I've Always Had a Boyfriend and It Isn't Always That Great

Being a boyfriend girl is astronomically different from being a girl who just so happens to have a boyfriend. Instead of walking around feeling unfailingly awesome about being in a relationship, I spend a lot of time brooding over why I can't seem to exist outside one
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This post originally appeared on Bustle.

The last time I was single was during the first semester of my freshman year of college, and I like to think that I wasn't too terrible at it. My single friends and I all scampered around to parties where I kissed engineers, football players, trust fund kids and juniors (juniors!). Their kisses were beery -- sticky and stale -- but I wasn't looking for love. I wasn't even looking for company at the dining hall. I hadn't been single in four years, nearly five, and dammit, I intended to make the most of it.

I made it to January. Actually, I didn't even make it to January, if you count the regular hookup I acquired on Halloween weekend (it began, as most earth-shattering loves do, fully costumed in a frat basement). That makes for two months, or a generous four, of singledom in an otherwise unbroken spectra of boyfriends stretching all the way back to middle school.

Being a boyfriend girl is astronomically different from being a girl who just so happens to have a boyfriend. Instead of walking around feeling unfailingly awesome about being in a relationship (I get laid on the reg, high five!), I spend a lot of time brooding over why I can't seem to exist outside one. I'm a fairly independent person in some respects: I live in a studio apartment, I plan quiet nights in and I love to eat at restaurants alone. But at the end of the day, I really rely on having someone there to... what? To respond to my texts? To make me feel loved? To take care of me? It leaves me feeling clingy at best, and like an atrocious feminist at worst.

I have cruised around the therapy block too many times to count, so I'm intellectually aware that different people have different needs, and that it's wrong to feel guilty about or to judge others for having those needs. Still, I feel ashamed. And I even raise the occasional eyebrow at other boyfriend girls. Yep, I judge myself and others like me, because I wholeheartedly believe that people need time outside relationships to grow, even if I haven't given myself that time. It's a really charming defense mechanism. (Can't judge me harsher than I judge myself! Can't judge me if I judge you first!) I'm not proud. It is far better to be a boyfriend girl than a hypocrite; I'm a bit of both.

Boyfriend girls speak to their non-boyfriend-girl peers through a screen door of sorts; it's flimsy, but very real. For the most part, my friends are empathetic to my problems and value my opinion when we're discussing theirs. (I don't have evil friends.) But every now and then, I'll get an eye-roll, a "you can't even participate in this conversation," a "look, you don't really know what it's like to be single." And they're right, I don't really know what it's like to be single; all of my advice is, to them, fairly useless boyfriend-girl advice.

But I do understand the loneliness and uncertainty at the heart of dating. No partner can completely expunge feelings of inadequacy and insecurity -- not even a string of great partners. I don't want out of my relationship; I love my boyfriend, and I loved those who predated him (well, some). Still, I wonder if being sans dude for a year or two would force me to fill those voids myself, a chore that I've deftly avoided by -- how else? -- distracting myself with some boyfriends.

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