
“Hello K! Long time no see.”
“Oh it’s you! How’s New York?”
After the exchange of pleasantries, I boldly asked if he needed to tell me any good news.
“No, I am buying a gift for my niece and I am also not going to get married in the foreseeable future!”
He sure sounded jaded but I didn’t want to probe further. So we picked out a gift for the birthday girl.
Then, K confided that he was dating a 25 year-old lady and how he came to relationship fatigue.
During my growing up years (K’s included), Singaporeans were criticised for being too materialistic. The relationship or marriage equation is simple: The man must have the 5 Cs to be deemed courtship-worthy:
1. Condominium
2. Cash
3. Car
4. Credit Card
5. Career
K told me how he had been re-educated about the alphabets of Singaporean love. The 25 year-old had told him that the girls today no longer crave for the 5 Cs, but the 5 Bs.
They want:
1. Not just a condominium, but a Bungalow
2. Not just cash, but a Billionaire
3. Not just a car, but at least a BMW
4. Not just a credit card, but own a Bank (gasp!)
5. Not just a career, but be a Boss
I would say, not only did I sympathise with K, I thought this to be ridiculous. If we were to measure love by material goods, then should we all be lonely souls because we deserve it?
I was flabbergasted, a tad disgusted by what I heard to say the least. If I were K, I would rather be celibate than give in to the impossible demands of women in Singapore. Or is it just Singapore? That is another question in itself.
K then told me that he was going to concentrate on his career, earn big bucks and buy a wife when he reaches 40. This is just sad. I told him maybe he hasn’t met “The One” yet and am sure she will not that avaricious.
In my generation, we were once capable of being ‘Mesdemoiselles Materialistic’; now the young girls are touted to be ‘Mesdemoiselles More-than-Materialistic’.
Surely there must be other versions of this alphabet of love, but I lament about the inflation of love. Can you imagine? Even love has to be put through economic inflation!
As I pen this, I simply ask myself, “What are we becoming or what have we become?”
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