Over the
weekend, I witnessed such a sweet moment between my grandparents that made me
feel all mushy on the inside. Grandma was stirring her stew, under the lit-up
kitchen hood. Grandpa looked at her and said, ‘Wow, you look so beautiful under
that light!’ and as always, she pretended she didn’t hear him. He called out to
her once more, ‘Come and sit here with me. You’ll look even prettier if you
weren’t standing there, cooking.’ The only reaction he got from her was a
glare. As much as she tried to hide it, I knew damn well she was feeling all
mushy on the inside as well. She had better be. Because these days, men like
Grandpa are a rare breed.
After
over 50 years of marriage, Grandpa still treats Grandma like how he would have
if he were trying to woo her. Looking at relationships today, everyone is
afraid of commitment. Everyone wants their partner to love them wholeheartedly
but is afraid to give their all. No one is ever willing to put the other person
first. The world has turned into a blur of one-night stands, casual hookups and
4-month long relationships. We all ‘have a thing’ with someone but nobody dares
to call it what it is. Love is the very being of our human nature, yet we’re
afraid to love, and we tell ourselves that we have the right to be afraid. So we
make excuses to avoid getting hurt, to avoid commitment and to avoid fully
giving ourselves to someone else.
‘I want to focus on my
career and be successful.’
Today’s
world is more materialistic than ever. Rather than being satisfied with just
getting by, we want so much more than we need. We work our behinds off to climb
the corporate ladder so that those around us can look up and say, ‘Wow, he/she
is so successful.’ And what determines success? The car(s) you drive, the
clothes you wear, that latest Bottega bag you’re carrying and the places you
dine at (which you tell everyone by checking in on Facebook and posting
pictures of a tiny cube of meat on an oversized plate).
What happened to the
time where success was measured by the happiness of your family? When Grandpa was
thirty, he had a modest job, a decent house – nothing too large or fancy – with
fruit trees in the garden, a simple sedan, a happy wife and four beautiful
children. His wife spent her daytimes chatting up friends at the market and around
town while the children were at school. When he returned home from work, they
would all enjoy Grandma’s home-cooked dinner and then he would guide his
children in their homework. Grandpa didn’t have much but he was successful.
It
is amazing to have a goal and to want to work hard to achieve it. However, many
of us use this as a reason to avoid taking relationships seriously because we
don’t want to start a family and bear its commitments. Then it no longer is a
reason but an excuse.
‘We can’t be fixed. We should break up.’
Our generation has it easy. Everything is handed
to us. We don’t have to search a book for answers: we have Google; we don’t
have to spin the dials on the telephone: we have touchscreens; we don’t even
have to step out of home: we have delivery.
This has caused us to become so easily frustrated when we
aren’t able to get what we want, so we give up and move on to the next without
even putting in enough effort to try and improve the now.
This
is why divorce is becoming more and more apparent. During Grandpa’s days,
divorce was for when things really don’t work out – a last resort. Today,
divorce is when we realize we don’t love our spouses as much as we thought we
did and aren’t willing to make enough sacrifices – an easy option out.
Working
towards fixing our relationships seems to be too much of an effort for our
generation.
We
don’t treasure our relationships enough to want to make sacrifices to keep it.
‘Getting married/having
a family is too much of a burden.’
When
we date someone without the intention to spend the rest of our lives with them,
we never truly love them. We just want to be with them in the now, while
looking around for a better person. When we intend to be with someone for life,
we stop comparing them to others and we stop looking for others. Someone better
may eventually come around, but what’s important is that we weren’t looking for
them while with someone else. Once we start looking, we don’t have the
right intentions when dating – it’s all in selfishness. And that ruins love for
us.
When
did having a family become a burden instead of a blessing? Now you would
probably stop reading because I sound like a pro-life pastor speaking to a
greying congregation. But really, think about it: is having someone to share
your life with really a burden? I’m not talking about sharing food on a date or
the petrol cost on a road trip. I’m talking about sharing the joy of looking at
the face of a newborn that was created by you and the person you love, as well
as the financial struggles of buying a house.
Maybe
if we stopped looking at these as burdens and started seeing them as an honor
and as something to look forward to, we might love better.
‘I need freedom and
space.’
Personal
space is one of the most important traits of a happy and long-lasting
relationship. But was it really space you needed when you and that cute guy
started texting while you and your boyfriend were on a break? Was it really
freedom when you told your girlfriend you were going out ‘just for lunch’ with
a girl who was clearly into you? We tend to use freedom and space as an excuse
to flirt around and explore our options. My Chinese mother often uses this
proverb (which sounds absurd when directly translated): Riding
a cow while looking for a horse. It simply means, you make
do with what you have while looking for something better. Our generation often
settles for less, then leave our partner because we’re unsatisfied. Wouldn’t we
have longer, better relationships if we didn’t just settle?
We
have ‘a thing’ with someone just so we aren’t lonely. We get together even
though we know very well that we won’t last very long. It has become acceptable
to be in a relationship just because. And when we’ve found a better person, we
use freedom – or the lack of – as an excuse to leave the relationship. If you
can’t accept that freedom and space has to come with boundaries when you’re in
a relationship, you shouldn’t be in one.
These
acceptable reasons have become so loosely used that our generation has turned
them into unacceptable excuses. Real relationships are hard to come by, and
love is losing its value. Look within before jumping into something that should
be more than casual. Don’t ruin love for the next person.





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