Shani Silver TWA.JPG

Hi, I’m Shani

I’m the host of A Single Serving Podcast and the author of A Single Revolution. I’m changing the narrative around being single, because so far it’s had pretty bad PR. I’m not an advocate for singlehood. I’m an advocate for women feeling good while single—there’s a difference.

What they say about my work

shanisilver@gmail.com

Single Girls Get The Couch: 5 Years Later

Originally published in August 2023.

Five years ago I wrote an essay about how single people are treated as permanent children by their loved ones. We’re not treated to the same respect or dignity that society gives to two people who split rent and bills. At the time I’d hoped it would find fuel and spark enough to change the dynamics of singlehood and the prevalence of single-shaming. In reality, it made more of a dent than a crater, but this very topic is still my only Tiktok video with a million views, so something’s resonating.

If you’re single, you don’t have to just accept the shittiest sleeping situation on a group trip. You don’t have to let your family relegate you to something less-than just because you aren’t partnered. You are allowed to say something, you’re allowed to count just as much as everyone else, and any dwelling that doesn’t have the same sleeping privacy for you as it does for couples is simply not big enough for this group’s vacation.

In celebration of five years in my line of work (and if you’re wondering, that line of work is going against grains), the essay is included below for your enjoyment. I also hope it helps you stand up to friends and family who think you don’t deserve privacy or dignity just because you’re single. A grown-up is a grown-up, and we don’t have to be having sex with the same person regularly just to prove that.

Single Girls Get The Couch, August 2019

I love my friends. I love my family. But after a certain age, something happens when single girls spend time with these cohorts, and I think it’s time we acknowledge it — and then cease.

It isn’t intentional of course, the subtle gestures that let single women know they’re not officially human yet. I notice it most when I am in a group, or visiting friends, or renting vacation spaces: Silly Shani, you’re not enough to take up an entire guest room! All that space is meant for a couple, otherwise it’s just half-used, and that is a waste of space. You are wasting space, being alone. To maximize our utilization of this AirBnB, you should sleep on the couch, because that’s enough for a single person who doesn’t require privacy because she can’t possibly be having sex. If there happens to be a children’s room with bunk beds tho, you can have that.

Yes, it’s a bit childish — but we’d never make a couple feel like children! That would be so rude! A couple should never have the worst sleeping situation available, that is where single girls go. By the way, you’ll be paying the same amount as the rest of us.

I love watching grown adults dining in public together trying to determine where everyone will sit around a table. I used to hang back and take whatever leftover perch remained after all the couples nestled together, plunking myself down between the pairs that obviously didn’t care to chat to each other.

Now I walk right up to the table and sit down wherever I chose. Let the happy people sort the rest out, I’ve done my time. That ancient Downton Abbey rule where you never sit next to your spouse sounds genius to me. Mix things up! Have new conversations with people you don’t see much, or know well. Now people are concerned if they sit their spouse next to a single woman, she’ll steal him. Such the minx, with all her dinner banter of the weather, how much she hates the subway, and the genuine value of Amazon Prime.

There’s the sense that I don’t “get” people’s lives anymore, once they’ve wed and reproduced and are suddenly seen as having achieved completeness. My download is apparently stuck at 50%. I’ve long observed that partnered people no longer know how to speak to single people. As if we’re suddenly of different genetic matter. I wonder, when marrieds get together, do they talk about cohabitation and romantic partnership exclusively? Do they think we’d just sit there, Aperol spritz in hand, staring blankly into space, confused by the discussion?

The point is that invitations dry up over time; a single woman will get asked to hang out less. We become less of an asset to the group dynamic and more of a liability. Someone talk to her, about anything, I don’t know…she’s alone.

No one knows what to do with a single girl. We’re the equivalent of a third arm growing from one’s neck. Everyone knows it’s there but ignores it, confused as to why it exists. There’s no purpose to it unless some kind of unique chore arises.

Single women are seen as incomplete. What is an adjective at 29 suddenly becomes a problem at 30. Everyone is seemingly moving forward but the single woman is stuck, she can’t move. Lord knows she can’t get up from the kid’s table of life unless a man grabs her hand and leads her. It’s a perpetual childhood, a failure to grow up, until suddenly we’re that cool old woman in quirky round glasses with an “alternative lifestyle” and lots of plants.

I am moving forward and I am thriving, or at least trying to. Every time I sit in the backseat of a couple’s car or with a motley crew of leftovers at wedding reception table #14 or consciously try to talk to the woman in the couple more than the man, I’m reminded of how superfluous the world tries to make me feel, simply because I’m unpartnered.

I’m unpartnered, so I’m incomplete. I’m unpartnered, so I’m not balanced. I’m unpartnered, so I stick out. And rather than looking at me and thinking, “Hey, I’ve got a friend she should meet,” they think, “Whew, I’m so glad I don’t have to be her anymore.” If we can only see ourselves, and only understand ourselves, and only empathize with ourselves, we run in a pretty selfish circle.

Someday, I will be in a couple. And there will certainly be a wave of relief that feels like standing on the Splash Water Falls bridge. I will be relieved to have company, affection, someone who, in moments of great disaster or joy, thinks of me first. That will all be fantastic. But it won’t erase my understanding of what it’s like to be a woman who doesn’t have that. Not who doesn’t have that yet, but simply who doesn’t have that. And I don’t know how long my understanding of how she feels will hold, but I do know that she will always, 100% always, get my guest room.

Single People Aren’t Stupid

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