I am a one woman man. The woman who knows me better than myself. My mirror reflection or the one whom I see God within. Are we alike or opposites or are we opposites yet complementary. This soul contract between us made before this life. I am dreaming and fantasizing about that something that is not real. It is just a story I wish to come true. God gives me subtle clues or guiding me directly to where I must be.
I have spiritually awakened and am walking this line between heaven and hell. Is it purgatory, this earth or universal laboratory? I test myself every day and want to push myself beyond my comfort zone. It takes fresh experiences, surroundings, and inputs for us to see familiar shadows in a new light.[1] Though, I look back and remember I did not like being around some of the people I worked with, even an immediate supervisor as I recall. A previous post on love and marriage.
Then we have the relationship between a man and a woman, where men often are superior. A young woman of intelligent, inventive mind, personal resourcefulness and energy sets off on a heroine’s adventure; by the end of her story, a man of superior wisdom and either superior age, income, or both, has worn her into submission.[2] Even the church became male-dominate. When we talk about God, there usually is not reference to a woman except in inferior roles. Even though noted. women in the Bible like Ruth for saving her people, Ruth for her unwavering devotion, and the Blessed Mary of Nazareth chosen as the mother of Jesus Christ. The was another woman, Joan of Arc, who became a superior warrior in the name of God and gave her life to save many. The tides are turning in today’s world where women are becoming less submissive.
I Am a One Woman Man Because There Is One Woman for This Man
Women historically thought differently about sex, and the way they thought it to be. Scientifically, it gave inspiration to Marie Curie for her expert research on radioactivity, Susan B. Anthony helped to end women’s suffrage and give them a right to vote, and Rosa Parks, a Black woman in Montgomery, Alabama, who would not give up her bus seat for a white man. It will serve no purpose for me to explain how the necessary knowledge came into my possession; but I will say that the story was only in part pieced, together by me. Another hand is responsible for much of the detail and for a certain occasional emotionalism which is, I believe, wholly foreign to my own style.[3] This previous passage refers to the famous Jane Austen novel, Emma. Too many men say they are a one woman man but art not.
Usually when stories told and written, they are either in first-person or third-person narrative form. As an ever-learning writer, I enjoy using third-person storytelling methods more because it makes the work look less self-centered with the self or ego. Most of the time I use both formats when writing.
Humans tell stories to share information, evoke emotions, and change opinions. An inherent dimension of these stories is the narrative perspective from which they are told: Sometimes stories are told from a person's first-person narrative perspective (e.g., using I/me pronouns), whereas other times, they are told about the person using a third-person narrative perspective (e.g., using he/him, she/her, etc., pronouns).[4] It seems today that we should not use certain expressions when referring to a particular group, which leads to separation and seems one-sided, as a general rule. All writing should be all inclusive of everyone who reads it, whether it is a woman or man.
In Writing, The Egoic I Is First Person, Less Used Than Second or Third Person
The more prominent subject today is consciousness, or the momentary awareness we all should focus on instead of the past or future. There are still people gifted with seeing into the future and are serving a mediumship, often judged as pseudoscience. Consciousness is at the center of the mind-body problem. It remains as fascinating a puzzle now as it has been across the many years that humans have reflected upon their minds.
Scientists explore the physical basis of consciousness, its neuronal correlates, its sensory inputs, and processing. Metaphysicians assert that mind is expansive and is something other than matter, brain chemistry, and phenomenal states within the brain. Consciousness is a mystery.[5] There is so much research and modern technology and how the brain works. Yet, even as I delve more into this and other referencing topics, I still ask if she is out there. Not out of loneliness do I ask but a woman who is compatible with me. Fate, I do not believe so much but chance or accident of meeting the right woman is possible. I have may already met her without realizing it.
In perspective what I just wrote, this topic is often changing with me realizing the statement, I am a one woman man, should not be stated.. If she is, let you and her come together naturally without expecting it. No matter what our belief is, men who are single and wonder if she is out there, meaning a future partner or wife has often been and will often be a common question for us.
References:
[1] Straza, Erin. Comfort Detox : Finding Freedom from Habits That Bind You, InterVarsity Press, 2017. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/atpa-ebooks/detail.action?docID=4786770.
Created from atpa-ebooks on 2026-05-22 22:16:41.
[2] Anderson, Kathleen. "Fathers and Lovers: The Gender Dynamics of Relational Influence in Emma." Persuasions : The Jane Austen Journal On-Line, vol. 21, no. 2, 2000. ProQuest, https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/fathers-lovers-gender-dynamics-relational/docview/2309812859/se-2.
[3] The Dreaming Sex : Early Tales of Scientific Imagination by Women, edited by Mike Ashley, Peter Owen Limited, 2011. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/atpa-ebooks/detail.action?docID=838855.
Created from atpa-ebooks on 2026-05-22 22:28:54.
[4] Niese, Zachary A. "He Sees the Forest, I See the Trees: Narrative Perspective Shifts How Abstractly People Construe a Text." Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, vol. 129, no. 5, 2025, pp. 773. ProQuest, https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/he-sees-forest-i-see-trees-narrative-perspective/docview/3261358819/se-2, doi:https://doi.org/10.1037/pspa0000462.
[5] McParland, Robert. Cultural Memory, Consciousness, and the Modernist Novel, Academica Press, 2022. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/atpa-ebooks/detail.action?docID=6887908.
Created from atpa-ebooks on 2026-05-22 22:35:19.