Author Martin Gallatin Lover Shopping Book tells singles how to be married one year from today DEBBIE L. SKLAR Special to The Jewish News ou've just entered the supermarket after a hec- tic day at work. You make a quick stop at the vege- table section and select a ripe tomato for the salad you'll be eating alone tonight. Just as you reach for the red plump juicy one, another hand does the same. You think, "I've met the mate of my dreams!' "Just remember, love is just a hello away;' says Martin V. Gallatin, the New York-based sociologist and author of Lover Shopping for Men and Women: How to be Married One Year From Today (Shapolsky Publishers). The book, which took five years to write, stemmed from seminars Gallatin taught in 1978. Subjects were: compositive thinking, becoming successful and how to get what you want. "Mostly single people showed up," he said during a recent telephone in- terview. "I started to orient the lif meetings to their needs; like where to go to meet the right person!' After several meetings, he discovered that the singles weren't getting results. So in 1981, Gallatin started going out into the super- markets, department stores and other places to do his own field studies. Part of Gallatin's philosophy is that "you don't have to be married, but you could be married one year from today!' Gallatin, who never married and is in his "young forties, but unavailable," uses the one-year calculation because, "after a few months you can pretty much know if a person is good for you or not, but it takes a while to work out the details. A year is an average length of time to make sure?' Gallatin says his book differs from another book How to Find the Love of Your Life - 90 Days to a Permanent Relationship by Bern Dominitz, because his book is not as "simplistic in its approach:' The 276-page hardcover book, which is available at bookstores in the Detroit area, comes complete with a gold-toned perforated wedding invita- tion insert. Dr. Gallatin's Plan For Being Married In A Year 1. Set a specific deadline for each person you date. 2. Visualize your mate. 3. Know yourself and what you have to offer. 4. Learn the necessary dating skills. appropriate 5. Seek opportunities. 6. Only get involved with someone good for you. 7. Help make the relation- ship work. Say "yes" or propose 8. when you're ready. "The reason I put the invitation in the book is in order to get feed- back;' he explains. "It's very difficult to know what people think; they real- ly just read what they want:' lb date, Gallatin — who lived several of his younger years in Detroit — says he has been invited to three weddings since his book has been on the market. "I feel great when I get these cards," he says. "I don't attend, but I do send a note, a video or call?' Gallatin says he receives daily calls from people requesting his ad- vice on love. "I don't charge in- dividual's for advice, but let's face it. I don't make my living that way:' he quipped. However, the book which is filled with advice on everything from hang- ing out at bars, safe sex and living with rejection, offers some pointers for those looking for love. "Social success is the ability to ap- proach anyone, anywhere, anytime and begin a conversation, maintain it, and end it when you want without the fear of rejection!' According to Gallatin, the dating THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 125