The Jane Austen Guide to Happily Ever After (5 page)

BOOK: The Jane Austen Guide to Happily Ever After
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T
IP JUST FOR JANEITES
Don’t wait to pursue
happiness in love until
“some time or other”
in the future.
And isn’t that in fact the
right
way to look at it, under modern conditions?
Don’t
we have plenty of time to just have fun, play the field, or even screw up our lives completely—and still recover and find happiness later? Can’t we enjoy male “admiration” to our frivolous hearts’ content ... or experience the perks of dating a high-status man (who doesn’t really take us seriously) ... or hang onto a guy we know isn’t really right for us, just for the time being, because we’re lonely or scared ... and still go on to find “permanent” bliss with the real love of our life later on? And anyway, aren’t a lot of the mistakes that Jane Austen’s unhappy women make actually errors forced by the constraints of their age—disasters that can’t happen to us because we have so much more time and freedom to maneuver in? Can’t we
afford
to let ourselves be distracted by other things that we want from men, sex, and love in the short term, and still end up living happily ever after?
Well, yes and no. Jane Austen certainly believes in learning from your mistakes. Almost every one of her heroines has a crucial moment when she realizes that she’s been managing her love life the wrong way. They make different mistakes, but they have similar moments when they recognize the errors they’ve fallen into. For Elizabeth Bennet, it’s Darcy’s letter that shows her how she’s let herself grossly underestimate his value (and exaggerate Wickham’s). For Catherine Morland, it’s when she sees she’s in danger of losing Henry Tilney’s respect by her wild imaginings about his father. For Emma, it’s only when she sees that her match-making schemes
have unconsciously encouraged Harriett to try for a match with Mr. Knightley that she realizes she loves Mr. Knightley herself. Fortunately, Jane Austen heroines are mostly able to recover from their mistakes and go on to find happiness in love.
16
The very same thing happens today. Women suddenly notice the qualities of a man they’ve overlooked, or they see through the jerk they’ve already given too much of themselves to. They realize they’re chasing the wrong things, they change course, they grow up. At last report, Jessica Cutler of “Washingtonienne” fame was married with a baby daughter. We can hope she’s changed her mind about “Love is not enough.”
But notice that Jane Austen’s heroines don’t find happy love by persisting in their mistakes. They get to their happy endings only by seeing that they’ve gone wrong somewhere, reviewing their “past conduct,” and
changing direction.
And that kind of change in direction isn’t by any means guaranteed. Not everybody in a Jane Austen novel who goes down the wrong road turns around and heads back in the right direction. Plenty of them just keep on going.
The force of habit is very strong. Strong enough to freeze us in the shapes we’ve twisted ourselves into in the pursuit of things that won’t ever make us really happy. That’s what Elizabeth Bennet is worried about when she tries to convince her father not to let Lydia go to the military camp at
Brighton.
17
The longer Lydia goes on chasing after the attention of men who don’t really care about her, the harder it’s going to be for her to do anything else: “Her character will be fixed, and she will, at sixteen, be the most determined flirt that ever made herself and her family ridiculous.”
18
Unfortunately, this kind of thing also still happens today—more often than the scenario where the woman realizes her mistake and recalibrates to aim for happiness after all.
19
The very elbow room we modern women have—that extra decade between the time we’re first interested in guys and the time it seems reasonable to think about a “permanent” relationship—can be a liability. Those are more years we have to become “fixed” in habits that make it harder for us to look for happiness in love. It’s not so easy, when you’ve spent your twenties pursuing attention, clinging to a guy because he’s your security blanket, or enjoying the status of the high rollers you date, to do a sudden turnaround and make happy love your aim.
For a modern example of the habit-forming pursuit of things other than happiness in love, read Hephzibah Anderson’s
Chastened: The Unexpected Story of My Year without Sex.
20
Anderson broke up with her college boyfriend because “I’d fallen for another—my heart now belonged to boundless, inconstant possibilities.” She was starting out in an exciting London publishing career and let herself be carried away on a wave of “fun, giddy times.” And she acquired a love life to match. “On some deep-down level, I think I regarded my singleness as part of the deal. I told myself I was looking for something more meaningful, more lasting, yet I consistently chose entanglements with men who weren’t really available.” She spent her twenties collecting a host of self-deprecating stories
21
from relationships that either sputtered out after “a torrid few months” or never got going in the first place. By the time Anderson happened to run into that old college boyfriend—fortuitously when he was buying another girl an engagement ring at De Beers in New York—she realized he was the only man who had ever told her, “I love you.”
22
And so she set off on a year without sex hoping she could change the dynamic she’d gotten stuck in.
T
IP JUST FOR JANEITES
Stop making the same
old bad choices about men
before those choices “fix”
your character, freezing you
into habits you may not
be able to break out of.
And then, when her sex fast was over at the end of the year, instead of the fireworks she’d been expecting after “all those months, all those lessons supposedly learned,” she found herself once again having “awful” sex with a man who “felt like a stranger.” She was right back in the same old pattern. In the end she decided she
had
learned something, after all—“Getting into that situation suggested I’d made absolutely no progress, but my response showed just how much I had learned. I could tell the real thing from the fake, and from that point there was no going back.”
23
So Hephzibah Anderson did manage, in the end, something like Jane Austen’s “serious reflection” and “self-knowledge.” But those extra years that started out with “boundless,
inconstant possibilities” didn’t make it any easier. That’s when she dug the rut that it took her a solid year of practicing the opposite to even begin to climb out of.
Jane Austen’s heroines need all their extraordinary wit, energy, and “delicacy of mind” for the pursuit of happiness. We can’t afford to aim any lower.
A
DOPT AN AUSTEN ATTITUDE:
In love, do you want happiness?
Do you only
of course
want to be happy? Are you just assuming happiness will happen “some time or other”—and meanwhile actively pursuing other aims where men are concerned?
Or are you pursuing “permanent,” “rational” happiness?
W
HAT WOULD JANE DO?
She’d review her “past conduct” and consider whether she’d been aiming for happiness in love or not. For Jane Austen’s heroines, that kind of review is the starting point for transforming their lives. We’ve seen that they’re driven to rethink the course they’re on by crises in their relationships. But to Jane Austen’s way of thinking, it is
not
necessary to wait until you’ve made a complete fool of yourself and—like Emma or Catherine Morland—find you’re in serious danger of losing the man you love, before you turn to “serious reflection” to gain the “self-knowledge” that will help you make the right choices in the future.
24
If you want to live like a Jane Austen heroine, you can decide to make today the crucial turning point in your personal novel, the apex of your story arc, the day you take stock, get to know yourself better, and go forward armed with the
self-knowledge that’s the fruit of that reflection. If you do want to pursue Jane Austen’s kind of happy love, ask yourself whether—up to this point in your life—you’ve been sticking to the path that leads where you want to go. Are your choices about men in line with what you really want? Or have you taken a detour that leads to any of the dead ends Jane Austen shows Lydia Bennet, Charlotte Lucas, or Maria Bertram ending up at?
Take your cue from Emma and Elizabeth, instead. Ask yourself: In my life up to this point, have I been distracted from the permanent happiness I really want by other enticements? Maybe because ...
• I just wanted to have a boyfriend
• I was having fun, and I didn’t want to have to start thinking about what came next
• I dissed him because my friends thought he was stupid; giving him the brush-off made me look cool
• He was obviously bad news ... but really hot
• I felt stupid still being a virgin
• He was more street smart than anyone I’d ever known; a whole bigger world seemed to be opening up in front of me
• I didn’t really like him very much, but all that attention sure was flattering
• I put off breaking up for too long because I was avoiding having to deal with his pain
• Being with him made me feel grown up, like a real woman
• My friends and family were pressuring me to find a relationship
• I hadn’t had sex in so long, and I didn’t want to feel completely out of things
• I didn’t want to be lonely
Okay, I’ll go first. Here’s a choice in my past that I can look back on and say,
There’s
where I got off the road to happy love—and from that point, things just got worse until I reversed course:
It’s my freshman year in college, and things aren’t going well. I’m having a hard time managing life more than seven hundred miles from everybody I care about—back in the days when you paid for long distance calls by the minute. I’m not making friends. Instead, I take up with C. (not his real initial), a grad student in philosophy. Because he seems to speak my language, while with the people in my dorm I feel like a creature from outer space. Because he calls me “princess,” and treats me like one. Because I feel like I can’t breathe if I don’t have
somebody
I’m close to
.
But this relationship is going nowhere; nowhere good, anyway. C. and I disagree on everything really important, and I can’t imagine his fitting into my real life—with my friends from back home, and my family—or into any life I want. And I’m not falling in love with him; I know that.
So I go home for Christmas, and while I’m there I see my friends and the guy I dated in high school. And he asks me whether I’m in love with C. I tell him airily that I don’t think I’m really old enough to be seriously in love with anybody; the important thing is that C.—this brilliant older man—is in love with me. Somehow this rationalization makes me feel instantly more grown up, like I’m a really serious person, and gives the relationship a kind of glamour
that helps me justify spending half a year of my life with a man I know I don’t love, and don’t look forward to a future with. A very Maria Bertram thing to do, I see now.

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