Holidays are weird, emotionally laden times. Sometimes it feels like the whole world is in love and full of twinkling lights, and sometimes it feels like everyone is in a magical winter wonderland but you, and sometimes youâve been in line at Target for forty-five minutes and youâre thinking about hiding in the pillow aisle and taking a nap, and your mom wonât stop texting you, so you text your sister, and then the eggnog youâre holding explodes.
Plus, you spend lots of time with people who have known you forever, but may not actually know you or anything about your life. And they care (letâs just pretend theyâre doing it because they care!) so they ask inappropriate questions in the name of small talk.
If youâre unmarried and of a certain age, relatives love to ask you why. The right answer is a complicated Venn diagram depending on how youâre feeling about yourself, your life, and that relative on that day.
And while itâs tempting to think of something cutting to say in return, letâs be real. Your grandma has lived through multiple world wars and may not deserve that. So here are nine all-too-real interactions and survival tactics designed to help you last past dessert.
1.The Too Little Information
Scene: Your mother and her flock of neighborhood best friendsâthe women who raised you, fed you, hugged you, and sent you out into the worldâcall you over. They spend ten minutes dissecting the love lives of their children, their nieces and nephews, the mailmanâs children, and their favorite celebritiesâ children. Theyâve all read the recent news articles about Tinder, ghosting, and this weekâs Modern Love column. They cover which venture capitalists have invested in which apps recently. They analyze the changing statistics about how oneâs income, age, and level of education affect oneâs chances for getting and staying married. Then they turn to you and ask what itâs really like out there for you.
Comeback: âGood!â
2. The Too Much Information
Scene: Your dadâs twin sister really restrains herself this year. She waits until grace is said and in the pause while the table is still quiet, she booms out, âHowâs your love life? You know, the problem with you kids is you canât commit!â
Comeback: âI ate Honeynut Cheerios on my couch last night while watching Jane the Virgin, making a PowerPoint for work, swiping on Tinder, and deleting spam messages on OKCupid. Do you want to see the twenty-minute conversation I had with a man about the differences between Corgis and Dachsunds? I made an Anthony Wiener joke and he asked if I was a Democrat and then blocked me.â
3. The Interference
Scene: You and your uncle, whoâs always been more of an older brother, are watching the parade on television while drinking beer on the couch. Youâve always idolized him as the epitome of coolâhe was riding a motorcycle when you were in middle school, and heâs brought a series of beautiful girlfriends with awesome hair to holidays over the years. Watching him taught you everything you know about flirting. Heâs holding his six-month-old and keeping an eye on his toddler, who is playing a game on his phone that appears to involve landing the actual Mars Rover on the moon. âYou think you know how much it means to meet your person and build your own family together,â your uncle says. âBut itâs even greater thank you think it is. Youâll see.â
Comeback: Your younger brother throws a football through the living room.
4. The Emily Post for the New World
Scene: Your priggish cousin Tad drapes his arm around his new wife, who is friendly, kind, and after the wedding discarded the boulder Tad gave her as an engagement ring in favor of a slim, plain wedding band. She makes you think Tad must have some redeeming quality that you havenât seen in the thirty years youâve known him. âLiving the dream! No ball and chain dragging you down,â Tad says.
Comeback: Pretend you didnât hear him and ask his lovely wife if she would like a piece of rum cake. You donât have to be nice to people who suck.
5. The Truth Isnât That Interesting
Scene: Your grandmother hands you a biscotti, pats your hand, and readjusts the one bobby pin in her nest of curls. âNow,â she says as she takes off her shoes, âtell me whatâs going on with all those dating apps I keep hearing about. Have you met anyone nice recently?â
Comeback: âIâve been on some very boring dates with some very nice people. I dated this one man for about two months but then his work transferred him to another city. Iâve been on three dates with someone I like okay, but I think we have different values around money, family, politics, and lifestyle, so I probably wonât pursue that much further.â
6. The Millennial
Scene: Your mom sits you down to have an in-depth conversation. After youâve covered work, the presidential candidates, current events, and the changed recipe for blueberry muffins at the nearby bakery (less sweet, which is nice, but theyâve lost something in the texture), she asks about your most recent break-up.
Comeback: Start texting. Nothing is real except your phone. Be the phone.
7. The Jane Austen
Scene: Your second cousin Matilda on your fatherâs side has five cats, each represented by a bejeweled broach on her bouclĂŠ jacket. Her husband has fallen asleep at the table at every dinner youâve ever attended with him. He snores gently beside her as she zeroes in on you. âWhen are you going to find a nice wife and settle down and give your poor parents grandchildren?â Matilda asks.
To her credit, your mother looks horrified.
Comeback: âAh, yes. It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife. Jane Austen wrote that in 1813. Have we really not changed at all in over a century? Is this still a truth universally acknowledged? I perhaps find myself more in need of the good fortune than the wifeâhaving graduated in 2008, Iâm earning less than my peers from 25 years ago and am deeply in debt to society for the cost of my education.â
8. The Wink and a Smile
Scene: Your auntâs best friend swoops down you as youâre carrying a full load of precariously stacked dishes to the kitchen. Youâve met for the first time that night. Without any preamble, she asks how old you are. Startled, you answer. She trills cheerily, âOh, you have plenty of time! I didnât get married until I was 33!â
Comeback: âI also have plenty of dates!â Nudge her with a chummy elbowâand drop the plates.
9. The This-Got-Real-Fast
Scene: Your dadâs friend from business school, who always asks you to call him Uncle Harry and acts as though heâs family even though youâve met him a total of three times, looks unreasonably pleased to be seated next to you at dinner. He has no children. Heâs been married four times. âLooks like they seated the singles together!â he says happily. âNow, an old man like myself, I understandâalthough between you and me, I play golf five times a week and Iâm more fit than I was when I was twenty, if you know what I meanââ He winks. âBut a lovely young woman like yourselfâwhat are you doing without a date?â
Comeback: âYou know, Iâm not sure. I think Iâd be a good partner. Iâve invested a fair amount of time, energy, and effort into looking. They say you should create a happy life for myself and Iâve done that. But it just doesnât seem to have happened yet. Maybe itâs a matter of luck? Would you mind passing the sweet potatoes, please?â