SINGLE LIFE Finding The Love Of Your Life 90 DAYS TO A PERMANENT RELA ?IONS* Ben Dominitz gives singles a method for meeting a member of the opposite sex for a worthwhile relationship HEIDI PRESS News Editor D oes this sound familiar? How many times have you sat home on a Saturday night _wishing you had a date, but ended up listening to Dick Bartley's Solid Gold Saturday Night? Once, a couple of times, every Satur- day night? All the good men are gone, the women say. All the women are JAPs, the men cry. Outside of friends, there's no one with whom to go out, many complain. But think a minute. Have you tried, really made a con- certed effort to meet members of the opposite sex to date? According to Ben Dominitz, if you're still in front of the TV on Saturday night, then you real- ly haven't been trying that hard. Dominitz, an educator and presi- dent of his own marketing company, has created a method for singles to find that special person with whom to share a relationship. He explains it in How to Find the Love of Your Life: 90 Days to a Permanent Relationship (Prima Publishing and Communications). Dominitz says singles should make just as concerted an effort fin- ding a mate as they would looking for a job. No one said it Would be easy. Yet, in non-preachy — sometimes. "hip" — language, the California- based Dominitz advises his readers to take a good look at themselves, evaluate their strengths and weaknesses, feel confident and com- municate with others a desire to meet potential dates. Planning and goal seeking are important factors in the Dominitz program. He suggests that by not hav- ing a time frame, persons tend to pro- crastinate and not follow through with their plans. Getting rid of old emotional "garbage" is another piece of advice he offers. In a chapter entitled "Removing the Obstacles," Dominitz tells his readers how to unload the old way of looking for love and open up to a new process: give yourself a positive focus; don't blame anyone for your singlehood. If you don't like it, do something about it. Take yourself away from mindless distractions and focus your activities on meeting new people. Don't be ambivalent about your feelings of independence as a single and desire for a permanent relationship; make a choice. Learn to overcome the "fear of rejection." Don't be afraid to take risks; learn from your experiences. Make a commit- ment to yourself, that your mission is to find someone with whom to -share your life.-At this point Dominitz in- cludes a pledge to be signed by the reader stating that he/she has made a commitment to himself/herself to proceed with the search. The Dominitz volume is loaded with advice, most of it really common sense. In a chapter entitled "The Secret of Being 'Attract'-ive," Dominitz-tells singles how to make themselves more appealing by con- sidering the following: personal hygiene, outer appearance, self- acceptance (be genuine), have a sense of direction, make others feel special, be a good listener, learn to flirt (make eye, contact, smile). Be the best you can be, he advises. "Take a look at yourself as you are now, and make whatever changes you deem necessary. Your life may never be quite the same." Finding a mate is like looking for a job. But, this is only the tip of the iceberg. Dominitz suggests that readers make lists about their. strengths and weaknesses and of per- . sons they know who may know other. singles, and then follow through with appointments meeting these contacts. He also suggests that either the man. or the woman can take the initiative to call the Person of the Opposite Sex (POS) for a "coffee data" It's a time- consuming process. In our fast-paced society, does Dominitz really believe that singles will Make the time? "I'd think they'd better," he said. They have to take time out to ask `what kind of person is right for me.' If people are too busy to think and plan their life, then it will be like a sinking ship." Dominitz commented that it wouldn't be too much for a single to take two hours out of his/her schedule to plan for the rest of his/her life. A native of Israel, Dominitz was trained as a concert violinist and con- ductor at the Juilliard School and at the University of Cincinnati. He left the music world to starthis own sales training business and became a con- sultant in the field of career counsel- ing. He has written a travel book and is on the continuing education facul- ty of more than 20 colleges and universities. He wrote the book after speaking with many unhappy, lonely singles. Dominitz said he saw that singles were somehow outside the communi- ty and it's the aim of his book to put them back in via networking with others who may have access to "hid- den singles," friends of friends, friends of relatives, friends of acquaintances and the like. So far, he says, reaction to his book from singles has been positive. "I've been getting some very nice mail. I got a wedding invitation from so- meone who met their mate (using his book)." Even persons in the behavioral sciences have welcomed How To Find the Love of Your Life. "The reaction has been universally positive. Some psychologists are ordering it for their clients." Dominitz wrote the book after he was married, at a time when he was THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 93