Category Archives: love & marriage

Candle Light Is Evil And Will Lead To Sex In Budget Hotels

“We will also check restaurants that offer candle-light dinners, as these often lead to possible sexual activities in budget hotels,” says JAIS director Datuk Mohamed Khusrin Munawi, who states that Valentine’s Day isn’t for Muslims.

Bwahahaha!!! Is it just me or is that the funniest thing you ever heard? Oh god. I have tears in my eyes. But that aside, I must confess I agree wholeheartedly with the good Datuk. Those damn candles are unwanted pregnancies / pre-marital sex / extra-marital affairs just waiting to happen.

You know what the solution to this is? White fluorescent lights. In fact, you know what the solution to all that’s wrong with this country is?

WHITE FLUORESCENT LIGHTS.

5 Great Reasons To Have Kids

I am no lover of little tykes. Anyone who knows me – or has read this, or has even seen me – can vouch for that. Lately though, I’ve had a tiny change of heart. I don’t seem to recoil in revulsion in as severe a degree as I used to whenever I came in proximity to a small child. While this isn’t an indication that I’ve been taken hostage by an uncontrollable urge to get knocked up, it is an indication that I’ve come to terms with the faint possibility that there might be some benefit in having (or at least being near) a kid after all. Here are five of mine:

1. Kids are amusing. They walk funny, they fall down a lot, they say strange things and they do a funny little dance whenever people dressed in giant animal costumes appear on TV.  They are a never-ending source of entertainment. What can I say? I get bored and sometimes, I run out of good DVDs.

2. Kids make great excuses. “Oh, I can’t come in to work cos my kid is really sick … Aiya, I have to leave this wonderful (read: super-boring) luncheon cos my kid’s waiting for me at home … Sorry I’m an hour late, you know my kid la, always giving me problems!!!”

3. Kids can be useful. Once they’re old enough – say, two or three – you can use them to fetch things for you, do chores around the house and if you’re lucky and with enough training, they can even lift moderately heavy, non-breakable objects and operate kitchen appliances.

4. Kids are like your personal dolls. You can dress them anyway you like and they have to comply. Sure I know there are precocious two-year-old terrors who are extremely finicky about their choice of attire but hey, take solace in the fact that they’re still small enough for you to arm-wrestle into submission.

5. Kids boost your self-esteem. They ask you all sorts of questions (why is the sun so hot, why is the sky so blue, why is that tree so big?) which you can easily answer even if you have no idea what the hell you’re talking about. “The sun is so hot cos it’s made of fire!” And they will believe you, which makes you feel really smart and powerful.

It has taken me three decades to inch away from absolute repugnance to … a somewhat milder form of repugnance. At this rate, by the time I do develop something bearing even the flimsiest resemblance to maternal instinct, I will be well be in my 60s and my uterus defunct. What a relief.

What’s The Difference Between A Man And A Chimpanzee?

sockmonkey

One is hairy, smells and scratches his arse.

The other is a chimpanzee.

Hahahaha!! I’m sorry. This is juvenile but I couldn’t resist.

Complication, Thy Name Is Cake

Why do I complicate things? Is it due to my unacknowledged fear of facing reality? Do I hide behind a façade of abstruse explanations and cleverly formulated rationalizations so that it appears as if I have a valid reason for behaving the way I do? Do I complicate matters to flabbergast other people (who usually have no idea in hell what I’m jabbering about anyway), make myself look all deep or purely to inject some entertainment value in my life?

image by stock.xchng

Just got into a lengthy (read pointless) discussion with Slugabed over the issue of Cake, after which I completely pissed him off. While I won’t indulge in the gory details of our discussion, suffice to say that it wasn’t actually about Cake. It was about the significance of Cake – a significance that was lost on him, I might add.

It was hard to carry on such a conversation with Slugabed, especially when he wouldn’t keep quiet and kept interjecting with, “What are you talking about??” in a tone which first hinted of curiosity, then bewilderment, then incredulity, eventually morphing into impatience, sarcasm and finally, downright annoyance.

I cannot lie. I felt slight stirrings of satisfaction in me when I heard Slugabed starting to buckle under his gargantuan effort to stay sane while trying to understand my ramblings, be the bigger person and give into my whims.

It’s strange. I feel like I’ve succeeded whenever I confuse and/or annoy somebody. Why does this seem to give me greater dissatisfaction than say, actually coming to a mutual compromise and chalking up some progress?

traditionalcake

I know what Slugabed is thinking right now. He’s thinking that I’ve gone completely nuts. He’s also wondering what in the world I mean by Cake – is it a code for some other confectionary? He’s trying to figure out how to handle these vile mood swings of mine. He’s formulating a strategy for the next time I decide to go berserk on him. He’s thinking next time, when she gets like this again, I’m going to just ignore her until she starts to talk some sense … or being a typical man, he’s probably wondering if he should have Cake for dessert.

Images by stock.xchng

To Love Is To Suffer

couple love

“… To avoid suffering, one must not love. But then, one suffers from not loving. Therefore, to love is to suffer; to not love is to suffer. To be happy is to love. To be happy then, is to suffer, but suffering makes one unhappy. Therefore, to be happy, one must love or love to suffer or suffer from too much happiness.”

- Woody Allen
American Actor, Author, Screenwriter and Film Director, b.1935

Image by stock.xchng

Suck On This, Baby!

breast

Yup. That’s what I’ve been doing, hunched over in front of my PC in the office. Writing a guide on breastfeeding. Anyone who’s known me for even close to 7 seconds will respond with: “You? Write a guide? On breastfeeding?!!” I might as well have announced that I’ve been writing a book on gorilla-scalping.

“What do you know about breastfeeding?” they ask incredulously.

Well, the closest I’ve ever gotten to developing anything even remotely resembling maternal instincts is touching the dog-eared tip of an Anne Geddes photo (in the process of tossing it into the dustbin). I am not married, have no kids and I am physically incapable of making cooing noises or performing any of those infantile antics adults usually perform to entertain babies. So I guess the answer to that question is obvious: nothing.

But after a couple of months on the project, I’d like to share 7 things I have learned:

1. Breast milk is best for baby.

2. Contrary to popular belief, breastfeeding does not make your boobs sag. It’s them blasted childbirth and gravity that turn your boobs into hanging tubes of flesh (yes, and this is supposed to make women feel better how?). I’m not entirely convinced about this but my boss and/or some doctors on the editorial panel may be reading this, so this is purely self-preservation.

3. Breastfeeding’s like really fulfilling and makes you feel like super-mom and all that.

4. You’ve gotta breastfeed the baby a zillion times a day and another zillion times in the dead of the night.

5. You can’t yell at your husband or call him a good-for-nothing #@%@@#!! while you’re breastfeeding the baby because this will disrupt the bonding process. You should also not be watching anything disturbing like horror movies, porn or any Mariah Carey music video while breastfeeding.

6. If you breastfeed right, your baby’s poop should be mustard-yellow in colour with tiny little seed-like things in them. It may be watery and look like diarrhea but rest assured, it’s not. Well, not unless he’s pooping 24/7 and stinking up the house, in which case you should bring him to your friendly neighbourhood paed.

7. You may or may not know this but babies bite. Hard.

Let’s Get Married … Not

hearts

I do not understand the concept and the hoopla surrounding marriage. Spoke to a friend who claimed that the only valid reason for marriage is kids. If you want kids, it helps for the government to know who made them – at least on paper. You know, to keep track of where these kids come from. What other conceivable reason can there be for the institution of marriage?

To a large extent, I feel that marriage is a concept imposed upon us by society. Because of social pressures and expectations, people are putting on their running shoes and making a mad dash for the altar. I suppose you can argue that they do it because they’re in love. Well, that view is flawed because I would take that to mean that every single person who gets hitched does it because they have found The One, and we all know that is not true.

Truth be told, marriage holds little allure for me. If I were to jump onto the bandwagon, it would – to a considerable extent – be because of what society expects of me (society being mother, grandmother and relatives who like to say things like, “Wah, still don’t want to get married ah?”).

I have wondered if I am talking like this simply because I have not found The One. Perhaps once I find The One, I’d be singing a different tune. Perhaps once The One appears in my life, I’d be happily traipsing through every bridal store in town, checking out the gaudy selections of sequined evening gowns and haggling over the price of fruitcake takeaway for the guests. Perhaps when I find The One, my brain will be polluted with nothing but thoughts of screaming pink-faced babies, soiled diapers and the Teletubbies theme song. Perhaps when He comes into my life, I will miraculously rediscover new meaning to my life and find no greater fulfillment than handpicking lint off his clothing and watching him burp the theme of Star Trek. Perhaps.

But my point remains: why get married? Doesn’t the concept go against every natural human instinct? Forgive me but aren’t we humans neophiliacs by nature? Don’t we crave the new and exciting? Don’t we live by the credo that variety is the spice of life? I mean, we get restless when sitting through a half-hour TV drama, relentlessly channel surfing just to see what else is on. We have about five hundred million different ice-cream flavours. We get sick and tired of the cute little outfit we bought just a week ago. We hop from job to job in scarily rapid succession. Is it just me or is it a tad ludicrous to expect a race this fickle to commit to one single person for the rest of their lives? In essence, what we’re doing is swearing to commit ourselves to a lifetime of sameness, of non-variety. A pretty big step especially since most of us can’t even stick to the same cellular phone for more than a year.

In this sense, isn’t marriage (to put it crudely) similar to buying an electronic gadget? Isn’t it a natural human instinct to exchange the current – and therefore, older and crummier – model for something better when the latter comes along? Of course, you can argue that it’s utterly ridiculous to compare a spouse to say, a really fancy digital camera with enough features to make grown men salivate. But are the two really all that different? The same impulses kick in, don’t they?

So isn’t that what marriage really is? Simply a way to make sure we don’t give in to what is, at the end of the day, our most basic, natural impulse? Because they know (I confess I have no idea who “they” is) that, left to our own devises, we’d be changing models faster than you can say “in sickness and in health”. So, in order to thwart what we would, under very natural circumstances, be very likely to do, they (I confess I still have no idea who “they” is) trap us in this unnatural state where we suffer great bouts of guilt the second we entertain the merest idea of being – dare I say it – bored.

And to think we spend our entire lives attempting to claw our way into such a situation? Scheming and plotting to gain entry into this seemingly hallowed institution? To think that the perceived success or failure of your entire existence can be extricated from your answer to the million dollar question, “You getting married yet?” Is this all that really matters? That you have a rock on your finger and you have somebody to microwave that frozen pizza for?

“Sure she’s traveled around the world on a makeshift boat three times and was part of the team that fashioned a sphinx out of chopsticks but does she have a husband to cook and clean for? No!”

The strange thing is, despite how some of us might feel about marriage, we inevitably play right into the whole fiasco. Marriage is like men – you can’t live with it, can’t live without it (at least you have the knowledge that your family will do everything short of rushing headlong into an elephant stampede to make sure the curse of non-marriage never befalls you). We still want it. For all sorts of reasons. Of course, there are the elite few who would find more fulfillment being chained to a cement mixer than joining the ranks of the ol’ ball and chain contingent, but they’re a different story all together.

Social conditioning runs deeper than anyone thinks. We’ve been so psyched into thinking that life is meaningless and purposeless unless we have someone to wake up next to that to be happy is to be married. Even when we may disagree with practically everything we’ve been brought up to think, we still find ourselves being swept up in the current of popular opinion. To still be single after a certain age is like having the word “loser” stamped across your forehead. The only upside to this predicament is that it saves you the trouble of having to explain why you’re still unmarried (which is a good thing since people usually act as if you’ve just announced that you’re planning to dissect a puppy).

Which brings up an interesting point: why in the world do we have to somehow defend ourselves for not being caught up in the ecstatic throes of matrimony? Why is the following question to “are you married?” always “but why?” I think a more fitting scenario would go something like this:

“Are you married?”

“Why yes, I am.” Smug smile.

“But why?”

“I beg your pardon?”

“Why are you married?”

Befuddled silence while trying to ascertain true intent of interrogator. Based on previous experience, an answer in the affirmative usually signified the end of the conversation and they would move on to other intellectually challenging topics such as why the tablecloths don’t match the upholstery.

“Well, because I love him.”

“Uh huh.” A glaring lack of conviction can be heard.

“I really do. Besides, we’ve been dating for eight years and our families were bugging us and we weren’t getting any younger and we had these coupons…”

“Uh huh.”

When people are interrogated on why they are unmarried, it implies that being unmarried is an unnatural state and being married is whereas we have already pointed out that it very clearly isn’t. So what gives? Perhaps it’s a numbers game – two are more intimidating than one. It goes without saying that when a married couple (therefore, two people – unless it’s one of those bizarre, unorthodox-type marriages) is pitted against a poor, defenseless singleton (one), the duo usually wins. Or perhaps the married couple is floundering in the paralytic state of ennui so badly that anything – even (or especially) the merciless ribbing of an unarmed unmarried individual – can be touted as amusement.

“Are you married?”

“No.”

“Why in the world not?”

“Well, I haven’t met anyone whom I’d want to touch with a ten-foot pole much less take an oath to spend eternity with.”

“REALLY????” There’s so much incredulity that you might as well have told her you were planning to surgically remove your uterus.

“Yes. Really.”

Got Baby Fever?

I’ve always wondered… what do people see in children and babies? Women who do not have children yearn for these little bundles of joy, while those who do often wish the little tykes would just disappear and not reappear till they’re old enough to bring home a steady paycheck.

What’s the deal with baby fever? I’m talking about intelligent women with a full-functioning heads on their shoulders who are actually eager to go through childbirth – one of the most horrific things to which you can subject your body. Nine months of walking around looking like someone just planted 15 pounds of explosives in your tummy, getting morning sickness and wearing atrocious maternity clothes from Mommy Fashions?

Despite all the pregnancy facts published in books, women the world over continue to ache for this torture. In my mind, this sort of treatment should only be inflicted when the woman is evil, has killed somebody, or burnt an animal activist’s house. It shouldn’t be inflicted on innocent women simply because they seem to want it so badly.

So women get their wish and get pregnant. And what do they have to show for nine months of pain? A tiny, fist-clenching, leg-kicking version of George Burns. One look at that little newborn and all at once, you understand the saying ‘only a mother could love something like that’. If nothing else, your faith in unconditional love is restored.

The woman is now satisfied that she’s given birth and Baby takes his time growing up. It’s an incredibly long process because it’s only after five or six months that he even begins to vaguely resemble a human being. This is when Baby enters a stage when he hates everybody, sulks continuously and takes up the sport of clapping.

Then he says his first word, has his first tooth, and if you’ve had the misfortune of being blessed with a bald baby, his first strand of hair. Everything is documented and everybody in the family becomes a historian. Entries are made into leather-bound journals bearing the name ‘BABY’: “15th March 2001, Baby has lunch. Baby burps twice; Baby is en route to becoming a real man!”

Then along comes the Terrible Twos. This is when Baby becomes the terror of the neighbourhood. He takes to biting people and pulling your hair. And for reasons unknown to man, every family member seems to find this absolutely adorable.

Soon, Baby goes to preschool, convinced he’s going to become somebody great once he grows up.

“What do you want to be, son?”

“A rocket scientist! I want to be a rocket scientist!”

“My, what an ambitious little man you are!”

“Or an astronaut! And fly to the moon! I want to fly a spaceship!”

Adolescence sets in and his ambitions begin to change. Baby is now old enough to now realize just how much work it will take to become a rocket scientist. This is also the point when he realizes that he hates studying and decides to bank on a career that doesn’t require dressing up in suits, speaking in full sentences or counting past 10. His choices are now narrowed down to rock star, harmonica extraordinaire and WWF referee.

Adolescence flies by and soon, you are faced with Baby’s graduation and his very first job as an accountant. (It’s important to note that all ambitious talk basically amount to nothing. Extensive research has shown that 95% of all male babies grow up to become accountants while the remaining 5% wind up as used car salesmen).

Time zooms past and one day, you feast your eyes on Baby’s first paycheck. You also feast your eyes on your cut: a whopping RM15. Your joy is finally complete.

Three months down the road, Baby is confirmed in his new job. He gets a pay raisemarries a woman who’s just like you. and your cut climbs up to RM20. He also takes you out to dinner in a fancy shop near his office. Life doesn’t get any better than this. It almost makes up for all the suffering you’ve gone through. Almost but not quite. That will come only when he marries a woman just like you.