jodoh belum sampai, rilek ah…

I think it’s one of those rhetorical questions a single person gets when s/he is… uh single. “Bila lagi?” “When is your turn?” “Where’s the boyfriend?” “Cannot get married too late wohhh, otherwise end up an old maid”.

Translated: I could be the CEO of Earth Sdn Bhd governing the lives of nearly 7 billion peps and wildlife and fish and squid, but if I were still single, in the end I’d just wind up an old maid. Regardless.

To put it simply, you could be at your death bed hanging on to dear life and I would be the sole decider on whether you live or die and your last breath would be wasted with these words hurled towards my powerful but single face, “you fucking old maid”.

Well, people are weird, you never know.

When minishorts blogged about being unmarried, I immediately thought of my current situation.

And of all people, it came in the form of a security guard.

I’ve been getting quite chummy with the guards at my sister’s place, mostly for easier access to the visitors’ parking lot. We speak sometimes, and one day after I bought them tea, the following conversation transpired. For the record, this is a different guard from the one I had a similar conversation with.

“Berapa umur kak?”
“25. Muda lagi.”
“25 muda? Ish… 25 dah nak kahwin dah, berumahtangga. You ingat 25 muda ke?”
“Memang la… bukannya harap sangat nak kahwin tu.”
“Tak boleh macam tu kak… orang kata, rumahtangga itu syurga.”
“Kalau takde jodoh, apa boleh buat…”
“Takde jodoh? Standard kak tinggi sangat ke?”
“Taklah… memang sekarang takde jodoh… tunggu lah…”
“Nak tunggu sampai bila??? 25 dah nak tua woooooo.”
“La… kak I kahwin umur 29… memang sekarang cina kahwin lambat punya…”
“You punya akak kahwin umur 29, abis you nak kahwin umur 29 juga? Jangan tiru orang…”

-_-”

“You umur berapa?” I asked him.
“22.”
“Abis, you dah kahwin ke belum? Ni nak kata orang…”
“Eh laki kahwin tua takpe, pompuan tak boleh. You tengok tu Siti Nurhaliza ngan Datuk K… Umur CT berapa… umur Datuk K berapa… kalau laki ha… berapa tua pun boleh kahwin…”
“Ah k la I naik atas dulu, bai!”

If you don’t understand Malay, basically I was “reprimanded” for not even thinking of wanting to get married anytime soon.

Thinking back, it’s rather… surreal. In any case, I’ve been careful not to bump into him. Can’t be bothered to get into the whole single-don’t-see-it-as-a-problem ‘conversation’ again.

Gilby Clarke is kinda hot.

bring on the beer

I was answering some interview questions when I just realised that I have been single for 5 years. This will be my 6th year of singlehood and if things doesn’t change soon, still counting…

Some people might think that it’s depressing. I have never really thought about it like that.

I have a great family, wonderful friends, and somehow they just made up for the lack of a steady male companion.

Of course I bitch and whine about how I would like things to change, how great it would be to have someone to hold hands with, but deep down I am wondering if I am ready for that change.

There have been slipped opportunities when things don’t and can’t work out, but I am not taking those into account. I don’t consider them boyfriends; relationships maybe but of a different, more complex and complicated kind.

At the wedding dinner, relatives a few times removed kept asking me when it would be my turn. I don’t even have a boyfriend to speak of!

Or maybe my perspective is so screwed that I should in fact be worried and start presenting myself better and snatch that ever elusive boyfriend-material fella.

This year I turn 25. My mother got married at my age. My grandmother got hitched at 15.

Maybe my turn will come at 35.

In this age where women are getting married at a later age, it is really not that scary a thought.

But first I’d have to snag a fella first, yeah? So if you know someone…

Perhaps in a couple of years I’ll be worried. Perhaps not. In the meantime, bring on the beers!

Related: female, 24, single, kl

so, are you getting hitched yet?

I bumped into an acquaintance earlier and after saying hi-what-not, asked him if he had a girlfriend (it’s the most standard and safest thing to ask any guy or girl you haven’t seen in yonks if they are in a relationship).

“I am getting married in September!” he beamed.

“Huh… didn’t you like, just started dating not long ago?”

“Yeah, one year actually, no use dating for 6 years before deciding to get married.”

I came back to the office and told my colleagues about it. One colleague said that a friend of hers met a guy online, talked to him via the net for a month, then met in real life and went out for five, and after that they were hitched. Now they have two kids.

It just is an extraordinary thing for me that people could get married so quickly and easily. Man, I don’t exactly know how long you have to be together to get married, but I put my minimum requirement at 2 years. It’s not a bad thing or anything to be married after a short while, it just seems a tad hasty to me.

Then again I have not met anyone I would want to spend an eternity with.

I have enough trouble looking for anyone who would want to spend 24 hours with me.

By the way congratulations to you! If you still read my blog, you would see this and I hope you don’t mind me being amazed and kolot, but damn we should have gone out :P

the run-around guys

For some unknown reasons, this past weekend I’d been having a lot of conversations on the topics of being single, being in a relationship, being a male and being a female. The eternal incomprehensible tangles of having different organs and functions that make sad love songs top of the charts and people like me bitching about it.

I don’t know what it means, maybe all it means is that when you talk, someone else will talk back. I don’t know, it’s not like there’s a big big mystery waiting to be uncovered. Despite assurances that I am still young this that, despite my overplayed dramatisation of singlehood, I am not overly worried. Maybe I *should* be, maybe I should start thinking about worrying.

Meanwhile, drinks all around!

Back in high school I used to hang out with this circle of friends, and over the years I noticed the ‘changing partners’ game. Girl A goes out with Guy A, they break up, Girl A gets together with Guy A’s buddy Guy B, Guy A gets together with Girl B, everyone breaks up, Guy B and Girl C gets together, Guy A then has interest in Girl C bla bla bla… the point of the matter is, everyone was dating everyone else within the same circle. Not my cup of tea but it seems to have continued on till today, Girl B and Guy N finally got together.

Then I came to KL to discover a whole new breed of men — the ones who would try their luck with every girl within the same circle. There may be a proper name for this type of men (desperate, horny, asshole, jerk, slut), but I call them the ‘Run-Around’ guys for lack of a more polite better term. Single girls worldwide may know of this situation — you get to know a guy, he seems nice and all, then you introduce him to all your girlfriends and he hits on them. Some do it discreetly, some don’t even bother to cover their tracks but you, the single girl is most likely to remain ignorant until you exchange notes with your girlfriends.

Quite sad lor. I don’t know if those guys realise it, but once notes have been passed around over and over, the circle of girls that they try so hard to infiltrate would mark them as history. Adios, tata, goodnight and goodbye. Or at least that is what I would do. So don’t bother, thanks.

There are also the girls who attempt to steal her friend’s every potential male in sight, but that’s another story.

While on friendships, I was still a kid in primary school when I experienced my first non-friendship friendship. A toddler my age and I mutually agreed to cease all communications.

“I don’t want to friend you already.”

“Don’t friend, don’t friend lah!”

Behold the cold war! How glorious it was back in those days to give the cold shoulder because if you even give the slightest hint of looking at the other person, there goes all your 8 year old credibility. Your friend who dared lend the other warring party a pencil would be semi-permanently marked as belonging to the other side, unless she comes back with her tail between her legs offering some juicy gossip for sniggers and laughter, such as the other one got into trouble with so-and-so teacher. Until then she is not worthy of your mighty attention. Feel free to look the other way and completely ignore her even if she was still standing in front of you, pretty much bewildered at the change of situation.

It was cute. But when adults still do it, it is downright stupid and childish and marks you on the losing end. You are no longer 8 years old. Grow the fuck up, why don’t you?

On another note, a big hi to Jazz Mamma of The Top Room! The place was nice, the music better.

And happy birthday eyeris! May your balls never sag till the end of time.

female, 24, single, kl

For 24 years I had shuffled by without knowing what was a Kelly or a Birkin, much less know what they looked like. Then in a SATC episode, Samantha Jones coveted a Birkin and it hit me that branded bags are actually given proper names. It’s no longer ‘just a Prada’ or ‘yet another expensive LV that you cannot afford’ and becomes ‘you are a nobody until you carry a Kelly’. Something like that.

In comparison, some women desire a Kelly/Birkin like how I desired my 19″ Samsung 913N LCD monitor that got stolen. I am still grieving.

Nah I am not trying to make any statements. I had a conversation with my sister the other day on women accessories, then I went home and googled for information on the Kelly/Birkin. They look like normal big bags to me, like how some of you would think that my stolen monitor was just another normal big monitor.

But I suppose I should be more conscientious about such things. It would definitely help in my case — a single 24 year old female in a city looking for the possibilities of a new romantic relationship that would sweep her off her size 9 feet. Especially after I posed this question to my sister, “Why can’t I get a boyfriend when there are women uglier than me already married?” and got this answer after a long thoughtful while, “You are too vulgar.”

Perhaps. She was referring to my behaviour, ie my walking, sitting etc, but let’s talk about accessories. I don’t own earrings because I have no need for them. No holes, you see. I hate wearing watches, bangles, bracelets and rings because I don’t feel comfortable having things on my arms and fingers. The only gold necklace I own is the one that my mom gave me for my 21st birthday. A while back someone showed me a RM5000++ Tiffany diamond ring imported from New York that she had saved so hard to buy, and it looked like a ring with bits of glass in it to me.

What about make up, eh? I hardly use it. It’s not like I have a natural glowing complexion that gives off light and a certain aura like you see in SK-II advertisements, but I’d could only be arsed to plaster my face with chemical paint when I go out clubbing, or have to attend events like weddings and the first day of Chinese New Year. I am not totally lost to not have the basic make up stuff — powder/ foundation thingy, eyebrow pencil, one shade of blusher, a palette of eyeshadow colours that I do not know how to use and a few lipsticks, some leftover from the 90s.

I love ‘curtains’ — long dressy gypsy skirts because they are easy to wear and rather ‘airy’. But if we meet for mamak, you are most likely to see me in my grey Abercrombie and Fitch t-shirt marked ‘Rebel #1′ and light brown knee-length shorts that I bought from the men’s department in FOS. I’d probably be carrying the same big bag that I’d carried the day before and the day before that and the days before that, because all my stuff are unceremoniously dumped in it.

So failing as a female, kan? Luckily I love shoes because in the words of Keira Knightly, they are so pretty. Maybe that’s my only redeeming female part.

Then I read this article and finally really understood what a friend told me ages ago, about receiving better service or any service at all if you trot around town with a branded bag. She worked in KLCC in one of those expensive looking stores and KLCC being KLCC, you have a lot of people ‘just looking’, too nervous to even look at the price tag. So how do you differentiate the ‘browsing only’ horde with the creme de la creme elite? “Very simple,” she answered, “just look at their handbags. Sometimes the rich and famous would come out in slippers and shorts but you can be sure that their handbags are le original designer stuff.”

Yesterday I watched a programme on 8TV, something about three women aged 26, 35 and 45 preparing their upcoming weddings in different ways. The 26 year old one planned a somewhat elaborate, serious wedding, stuff that little girls dream of. Not a dry eye in the house, that kind of stuff. The 35 year old wanted a relaxed mood, and during her exchange of vows said to her husband, “I’m glad I found someone like you, because I really looked” [add facial comedy effect]. After the formal stuff was done with, she changed into a black top and white pants so she could enjoy her own wedding, dancing and all. The 45 year old’s wedding was very simple, with two kids from either her or her husband’s previous marriage/affair up the stage with the priest. Her very old father with great effort walked her down the aisle and he looked real proud and happy and was crying a lot. Mostly because if she had waited a couple more years, it wouldn’t be feasible to drag him from six feet under to perform his traditional fatherly duties.

The 26 year old Chinese version would be 30 tables for each side of the family, 2.5 to 3 hours of a 10-course meal, arriving at 7 pm only to wait for 8 or 8.30 pm. Substitute ‘cheers’ with ‘yumseng’, hand the mic to a couple old distant relatives so they could sing out-of-tune Hokkien oldies, go around all the tables for the obligatory we-can-do-better-than-the-previous-table yum sengs, voila! a very very happy Chinese family. Congratulations, you have done it, you have made us all proud by proving how very Chinese both of you are.

35 years old? A more sombre affair, smaller, less relatives. 45 years old? What 45 years old? If you are not married by 35, you are never getting married and can look forward to a life of community service because you have no other obligations anyway. The four pillars of your local temple/church are your new best friends.

I have 11 years to go.

Then there was the incident with a security guard at my sis’s place when he asked me how old I was.

“24. I am still young lah.”

“24?!? My sister is 24 and she already has three kids.”

If that doesn’t get you thinking, I don’t know what will.

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