The advice and speeches given during my vows weren’t just for me," Eleby said. "Everyone there started reflecting on their life on how you have to forgive yourself for the past and know you are a worthy human being worthy of love. You first have to love yourself. The more love you have yourself, the more you can love others."

There was barely a dry eye in the room, Colone said, especially when Eleby sang, "I Believe I Can Fly," at the end of the ceremony.

Eleby said she was overwhelmed and started crying herself when she sang the second verse: "There are miracles in this life that I must achieve, but I know first that it starts inside of me."

The tears were quickly wiped away by the lavish reception afterwards, Colone said.



ht_yasmin_elebi_wedding_04_jc_150129_4x3_992.jpg
Eric B. Blackshire
Yasmin Elebi, 40, married herself in a wedding and reception hosted at the Houston Museum of African American Culture.more +


"Her first dance was a line dance strut with her Delta sorority sisters," Colone said. "The reception was amazing. She had everything -- four food stations with all the food anyone could possibly want, a photo booth, a live band, a D.J., and even a 5-foot-tall elephant ice sculpture. The kids even had their own room, so the parents could enjoy their adult fun on the floor."

Eleby is now back teaching kindergartners at a multinational school in Saudi Arabia. She said she recently had a second, smaller wedding and birthday celebration this past weekend with her friends there.

Though some people have tried to say Eleby's marriage to herself is ridiculous, she said she doesn't let it get to her.

"If they don’t understand the concept of self-love, I really don’t know what to say to them," Eleby told ABC News. "I have no words but, 'I am fabulous.' What I want people to take away from this is that they are worthy of love and forgiveness no matter what they've done in the past."

Eleby also revealed to ABC News that she is dating someone right now.

"I don’t know if marriage is in the future or not," she said. "I've thought that about my past relationships, but they all ended amicably because they just weren't going."

Two of her exes actually attended her wedding in Houston.

"This is something you'd do, totally up your ally," Eleby said they told her.
 
Is it? This is from last year...

ht_yasmin_elebi_wedding_03_jc_150129_16x9_992.jpg


Yasmin Eleby sent an invitation to friends and family asking them to come celebrate her 40th birthday in a "unique way." Why was it unique? Yasmin Eleby had arranged a surprise marriage ceremony ... in which she married herself.

"I’d been saying a few years that if I hadn't gotten married by the time I was 40, I’d just have a wedding by myself," Eleby told ABC News today. "I decided I didn't want it to be a joke. I wanted to have a celebration of myself. My wedding was going to be about me making a commitment to love myself, to honor myself and to know my self-worth."





So Eleby got in touch with event planner Darrel Colone, who said she was the easiest and hardest client he ever had to work with.

"She's a kindergarten teacher in Saudi Arabia, so she's only in the Texasarea once or twice a year," Colone told ABC News. "We planned everything mostly through email, Facebook message and text."

Eleby said she started planning her Jan. 3 "wedding" during late-July 2014.

Colone said he loved that Eleby decided to plan such an unconventional event, so he chose an equally unusual venue -- the Houston Museum of African American Culture.



ht_yasmin_elebi_wedding_07_jc_150129_4x3_992.jpg
Eric B. Blackshire
Yasmin Elebi, 40, married herself in a wedding and reception hosted at the Houston Museum of African American Culturemore +


"We were allowed to choose an exhibit to have in the gallery area, where guests would arrive, and we chose 'Women of the New Tribe,' Colone said. "They were pictures of strong African American women in the country that reflected the strong, independent, cultured and well-traveled woman Yasmin was."

When Eleby arrived at the museum, guests were escorted to the ceremony space complete with candles, purple ambient light and beautiful flowers.

"Everyone was so amazed when they saw the room," Colone said. "They were like, 'Is this a wedding? A wedding? What's going on!'"

That's when Eleby said she came dancing down the aisle to Stevie Wonder's "Isn't She Lovely," along with her mother and bridesmaid. She was wearing a purple gown because purple is her favorite color. The dance ended at the altar in the center of the room. Colone said he arranged for Eleby to be in the middle of the guests arranged in a circle because he wanted her to be the center of attention.

Three ministers -- her eldest sister, a niece and friend -- then asked together, "Who thinks Yasmin is 40 and fabulous?" Colone said. He added that the 160 guests in the room chimed, "We do!"



ht_yasmin_elebi_wedding_05_jc_150129_4x3_992.jpg
Eric B. Blackshire
Yasmin Elebi, 40, married herself in a wedding and reception hosted at the Houston Museum of African American Culture.more +


The ceremony's mood changed, Yasmin said, when she started saying her vows to herself with the help of her ministers. They were on committing to forgive, love and honor yourself, she said.

"The advice and speeches given during my vows weren’t just for me," Eleby said. "Everyone there started reflecting on their life on how you have to forgive yourself for the past and know you are a worthy human being worthy of love. You first have to love yourself. The more love you have yourself, the more you can love others."

There was barely a dry eye in the room, Colone said, especially when Eleby sang, "I Believe I Can Fly," at the end of the ceremony.

Eleby said she was overwhelmed and started crying herself when she sang the second verse: "There are miracles in this life that I must achieve, but I know first that it starts inside of me."

The tears were quickly wiped away by the lavish reception afterwards, Colone said.



ht_yasmin_elebi_wedding_04_jc_150129_4x3_992.jpg
Eric B. Blackshire
Yasmin Elebi, 40, married herself in a wedding and reception hosted at the Houston Museum of African American Culture.more +


"Her first dance was a line dance strut with her Delta sorority sisters," Colone said. "The reception was amazing. She had everything -- four food stations with all the food anyone could possibly want, a photo booth, a live band, a D.J., and even a 5-foot-tall elephant ice sculpture. The kids even had their own room, so the parents could enjoy their adult fun on the floor."

Eleby is now back teaching kindergartners at a multinational school in Saudi Arabia. She said she recently had a second, smaller wedding and birthday celebration this past weekend with her friends there.

Though some people have tried to say Eleby's marriage to herself is ridiculous, she said she doesn't let it get to her.

"If they don’t understand the concept of self-love, I really don’t know what to say to them," Eleby told ABC News. "I have no words but, 'I am fabulous.' What I want people to take away from this is that they are worthy of love and forgiveness no matter what they've done in the past."

Eleby also revealed to ABC News that she is dating someone right now.

"I don’t know if marriage is in the future or not," she said. "I've thought that about my past relationships, but they all ended amicably because they just weren't going."

Two of her exes actually attended her wedding in Houston.

"This is something you'd do, totally up your ally," Eleby said they told her.


Wow, I stand corrected. This is some CPS (crazy people :censored:):lachen:
 
The way both talk they are extremely into self anyway... narcissists.

And this statistic is startling. Wonder if ot means no SO at all? Or with an SO but unmarried? hmmm




And this one invited her ex boyfriends to her self-wedding?!o_O

lol! You know they were happy about dodging a bullet. The article says she was dating someone. I wonder if she invited them to the wedding :lol:
 
I don't even know where to start...

She looks exactly how I would expect a woman who marries herself to look like.

Most people who profess their love for self with shenanigans like this are rarely truly happy internally. True self-love is understated, private and quietly confident. These desperately tacky displays of self-affection are a facade and behind those yellow-toothed, gummy grins are sad and lonely women who are bored with life and in need of validation from others.
 
Is it? This is from last year...

ht_yasmin_elebi_wedding_03_jc_150129_16x9_992.jpg


Yasmin Eleby sent an invitation to friends and family asking them to come celebrate her 40th birthday in a "unique way." Why was it unique? Yasmin Eleby had arranged a surprise marriage ceremony ... in which she married herself.

"I’d been saying a few years that if I hadn't gotten married by the time I was 40, I’d just have a wedding by myself," Eleby told ABC News today. "I decided I didn't want it to be a joke. I wanted to have a celebration of myself. My wedding was going to be about me making a commitment to love myself, to honor myself and to know my self-worth."





So Eleby got in touch with event planner Darrel Colone, who said she was the easiest and hardest client he ever had to work with.

"She's a kindergarten teacher in Saudi Arabia, so she's only in the Texasarea once or twice a year," Colone told ABC News. "We planned everything mostly through email, Facebook message and text."

Eleby said she started planning her Jan. 3 "wedding" during late-July 2014.

Colone said he loved that Eleby decided to plan such an unconventional event, so he chose an equally unusual venue -- the Houston Museum of African American Culture.



ht_yasmin_elebi_wedding_07_jc_150129_4x3_992.jpg
Eric B. Blackshire
Yasmin Elebi, 40, married herself in a wedding and reception hosted at the Houston Museum of African American Culturemore +


"We were allowed to choose an exhibit to have in the gallery area, where guests would arrive, and we chose 'Women of the New Tribe,' Colone said. "They were pictures of strong African American women in the country that reflected the strong, independent, cultured and well-traveled woman Yasmin was."

When Eleby arrived at the museum, guests were escorted to the ceremony space complete with candles, purple ambient light and beautiful flowers.

"Everyone was so amazed when they saw the room," Colone said. "They were like, 'Is this a wedding? A wedding? What's going on!'"

That's when Eleby said she came dancing down the aisle to Stevie Wonder's "Isn't She Lovely," along with her mother and bridesmaid. She was wearing a purple gown because purple is her favorite color. The dance ended at the altar in the center of the room. Colone said he arranged for Eleby to be in the middle of the guests arranged in a circle because he wanted her to be the center of attention.

Three ministers -- her eldest sister, a niece and friend -- then asked together, "Who thinks Yasmin is 40 and fabulous?" Colone said. He added that the 160 guests in the room chimed, "We do!"



ht_yasmin_elebi_wedding_05_jc_150129_4x3_992.jpg
Eric B. Blackshire
Yasmin Elebi, 40, married herself in a wedding and reception hosted at the Houston Museum of African American Culture.more +


The ceremony's mood changed, Yasmin said, when she started saying her vows to herself with the help of her ministers. They were on committing to forgive, love and honor yourself, she said.

"The advice and speeches given during my vows weren’t just for me," Eleby said. "Everyone there started reflecting on their life on how you have to forgive yourself for the past and know you are a worthy human being worthy of love. You first have to love yourself. The more love you have yourself, the more you can love others."

There was barely a dry eye in the room, Colone said, especially when Eleby sang, "I Believe I Can Fly," at the end of the ceremony.

Eleby said she was overwhelmed and started crying herself when she sang the second verse: "There are miracles in this life that I must achieve, but I know first that it starts inside of me."

The tears were quickly wiped away by the lavish reception afterwards, Colone said.



ht_yasmin_elebi_wedding_04_jc_150129_4x3_992.jpg
Eric B. Blackshire
Yasmin Elebi, 40, married herself in a wedding and reception hosted at the Houston Museum of African American Culture.more +


"Her first dance was a line dance strut with her Delta sorority sisters," Colone said. "The reception was amazing. She had everything -- four food stations with all the food anyone could possibly want, a photo booth, a live band, a D.J., and even a 5-foot-tall elephant ice sculpture. The kids even had their own room, so the parents could enjoy their adult fun on the floor."

Eleby is now back teaching kindergartners at a multinational school in Saudi Arabia. She said she recently had a second, smaller wedding and birthday celebration this past weekend with her friends there.

Though some people have tried to say Eleby's marriage to herself is ridiculous, she said she doesn't let it get to her.

"If they don’t understand the concept of self-love, I really don’t know what to say to them," Eleby told ABC News. "I have no words but, 'I am fabulous.' What I want people to take away from this is that they are worthy of love and forgiveness no matter what they've done in the past."

Eleby also revealed to ABC News that she is dating someone right now.

"I don’t know if marriage is in the future or not," she said. "I've thought that about my past relationships, but they all ended amicably because they just weren't going."

Two of her exes actually attended her wedding in Houston.

"This is something you'd do, totally up your ally," Eleby said they told her.

Wow.

I'm turning 40 next year. I think I'm just gonna celebrate my birthday and keep it pushing, though. :look:
 
We will be seeing more of this, people are replacing real relationships with virtual ones. When they are ready to form interpersonal relationships, they can't because they either haven't developed the skills or lost them, this is the result.

When I see posts on social media proclaiming I hate people, I just SMH, you don't hate people, you fear rejection and decided to capitulate to your current state of loneliness and isolation.
 
So if you wanna marry an actual person, do you divorce yourself?:look:
:lol:

This is really sad to me. I can't believe someone that would do this is truly happy with themselves. I didn't read the articles (on neither the ww nor the bw) but I just can't help but feel like they did this in hopes of someone saying i'll marry you boo. It seems attention seeking. Celebrate yourself in a normal healthy way and just keep it moving. This is neither normal nor healthy to me.
 
The woman in purple looks sad and like she let herself go physically, but I don't think this is a bad idea. It reminds me of when Oprah had a slumber party in middle age because she never got to have one in childhood. These women probably feel pressure because they are single after a certain age, and they have society saying that something is fundamentally wrong with them because of that. That they are nothing without a mate. They are saying, "No, I am not nothing, and I deserve a celebration." It is good for them if it makes them happy.

Now I know someone who met a guy online and had a wedding a short time after that. They are not together anymore. I think she just wanted to be married. I think marrying yourself is better than that. At least you're not dragging another person along with it. People marry for validation, too.
 
So if someone asks her if she's married, does she say yes?

Anyway, I can certainly understand the concept of loving yourself and making a commitment to care for, respect and love yourself no matter what. But that is something private and doesn't need a ceremony in front of multiple guests.
'This does seem pretty sad though, because it seems that they have given up on love so they have chosen to just finally have their dream wedding/ their big day complete with guests. And seems a little attention seeking.
 
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I think it's a bit much but I had the big wedding and to be honest it's not all it's cracked up to be. What matters is what happens after the wedding. But it's a lot of fun planning a big party celebrating love and a new beginning. Women are chastised for not getting married and made to feel less than. Then when they decide to celebrate a commitment and deep love for themselves they are criticized again. I couldn't do it, but they aren't hurting anyone. They are trying to have fun. They are not saying they will never get married either or that they don't want a partner. But in the meantime they are trying their best to partner with themselves. I wish them well and I wish them happiness. It appears to be an act of desperation. But I don't think it really is. For some perhaps, but for others I believe it's like traveling alone, buying a home alone, choosing to adopt or have a child alone. It's away of making peace. A way to say if it is just me, that's enough, and I'm happy with that. I think our society is conditioned to put single women down and it needs to stop.
 
I think it's a bit much but I had the big wedding and to be honest it's not all it's cracked up to be. What matters is what happens after the wedding. But it's a lot of fun planning a big party celebrating love and a new beginning. Women are chastised for not getting married and made to feel less than. Then when they decide to celebrate a commitment and deep love for themselves they are criticized again. I couldn't do it, but they aren't hurting anyone. They are trying to have fun. They are not saying they will never get married either or that they don't want a partner. But in the meantime they are trying their best to partner with themselves. I wish them well and I wish them happiness. It appears to be an act of desperation. But I don't think it really is. For some perhaps, but for others I believe it's like traveling alone, buying a home alone, choosing to adopt or have a child alone. It's away of making peace. A way to say if it is just me, that's enough, and I'm happy with that. I think our society is conditioned to put single women down and it needs to stop.

I agree, but I wonder why not throw a big party for yourself, maybe at the next birthday. I think that would be lovely, you can be as over the top as you want, and no one would look sideways.
 
I think it's a bit much but I had the big wedding and to be honest it's not all it's cracked up to be. What matters is what happens after the wedding. But it's a lot of fun planning a big party celebrating love and a new beginning. Women are chastised for not getting married and made to feel less than. Then when they decide to celebrate a commitment and deep love for themselves they are criticized again. I couldn't do it, but they aren't hurting anyone. They are trying to have fun. They are not saying they will never get married either or that they don't want a partner. But in the meantime they are trying their best to partner with themselves. I wish them well and I wish them happiness. It appears to be an act of desperation. But I don't think it really is. For some perhaps, but for others I believe it's like traveling alone, buying a home alone, choosing to adopt or have a child alone. It's away of making peace. A way to say if it is just me, that's enough, and I'm happy with that. I think our society is conditioned to put single women down and it needs to stop.


I agree with your post 100%. :yep:

I was so ready to come in here and laugh at these women and shake my head at this lunacy... :nono:

But when I watched the video, I actually started to feel a little sorry for these women. :ohwell: My heart broke for them actually. I know how it feels to want to be married (I'm currently single), and I know how it feels to have society, family members, strangers (even!) asking you when you will be married, or making you feel like you're somehow "less than", "strange" or "weird" because you're (insert your age here) and STILL not married.... :ohwell:

So I completely understand where they are coming from.

While I would NEVER engage in this type of stunt myself, I don't think that what they are doing is hurting anyone really. If they feel happy with what they're doing, who am I to laugh/mock them? If this helps them to focus on self-love, to feel positive, to feel "special" for a day, or to just stop the naggers and questioners, well then, hey...more power to them.

I thought I would find them silly for doing this, but inside my heart kind of aches a little for them, because I know it can't be easy to WANT something, but have absolutely no real control over whether you will have it or not. I do think however that there are ways you can increase your chances of dating and getting married. :yep:

I just hope these ladies (if they haven't done so already) seek some counseling to heal any possible baggage/childhood traumas/or anything else that could possibly unknowingly/subconsciously be hindering them from finding a truly loving and lasting relationship. :yep: Even if just going to counseling to share their frustrations for a few sessions and getting some positive uplifting encouragement might help them tremendously.
 
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