Wang Tai Tai invites.....
Come Journey With Me ......................
Have you ever seen a vision of happiness?
But what struck me most that night were two things. Firstly, it was the heartfelt speech that Jomel’s new sister-in-law gave as a toast to the new couple. It was touching to hear how her family welcome Jomel into the family with open hearts and open arms and the tribute that they paid to Jomel as a woman of strength and integrity. Jomel has surely emerged a stronger person through the many tests and trials that she has been through from a very young age. A lesser woman would have buckled in defeat.
God bless you, Jomel & Mr. D. May you live long and happy together!
After such pleasant memories of my own wedding, I am brought down to earth by the little purple thingy that is now hanging in my cupboard. (Yes, Jomel, if you are reading this, it's purple in color.) The formerly svelte figure in ivory five years ago is going to try and look (a lot) less fat in this purple dress which will be gracing a dear friend's wedding reception this Saturday.
I have scoured the lengths and breaths of several malls these last two week, dropped in unashamedly to boutiques for larger women but couldn't find the perfect dress. Not that the dress is not perfect but the figure isn't! The covered ones make me look frumpy and 'ah-soh' (read, old) and the revealing ones will be showing so much extra and unwanted flesh that I am sure Papa Bkworm will refuse to be seen in public with me.
When I finally walked into Zara with legs that were so numbed from dress hunting, I was ready to just take anything that will ...... fit. Little Bkworm came into the fitting room with me and with a choice of two different designs, she sighed away her approval for one of them, if only to stop me from going into another boutique after that. Do you think they put magic mirrors in fitting rooms because when I came home and tried on my purchase, I looked much bigger! Uh-oh!!
Tonight, I am going to ransack my cupboard for that shawl that may just be my saving grace when I show up at the reception on Saturday night, looking like an oversized Barney!
Or worse, Miss Piggy in purple.
Jomel is feeling the jitters about her upcoming wedding. And reading about it in her blog, reminded me of my big day not so long ago. I was short of a month from my fortieth birthday when Papa Bkworm and I tied the knot on a sunny Saturday morning.
We had only four months to prepare. From the proposal to the altar. It wasn't the altar, really. BUT we had a great time anyway, feeling both excited and nervous at the same time, standing before the Registrar at the Jabatan Pendaftaran in our full wedding regalia. Not many brides would turn up at the Registration Department wearing a wedding gown complete with flowers and all for a civil ceremony! Talk about being the centre of attention. There were two other couples who went in before us and each couple only went into the room with their two witnesses. We went in with our entourage of ten! And picture this..... two of them who were supposed to videotape and take photos of the signing ceremony were moving about so much trying to get the best shot that the Registrar had to request that pictures should only be taken from behind her because she doesn't want to be photographed! Thank God that she didn't chase all of us out!
The preparation was a far cry from the one that took place twenty years before that. My parents organized everything, right up to the kind of nightie that I would be wearing on my wedding night. It looked more like a pink cotton housecoat with buttons right up to the neck! All I had to do was to wake up on the morning of the wedding, put on my wedding gown and do what the tai kam che' tells me to do for the rest of the day.
Twenty years later, I took charge of the planning. And Papa Bkworm took charge of the finances. We came up with a role sheet, delegated different tasks to our close friends who had volunteered to help out, booked the restaurant, designed the invitations, arranged for the wedding photography and planned the honeymoon together. Amidst the flurry of activity, there was a constant nagging thought at the back of our minds. Would Papa Bkworm's parents relent and come to the wedding?
My in-laws and I get on fine now but it wasn't always like that. Being a parent, I understand their initial objections and disdain for a relationship which they saw as unbalanced and wrong. Their eldest son was going to take an older, single parent as his wife. A woman with a teenage son and a young daughter. Nothing short of a miracle could have turned their animosity to the acceptance and love that his parents and I share today.
They didn't come for the wedding. But Papa Bkworm's siblings were present and I think that almost completed our joy. Jomel's entry 'Striving For Perfection', again made me think of how disappointed I was when Lara couldn't attend the wedding because SARS struck this part of Asia during that period in 2003. Singapore was also quite seriously affected by the epidemic and Lara kept having a fever that wouldn't go away just before the wedding. There was no way she would have made it past the stringent health check at the Immigration checkpoint. Despite this hiccup, we were totally but pleasantly taken aback when one of Papa Bkworm's closest friend flew back from Hong Kong to attend our lunch reception. He was unable to confirm his attendance earlier because Hong Kong was also badly hit by SARS but he turned up in the end, hale and hearty. We were grateful for his presence just as we were overjoyed at the support of friends and family who celebrated together with us that day.
It wasn't perfect. We still cringe thinking about some of the boo-boos that happened despite our best efforts to keep things according to plan. Perhaps there were things we could have done better. I should have done a music video - imagine for a moment, Bkworm doing a version of Shania Twain's Gonna Getcha and dedicating it to Papa Bkworm at the lunch reception! (Haha, maybe I will do a grandma version at our anniversary years from now!) We would have loved a church wedding, complete with a dreamy walk down the aisle as Papa Bkworm awaits at the altar in a white tux but that was not to be. Instead, we had a pastor friend pray a blessing over us at our reception.
The wonderful and warm memories from the time of preparation until we sent off our last guest with hugs and kisses - these shall stay with us for the rest of our lives. And to us, perfection has been achieved.
Parenthood comes with a price. Not only does one get a replica of oneself but also a life long responsibility of being emotionally attached to one’s offspring. It’s not something you buy off the shelf and then have it shelved if doesn't work according to your specifications. But the hurts can go deep.
Why am I being so melancholic today? I am just reflecting on the heartache of not being able to get through to their little heads. Am I being too much of a queen control? Is it wrong to want your children to do well in life; to do better than me in life? Have I forgotten my own uncertainties when I was at their age and yet I seemed to have turned out quite all right in the end; albeit a little late in life and not discounting the fact that there were a lot of life’s lessons to learn along the way.
The words, “When I was at your age…..” are perpetually at the tip of my tongue but I have to remind myself time and again that when I was at their age, there were no handphones and no iPods. When I was at their age, there were no video games and life was simpler in more ways than one. We never dare to talk back to our elders. We didn’t question their instructions; obeying was the ONLY option. Well, at least, it was like that in my own life. I try to understand my children. I want to understand them – what makes them tick, what makes them do the things they do. It’s a terrible thing when you see them walking towards a pothole in life and you yell out to them to look out and all you get is, “Leave me alone!”. If only they know that I feel every tear that roll down their cheeks when things go wrong and I feel every frustration that they go through when things don't turn out the way they want.
I know they are individuals in their own right. They are not me. They have their own path, a journey already written by God when He created them. But like me, they must make their own choices which will influence the direction they shall be taking along that path. I know. I know. But it’s much harder to live that knowledge and let go.
A friend told me a story about a woman and her son who seemed wayward and unteachable. The woman had only one response.
When he plays, she prays.
Will you pray along with me?
Do you know how many times I have typed this line? (All 50 characters including the spaces and the question mark!) I guess it doesn’t matter since you are obviously reading it already. Yes, I am getting a little weird here, perhaps from having too much of loneliness.
By the way, have you ever been lonely?
![]()
All content on this website (including text, photographs, audio files, and any other original works), unless otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons License.