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Sumiko Tan : Missing out on married life.

iamtalkinglah

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http://sgblogs.com/entry/sumiko-missing-married-life/274773

"Is there something wrong with me? Is this all there is to life? Why aren't I married? Am I not good enough? Am I not lovable enough? Am I not capable of loving deeply and permanently? Have I been too fussy? Do I have bad karma?" - Sumiko Tan

Feeling half a woman
Am I less of a woman because I am not a mother and a wife? I sometimes feel that way
By Sumiko Tan


I always feel a bit awkward when I bump into friends with their children in tow. I don't quite know how to behave with the kids. I tend to either overdo the 'oh what a cute/handsome/pretty son/daughter you have' routine or swing the other way and ignore the child completely. I was at a mall one Sunday when I was struck by a handsome little boy walking towards me. He was about eight and had brown hair and startlingly light-blue eyes. I glanced to his side and discovered that I knew the woman who was with him. It was a friend from way back whom I'd lost touch with. We chatted a bit, all the while with me marvelling at how cute her son was. In this instance, he really is an exceptionally good-looking boy so I wasn't lying or exaggerating, but I wonder how much of my gushy chatter was also due to a bit of nerves. I've realised that I don't really know how to behave around children. As someone who has never been a mother and with the only children in my life (my niece and nephew) living in another country, I am unfamiliar with young people and so find myself acting unnaturally in their presence. I lack the instincts that parenthood brings. To use an analogy which I hope won't offend animal-hating parents: Because I love dogs and have had so many, I'm at home with them. Whenever I see a dog, I am drawn to it and know what to do - when to pat it and when not to, how it likes to be tickled a certain way, and I'll think nothing of flicking away the bits of eye dirt on the face of a stranger's dog. It's a different matter with children. No, this is not another column about feeling broody and wishing I had children. I'm so over that. But it occurred to me that because I've never given birth - and never ever will - my life experiences have been very different from those of the majority of women who are mothers. And because I have also never been a wife - and probably never would - I have not experienced the things that 'normal' women go through. Am I less of a woman because of that? I sometimes feel so. Take the friend I saw at the mall. The last time we met a decade ago, she was single, like me. In the interim, she had not only got married but had also begotten several children. My mind boggles at how eventful her life must have been in the past 10 years - meeting her life partner, preparing to get married, setting up a home, adapting to being a wife, going through pregnancy and then coping with motherhood. While all this is alien to me, it's what 'normal' women go through; marriage and parenthood are part of the natural circle of life. My life, on the other hand, has been unnaturally arrested. The cares and concerns I faced in my 30s were not that much different from those when I was in my 20s, and now that I'm in my 40s, not that much has changed either. I'm not complaining. As I've often said, there are loads of things to cheer about in being single. But as age beckons and maybe because I'm no longer so footloose and fancy free, I'm also beginning to wonder if I've missed out on the experiences that most women go through, and if I am less complete as a person because of it. I feel a twinge of this when my sister regales me with tales of her children. She has an especially good connection with her son, who's five, and was raving to me recently about how chivalrous he is. They were out on a nature walk and the boy took it upon himself to clear the path for her; he ran ahead to lift the brambles so that she could walk along unobstructed. Ever so often he'd also stop and shout: 'Mama, are you okay?' How sweet, I told my sister, and thought to myself that, well, that's something I'll never get to experience, the unconditional love of a boy. It's not that I envy her - or any parent - their children, no, not at all. But in my idle moments I am curious: What would my life have been like had I been one too? More fulfilled? Less self-centred? Frazzled? It's the same with not being a wife. Again, it's not that I look on enviously at couples. I really don't. I'm happy with my life. But once in a while, it hits me that maybe there's something wrong with me. It doesn't matter how I love my single life. It doesn't matter that I have all the personal space in the world. It doesn't matter what I've achieved in my career. It doesn't matter how I know it's better to be alone than to be alone in a marriage. It doesn't matter that I've seen how marriage isn't a binding contract or a guarantee of a happy-ever-after. It doesn't matter how many boyfriends I've had or might have. It doesn't matter if there are men who care for my well-being. The fact remains that I am not married, and I say this not in a self-pitying way but as an acknowledgment of a, to me, puzzling fact. And the fact remains that no one has been mad enough about me - and I for him - for us to embark on a journey together. The fact remains that no matter how fun singlehood is, there are nights when I lie in my nice big bed all by my lonesome self (well, actually my dog sleeps with me), and think: Is there something wrong with me? Is this all there is to life? Why aren't I married? Am I not good enough? Am I not lovable enough? Am I not capable of loving deeply and permanently? Have I been too fussy? Do I have bad karma? Don't I deserve more? My mother was married, my sister is married, Michelle Obama is married, the woman who cleans the office pantry is married, so many 'normal' women are married, why not me? Have I failed as a woman? Am I inadequate? Have I become nothing more than a 'singles' statistic? But, ah well, these feelings come but mostly these feelings go. If this is meant to be the script of my life, then why bother trying to rewrite it? It is often said that life is what you make of it, so I shall be thankful for what I have rather than what it could have, should have, would have been. The alternative could in fact have been worse.
 

cooleo

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SuckMiKo Tan is amazing. She is the only so called Journalist who can write columns about her sad single pathetic life for years and still remain on payroll.

The woman can't speak Mandarin, can't speak Japanese even though is half Japanese, and is past her prime.

Any takers care to take her off the shelf and give us readers a break?! :oIo:
 

Royalblood

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I seriously wonder how she satisfy her sexual urges????:confused:

7 dildos of 7 different sizes and colours, each per day to satisfy her weekly sexual needs?
 

iamtalkinglah

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Found this.......

<TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%"><TBODY><TR class=msghead><TD><TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0><TBODY><TR class=msghead><TD class=msgF width="1%" noWrap align=right>From: </TD><TD class=msgFname width="68%" noWrap>kojakbt22 <NOBR>
icon.aspx
</NOBR> </TD><TD class=msgDate width="30%" noWrap align=right>12:34 am </TD></TR><TR class=msghead><TD class=msgT height=20 width="1%" noWrap align=right>To: </TD><TD class=msgTname width="68%" noWrap>ALL <NOBR></NOBR></TD><TD class=msgNum noWrap align=right> </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR><TR><TD class=msgleft rowSpan=4 width="1%"> </TD><TD class=wintiny noWrap align=right>12675.1 </TD></TR><TR><TD height=8></TD></TR><TR><TD class=msgtxt><TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%"><TBODY><TR><TD>Let's talk about sex

</TD></TR><TR><TD><!-- headline one : end --></TD></TR><TR><TD>Sex education, that is. How I wish I had received some of that when I was a teen </TD></TR><TR><TD><!-- Author --></TD></TR><TR><TD class="padlrt8 georgia11 darkgrey bold" colSpan=2>By Sumiko Tan
</TD></TR><TR><TD><!-- show image if available --></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>



<!-- START OF : div id="storytext"--><!-- more than 4 paragraphs -->All that news about sex education has got me wishing how I had a bit of that when I was young.
Whatever the pros and cons of the Comprehensive Sexuality Education programme conducted by women's group Aware - a topic that has generated such fierce debate - I think students today are lucky to be taught something, anything.
I can't recall receiving any form of sex education either formally or informally when I was a teen.
I would have benefited from it, given how my teenage years were hormonally charged and spent hurtling from one crush to another.
When I left secondary school, I sure knew a lot about the reproductive parts of flowering plants (remember those diagrams we had to draw of petals, stamens and pistils?), but barely anything about human reproduction.
I had little idea of male and female anatomical parts, or of how babies are made, or how you can avoid making them, or of diseases you can catch or the pitfalls in boy-girl relationships.
Those were the days before the Internet and such information wasn't easily available.
There was silence at home too.
In a way my family was more liberal than others. We bathed as a family when my siblings and I were younger and this was considered normal (maybe it's because my mother's Japanese).
And because there were three females at home, my mother, sister and I would compare body parts. We talked openly and endlessly about our body shapes and weight.
But the act of sex itself and of relationships weren't discussed.
What adults did behind closed doors remained a mystery, and neither did my parents broach relationship issues like what happens when you date, whether it's okay to kiss and cuddle and so on, and how to deal with relationship break-ups.
My father was very strict about who I went out with, and because of that I kept most of my dates a secret from him.
The only person who'd bring up anything close to sex education was my sister.
Even then she wasn't explicit because she, too, was in the dark. But she'd remind me to 'be careful' with guys, to 'save yourself for marriage' and 'don't do anything you'll regret'.
It would have been good if someone either in school or at home had given me the facts of life and discussed issues like pregnancy, contraception, sexually transmitted diseases and how to cope with relationship woes.
It would have made me surer of what I could and should do - or couldn't and shouldn't - when I started dating.
Perhaps today's generation of parents are more enlightened and open about talking about sex with their kids. Certainly living in an HIV/Aids era does make it more crucial. But I doubt it.
If you go by my married friends, most still feel uncomfortable about raising the subject and would prefer to leave it to schools and teachers or groups such as Aware to fill their kids in.
The problem is, values and views differ so drastically among parents that it is near impossible to find a sex education programme that will not make some parent blanch.
Do you, for example, teach only abstinence or safe sex?
Should you assume that sexual behaviour among teens is a given and that it is hence crucial to give them information about the risks and how to minimise them?
Should sex education impart a standard of moral behaviour?
Will values-free knowledge of sexual practices necessarily lead to harmful behaviour?
Should lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender lifestyles even be mentioned as part of sex education? At what age? Does it encourage homosexual behaviour? And if so, is there anything wrong with that?
I am not a parent and so I don't have much to go by, but I should think that schools can, and should, play only a small role in how a child develops sexually.
Surely it is parents who have - and should have - ultimate control. After all, why have kids unless you are sure you can teach, guide and nurture them?
And given that a person's sexuality is such a major aspect of his life, isn't it the responsibility of parents to address these issues at home, and to impart and impose their values on their children?
No school or teacher or group should be expected to carry that burden.
Then, when the children are adults, they have to make up their own minds. If you have faithfully done your part, chances are they will not depart from what they had been taught.
I know my sister has given a lot of thought to the sex education of her two children.
My niece is 11 going on 12 and at that awkward age when her body is shedding its girlish contours but her preoccupations remain those of a child.
She still plays with dolls and trains and loves re-enacting stories from books with her best female friends.
She and her female cousin have set up a 'store' in an unused cabin in their grandparents' garden to sell stuff they make.
She has several friends who are boys and they talk about snakes and lizards and she plays soccer with them.
Boys are in the picture only in so far as they are like her little brother Josh, whom she plays with much of the time.
She does like a certain boy called Eric - he's 10 - a lot, but my sister says it's not a crush. She's happy to see him and they will talk about reptiles and fighter planes but she does not moon over him. To her, Eric is a bigger version of Josh.
We're glad that she's still so innocent, but it's only a matter of time before the boy-crazy hormones kick in. They always do. And then my sister will probably have her hands full.
Although I'm just an aunt, I feel skittish about how my niece is going to handle her sexuality once she becomes a teenager.
Will she end up one of those girls who throw themselves at boys and do crazy, wild things? Or will she be nerdy and shy, a wallflower lacking in confidence when in the company of boys? Perhaps she'd be somewhere in between.
And there's Josh. He's only six now and easy-going and friendly, but what sort of teenager will he be? Girl-mad with a string of girlfriends? The love 'em and leave 'em sort? Or someone who's gentlemanly?
A friend was telling me about how his nephew has been feeling dashed because a girl he likes had rejected him. He has now decided to act 'cool' with other girls. He's all of 12.
Time will tell when it comes to my niece and nephew. I can only hope that they turn out well-adjusted and okay - sexually and otherwise.

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yellow_people

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"Is there something wrong with me? Is this all there is to life? Why aren't I married? Am I not good enough? Am I not lovable enough? Am I not capable of loving deeply and permanently? Have I been too fussy? Do I have bad karma?" - Sumiko Tan

Dear Ms Tan,

Many single educated Chinese women I have met have asked me the same thing you have asked. I will tell you the same thing I have told these numerous Chinese women; there is absolutely nothing wrong with you. You are inflicted with what is know as the "Ah Beng syndrome".

There are a number of eligible attractive man out there. Just as the saying goes there are many fishes in the ocean. The clue is to know where to fish. Unfortunately you have been fishing in a longkang. As expected all you will find there is that small and smelly longkang fish (read: Ah Beng).

I am going to let you in on a secret. Instead of making a list of qualities you look for in a man; make a list of what you do not want to see in a man. I call it the "anti-Ah Beng" list. Its a lot easier and you will find the success rate to be very high. A lot of Chinese women have taken this advise and are now in happy healthy relationships.
 

vincenttan

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Do I have bad karma?
You made a choice to milk men when you are younger for career advancement, don't regret now.
 

hahaho

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SuckMiKo Tan is amazing. She is the only so called Journalist who can write columns about her sad single pathetic life for years and still remain on payroll.

The woman can't speak Mandarin, can't speak Japanese even though is half Japanese, and is past her prime.

Any takers care to take her off the shelf and give us readers a break?! :oIo:

That is because, there are many whiner losers around who lap up her sobby sobby life tales, ..sort of vitamin supplement to them all..to know there are others like them sunk in despair and misery.
 

Papsmearer

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Generous Asset
I seriously wonder how she satisfy her sexual urges????:confused:

7 dildos of 7 different sizes and colours, each per day to satisfy her weekly sexual needs?

Sumiko is too cheap, she changes her cucumber every 5 days. After using it in her hai, she chops it up for her nasi lemak. Now you know.
 

cooleo

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Sumiko is too cheap, she changes her cucumber every 5 days. After using it in her hai, she chops it up for her nasi lemak. Now you know.

I am going to pay attention to women who buy cucumbers from supermarkets from now on
 

Papsmearer

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I am going to pay attention to women who buy cucumbers from supermarkets from now on

Yes, you should. They will be mostly the spinster old maid type like SuckmiKock, and you can see by the way they handle and balance the cucumber, they are heavy users. Also, if they buy a lot of nasi lemak ingredients
 

AhBengBoyBoy

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I have always held the unchanging opinion that with her stunning looks, she could have easily been wildly successful as a glam model, if only she chose to.

Even now, that''s still true.
 
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