Thursday, February 26, 2009

Marriage VS Wedding

I just found this. Makes you think, don't it?


" 'LOVE don't cost a thing,' Jennifer Lopez once famously sang - but she neglected to mention that weddings are quite another matter.

Over the past few years, I have marvelled at how my peers managed everything from custom-made animated videos to sunset yacht parties for their unions, while still qualifying only for an HDB flat on a combined income of $8,000 a month.

My own wedding next year will be fuss-free: just the traditional hotel dinner and a simple solemnisation on one day. Even so, it will probably cost my entire year's salary.
That cost is, in fact, delaying some of my friends' walk down that aisle; they say they have not saved enough for their big day.

It is a practical consideration given today's inflation. Even a small wedding can be costly, and every time a bride-to-be hears wedding bells, there is also the background ka-ching sound from the bridal industry's cash registers.

According to my extensive - but unscientific - research, the average cost of a weekend hotel banquet will go up 5 per cent to 10 per cent between this year and next, crossing the $1,000 per table mark just in time for my dinner.

That does not include wine, now a wedding staple, which will set you back another $1,000 or so. Another $3,000 will go to photographers and videographers to document the special day.
Then there is the dress.

Even at one-stop heartland shops, bridal gown packages now cost upwards of $2,500. I have not even dared to ask about the designer creations I drool over in magazines.

Wedding rings - just those little bands - do not come under $1,200 a pair. My fiance and I have taken to walking into jewellery shops and demanding to see their cheapest choices.

And we didn't get very good service, let me tell you.

So I tell myself not to get carried away - who says you have to have it all?

Although 'mandatory' banquets may be blamed on parents, it is the couples themselves who order personalised videos, devise themes and plan three entrances with accompanying dramatic outfits.

Problem is, most of their friends are also new to the workforce, which means their well-meant dinner hongbao probably cover just the appetisers.

Couples swallow the exorbitant mark-ups on purchases for their wedding, telling themselves it is a once-in- a-lifetime event worth every cent to celebrate their love.

One friend even toyed with the idea of having her bridal photos shot overseas for an extra-special touch. The cost: $15,000.

My question is: If you have true love, do you really need the big wedding?

After all, you could get married for as little as $26 - the fee that the Registry of Marriages charges for a marriage licence.

That does not seem enough for young starry-eyed couples just starting their careers, who seem to want the splashiest weddings.

But I know of a couple in their late 30s who did away with the pomp and had a simple church service and dinner, happy enough to have found love when they least expected it.

Lopez's wedding, to singer Marc Anthony in 2004, was a low-key affair which cost US$50,000 (about S$70,400 in today's rates). The couple, both acquainted with failed marriages, spent a relatively modest amount on their celebrity wedding, compared to say, Liza Minelli, whose 2002 nuptials topped Forbes.com's most expensive wedding list at an estimated US$3.5million.

Me, I am lucky enough to have a partner who constantly reminds me that it is the marriage, not just the wedding, which really matters.

Lopez is still married. Minelli is not. With the right person, love won't cost you much at all. "

Quoted from Straits Times Online - http://www.straitstimes.com/Breaking%2BNews/Singapore/Story/STIStory_269342.html

Thursday, February 12, 2009

25 Things About Me

"Once you’ve been tagged, you are supposed to write a note with 25 random things, facts, habits, or goals about you. At the end, choose 25 people to be tagged. You have to tag the person who tagged you. If I tagged you, it’s because I want to know more about you, or I had the honour of being tagged by you in another note!"

1) i'm doing this because (A)i'm bored, (B) many people have tagged me, so i guess i owe it to them.

2) I am a monster while working. Just ask any of my project groupmates.

3) I like jackets.

4) My english is probably better than half the people in RI, while my mandarin is probably worse than half the people in ACS.

5) I am not photogenic.

6) I like cats.

7) I like friendly dogs.

8) I can spend the whole day in a Pet Store.

9) Or the zoo.

10) If money isn't an issue, my dream job would be either a zoo-keeper or a national park ranger.

11) I want an apartment with a view over a water-body.

12) I believe men are not needy. Needy male-humans are not men.

13) I believe women are independent. Though they like a man around to call their own. (See Point 12 for definition of man)

14) I cannot swim.

15) I want a powerboat license.

16) I have double standards.

17) Perfection, for myself.

18) Happy, for others.

19) I get pissed easily. Mostly at Gerald Teo.

20) I used to have breakfast almost every Sunday with 2 people. And I know I will again.

21) I want to see the world.

22) I'm looking for a stabalising influence.

23) I want a new computer/laptop. Cos the one I have sucks right now..

24) I do not like to eat ginger. Or large pieces of garlic. Everything else is pretty much fine.

25) I fear death. But not my own.

Saturday, February 07, 2009

大哥是对的

Read between the lines.. he/she is just not that into you.

... ...大哥是对的

Sunday, January 18, 2009

The Art of Contentment

I got this from a friend who got it from a friend who got it from a friend... sounds like something very emo....

" For most of us, being single will be more of a phase than a final destination. This is the best place to practice the art of contentment. Someday, I'm sure most of us will fall in love and get married. But the thing is, love will always be tested.

Someone more handsome, beautiful, more charming, richer, funnier, sweeter would come along. If you have not practiced the art of contentment as a single person, chances are you would be tempted to want that and not cherish your chosen one. Practicing the Art of Contentment as a single person means that you take what life gives you, good or bad, and you're willing to see it through. It means you don't walk away everytime things get tough, because it builds in you patience, perseverance, understanding and a hundred different virtues that people in a hurry will never have to cherish.

Being single means you would find how it feels to be alone thus, allowing you to cherish every moment you spend with your chosen one. The art of contentment means you wouldn't mind if life had to make you wait for so long to find the love of your life, because you know that the waiting would only make the finding the love of your life much sweeter.

Being single is a time of your life when you can get to know yourself better. You can pursue different interest and passions without having to ask another person's approval. It is a phase when you can keep focus on other things, discover your potentials and talents, and see yourself become more of the person you expect to be.

Allow yourself to surprise you. Stop wasting precious energy trying to figure out why you're still romantically unattached. It's all in the mind. Take the time to go see your friends, spend time with your family, do charity work and you will realize that you are not, and never for one moment, was alone.

Try to get to know yourself first before you try to get to know other people. To be truly loved, means to be known and accepted for who you are. How do you expect other people to know you and to love you, when you don't know who and what you really are? Sometimes the dilemmas we face are not between what is absolutely bad and absolutely good. Sometimes, it's between what is good and best.

Treat this stage of your life as a phase to evaluate who is good for you and who is best for you. Sometimes, you won't hear music, or feel magic to know who's best for you. The heart just knows and it doesn't need any romantically charged scenario to decide on the matter. Trust in your heart, and trust that time will eventually lead you to, not to the perfect partner, but to the most suitable partner for you. Being single is a phase of life that we need to be thankful for, because being single means our hearts have yet to choose the best one for us.

Take your time, the world will wait. Being married doesn't guarantee that it will make your life happy. It doesn't guarantee anything at all. Sometimes, it only brings two miserable people together only to make their life even more miserable. Without the right intention, the emotional maturity, financial security and of course, unwavering love, you're better off unattached.

Living Life. Don't put your life on hold for Mr. and Mrs. Right, but don't let it waste away with Mr. or Mrs. Wrong. Life is about things that you do and happen to you everyday. It's not about the things that could have happened but never did, or things that you think would happen in the future. Live life now. Live it to the fullest and stop beating yourself up, trying to be perfect on a Saturday night date. Allow life to surprise you with it's most wonderful blessings.
"

Friday, January 16, 2009

?

I wonder... ...

Friday, November 21, 2008

For the ladies... Something about men.

Oprah wrote this about men…

1. If a man wants you, nothing can keep him away.

2. If he doesn’t want you, nothing can make him stay.

3. Stop making excuses for a man and his behavior.

4. Allow your intuition (or spirit) to save you from heartache.

5. Stop trying to change yourself for a relationship that’s not meant to be.

6. Slower is better. Never live your life for a man before you find what makes you truly happy.

7. If a relationship ends because the man was not treating you as you deserve then heck no, you can’t “be friends”.

8. A friend wouldn’t mistreat a friend. Don’t settle.

9. If you feel like he is stringing you along, then he probably is.

10. Don’t stay because you think “it will get better”.

11. You’ll be mad at yourself a year later for staying when things are not better.

12. The only person you can control in a relationship is you.

13. Avoid men who’ve got a bunch of children by a bunch of different women.

14. He didn’t marry them when he got them pregnant, why would he treat you any differently?

15. Always have your own set of friends separate from his.

16. Maintain boundaries in how a guy treats you.

17. If something bothers you, speak up.

18. Never let a man know everything. He will use it against you later.

19. You cannot change a man’s behavior. Change comes from within.

20. Don’t EVER make him feel he is more important than you are…even if he has more education or in a better job.

21. Do not make him into a quasi-god. He is a man, nothing more nothing less.

22. Never let a man define who you are.

23. Never borrow someone else’s man.

24. If he cheated with you, he’ll cheat on you.

25. A man will only treat you the way you ALLOW him to treat you.

26. All men are NOT dogs.

27. You should not be the one doing all the bending…compromise is a two way street.

28. You need time to heal between relationships. There is nothing cute about baggage… Deal with your issues before pursuing a new relationship.

29. You should never look for someone to COMPLETE you… a relationship consists of two WHOLE individuals… look for someone complimentary. ..not supplementary.

30. Dating is fun…even if he doesn’t turn out to be Mr. Right.

31. Make him miss you sometimes… when a man always know where you are, and you’re always readily available to him - he takes it for granted.

32. Never move into his mother’s house.

33. Never co-sign for a man.

34. Don’t fully commit to a man who doesn’t give you everything that you need.

35. Keep him in your radar but get to know others.Share this with other women and men (just so they know)…

Monday, November 17, 2008

Ridiculous

QUOTED FROM yahoo_news.

<< LONDON (AFP) - - A British woman is to divorce her husband after discovering he was having a virtual affair within the online game "Second Life," British media reported Friday.

Jane Doe, 28, met her husband John Smith within the game in May 2003, and six months later, she moved into his home in Cornwall, southwest England.

The couple married in July 2005, while their "Second Life" avatars Dave Barmy and Laura Skye -- younger, slimmer versions of their real-life selves -- also held an online ceremony for their virtual friends.

After a rare break from the computer, however, Doe returned to find her 40-year-old husband in an intimate, albeit virtual, position with an online prostitute within "Second Life", which she said was the "ultimate betrayal".

"I was so hurt," she was quoted as saying in The Times, adding that theirs was a "very serious marriage".

"I just couldn't believe what he'd done. It's cheating as far as I'm concerned, but he didn't see it as a problem and couldn't see why I was so upset.

"He said I was just making a big fuss and tried to make out it was my fault for not giving him enough attention."

Second Life is an online role-playing game with more than 15 million users, in which players can create virtual avatars and interact with other gamers, or the environment.

The game has its own virtual economy, in which online currency can be exchanged for real-world US dollars, and several major businesses have set up "branches" within the game, while others operate entirely within it.

According to the Daily Telegraph, Doe claims that Smith is now engaged to the woman he was having an online tryst with, despite never having met her.

She has, meanwhile, found a new love, through fantasy online role-playing game "World of Warcraft". >>

Married over a game, and getting divorced over a game. Life is pretty much a game to those people, isn't it?