Category Archives: Boyfriend of the Year

We didn’t even need to call in Dr. Phil

Matt and I got in a fight last week, a fight that can mostly be summed up by this:

“If I’m thirsty, I don’t want you to bring me a glass of water. I want you to say, ‘Gloria, I too know what it means to be thirsty.’”
—White Men Can’t Jump

We hardly ever fight, which is sort of weird (but I’ll take it!), though when we do, it’s usually some version of me bemoaning my poor, unfortunate life, him quickly trying to fix it, then me saying, hey, chill out, sad is the new happy, didn’t you hear? And then arguing about our clashing ways of communication. Typical Mars/Venus stuff, I suppose.

We made up and now whenever I complain about the universe, Matt is quick to sympathize and comfort rather than flip through the buyer’s manual in his brain.

Before we went to bed last night, I was like, “Can you turn off the lights? I’m so tired!” He calmly replied, “I too know what it’s like to not want to get up.”

Today, I walked through the door holding a bunch of bags and boxes, then motioned for him to help me take off my strappy, claspy sandals (hey, I’m Asian, no shoes in the house). He shook his head and said, “I too know what it’s like to be stuck in high heels.”

Geez.

For some reason, this is why I love him.

And boldly go where no man has gone before

Matt and I were sitting in my room, talking about seeing Star Trek, which I heard is supposed to be good or something. Unsurprisingly, I know nothing about Star Trek, except that they wear those awful polyester onesies, but I wanted to pretend that I had some nerd cred, so I put up the hand sign and said robotically, “Live long and prosper.”

To which Matt replied, “Uh, that’s The Shocker.”

I looked at my hand and oh my God, it was.

We started chuckling hysterically.

Of course, this was when he put up The Shocker, pointed it at me and said, “Do you want to live long and prosper?” I curled up on my bed and screamed, “NOOOO!”

Still giggling, I got up to go to the bathroom, which was where I had the most excellent idea.

I rushed out and told Matt, he nodded and laughed, and then went to his laptop and opened Photoshop.

Ladies and gentlemen, I present to you …

mrshock

Live long and shock her.

Thank you, thank you, we’ll be here all night.

Whoa

My relationship has moved at the speed of molasses for the past six years. Now it’s zooming forward in a major way. Such phrases were uttered this weekend:

“We should probably get a Magic Bullet.”

“Would you rather have a Roomba or a regular vacuum?”

“Can we have ice cream sometimes?”

This is huge, people. Huge. Nothing is set in stone yet, but my heart feels like it’s going to burst out of my chest. It’s thrilling, it’s frightening, it’s weird. Breathe.

By the way, Matt says we can have ice cream sometimes. But not too often because it’s expensive.

Yeah.

Breathe.

NOTE: Matt is hyperventilating right now because he thinks y’all might think that we are engaged or something. I assured him that you do NOT think that because hello!? If/when I do get engaged, I will not announce it with some cryptic post. (I will announce it with bling — pretty shiny bling! Wait, what?) We’ve just been in talks of possibly maybe sharing a living space and I’m being all vague because we don’t have a timeline or other details just yet. Still huge, right?

Seeing eye to eye

tall1

One night, at high school church camp, our counselor had us girls sit around in a little circle and discuss the things we should be looking for in a potential partner, the standards we should be setting for ourselves. We each had to share the traits that were most important to us.

I said “tall.”

(Yes, I realize I missed the point of this exercise completely.)

At 5-foot-8, I’m rather tall. Not like WNBA tall or anything, but growing up with mostly Asian friends, I was indeed “the tall girl.” Well, actually, “the tall, skinny girl.” (Those were the days.) So I always envisioned myself with a tall guy. And I always dated tall guys.

Until Matt.

He’s 5-foot-7, so we’re not exactly TomKat when it comes to the height difference. But as most any girl would know, this is an issue. Not a deal-breaker (Hello! He’s Matt! He does The Robot in a Storm Trooper hoodie!), but certainly an issue.

We’re not one of those couples that fit. You know the type. He stands behind her, his chin resting sweetly on her little head. When they walk side-by-side, his arm relaxes around her shoulders. They look adorable in photographs — it’s as if the curve of his neck was created just for her cheek.

Instead, when Matt and I walk side-by-side, it’s an awkward, “So … do you put your arm around me and stretch uncomfortably? Or do I put my arm around you because it’s easier? But I can’t do that! I’m a girl! Okay, let’s just hold hands.” When we’re, on rare occasion, out on the dance floor, I feel like I have to really bend my knees and get low to do that basic “freak move.” When we’re lying in bed and I want to rest my head on his chest, my feet sometimes dangle off the bed.

And then there’s heels. I do wonder if my shoe collection would be different if Matt were four inches taller. Shrug.

But really, height is something I rarely think about anymore. I’m me, he’s he and in our own clumsy way, we fit just fine.

Aw.

Love is …

… adjusting your standards.

[Lying in each other's arms]

Me: To me, you’re a 7.

Matt: And you’re my silver medal.

Just want to give a quick shout-out to Matt, who’s been so sweet and supportive as I continue to be a frazzled, spread-WAY-too-thin nutcase for the rest of the week. Thanks Matt.

Skinny

In middle school, I was skinny. Like, skinny skinny. Kids called me “Toothpick” and “Skinny Bone Jones” and “Chicken Legs” and every other uncreative nickname you could think of for girl whose puny 71-pound body drowned in her Hypercolor tees and cuffed denim shorts. In my yearbook, someone even wrote: “Be careful not to fly away when the wind blows!” Har, har, thanks, growl. I hated being skinny. So I ate.

In high school, I was skinny. I wore the elusive size double-zero jeans and still needed a belt, but at least I was starting to look like a human being. Friends emphasized that I was so lucky to be able to scarf down whatever I wanted and not gain an ounce, so I basked in my God-given gift. And I ate.

In college, I was skinny. And oh, I ate. Waffles smothered with strawberry glaze and ice cream for breakfast (dorm food, yum), fast food for lunch, Alberto’s carne asada fries for late-night snacks. I complained that I was starting to look like one of those starving kids from Somalia — frail limbs with a portruding belly, but overall, I was still skinny. And for the first time, I was happy with the way I looked. So I ate more.

When you’ve been skinny throughout your life, you kind of assume that you’ll stay that way forever. In the past few years, I’ve been pretty blah about my body and how it has expanded (I wear like a M/L at Forever 21 – ugh!), but I keep telling myself that it’s no big deal, everyone gains weight as they age, empire-waist tops are still in, I’m still thin by American standards, I shouldn’t compare myself to others, Sausage McMuffins make me really happy and in the end, isn’t that what’s important?

But the truth is, I’m sick of seeing my gut spill over my pajama pants as I sit indian-style in front of my closet mirror and do my makeup. I’m sick of not being able to see my hoo-ha when look down in the shower. I’m sick of having to do five squats every time I put on my jeans to give my thighs a teensy bit of breathing room. I’m sick of not feeling hot.

This weekend, I cleaned out my closet and got rid of three giant trash bags of old clothes. (They’ll be donated, or sold, or something.) Most items were chucked because I no longer like them, but many items were begrudgingly shoved in a bag because I just can’t fit them anymore. I wistfully showed Matt one of my favorite tops from college, a lacy halter that, in my own words, “brought all the boys to the yard.” He urged me to try it on and for some stupid reason, I did. The thing looked like a fancy sports bra. It was kind of a wake-up call.

Anyway, this whole memoir here is to announce that Matt and I are in a competition. We’re both aiming to lose 10 pounds by mid-February. There are prizes and such, but really, we just want to be sexy.

I don’t know what sort of lifestyle changes I should make, so any advice would be appreciated.

I’m excited.

I’m gonna be skinny.

Quick Thinker

Every once in a while, Matt likes to clean out my Gmail inbox. I guess seeing 1,546 un-archived messages gives him a nervous tick. I don’t particularly enjoy this process (Did I leave anything incriminating in there? Stop looking at that!), but when it’s all over, I’m always left with a bright, clutter-free station.

Yesterday, as he was tagging my Twitter messages and Borders newsletters, I was being my usual bratty self. “NOOOO! Don’t touch that coupon! I need it! OK, stop. I like my inbox the way it is! 586 unread messages really isn’t that bad. Give me the laptop. Come on!”

After much bickering, we suddenly landed upon one of our old email exchanges, one from when he was on a business trip to Michigan. It was disgustingly cute. I had forgotten that we used to drop each other sweet notes like that all the time while I was living in Arizona.

“Aww, you really love me, don’t you?” I asked.

Still irked, he mumbled under his breath: “Barely.”

“WHAT DID YOU SAY?!?!”

“I … I said … merrily. I love you merrily!”

People, those days of yore are over.

Before The Ring: A Checklist

Right this moment, there are three couples smiling at me. They’re so happy. MAKE THEM STOP! Okay, okay, so they’re immortalized as Save the Date magnets on my bulletin board. Yes, we’re halfway to wedding season once again.

I’m sure you’d expect me to insert some hyperbole-drenched paragraph about how everyone’s getting married and how there’s so much pressure to get with the program. But you know what? That freak-out session is so last season. I’m incredibly happy for my friends getting hitched and incredibly happy with my own love life, too. Even for a 27 year old woman who’s been with her boyfriend for nearly five years and has a traditional Chinese grandmother who somehow finds a new way to say YOU’RE NOT GETTING ANY YOUNGER every time she sees her, this is indeed possible.

Plus, I’m not ready quite yet. Relationship-wise, I guess I’m almost ready, but in so many other ways, I’m simply unprepared. Warning, the rest of this post may sound ridiculous, but it’s stuff that I do think about. You see, while marriage is all about love and commitment (I can handle that), the engagement and wedding, well, those come with completely different checklists.

Here are some things I still need to do before anyone asks me to be a wife:

Fuel my friendships: One of my friends was asked to be a maid of honor. The bride is one of her best friends from high school, but in the years after college, they drifted. My friend was complaining that the bride is all of a sudden reaching out to her, calling her to hang out and trying to jerk the friendship to where it used to be. “It’s so obvious,” my friend said, rolling her eyes. Quiet mental note to self: Be a better friend (and relative, for that matter). Of course, a wedding shouldn’t be the only reason to jump-start relationships with others, but hey, it’s an incentive.

Fix bottom teeth: For perfect, TheKnot.com-ready pictures.

Attract more blog readers: To direct them to a future wedding blog, duh.

Domesticate: No one’s gonna propose to someone who doesn’t know how to sew on a button or use an oven.

Save money: My parents already emptied the “wedding fund” and bought timeshares and a big screen TV.

Get educated: Cushion? Princess? Baguette? Whaaa?

Wow, I should get moving. Although I’m sure that after Matt reads this, I won’t be needing to think about any of these things for a long, long time.

I’m so Hollywood

00111

Except I have tiny boobs. And I kind of forgot to iron.

Matt and I at my magazine’s annual gala

Dress by Be Seduced

The obligatory pre-birthday freak-out

In five days, I will be 27. Matt already hosted a very classy pre-birthday gala for me this past weekend, complete with party hats and flip cup and a jam session on Rock Band. I think I guzzled one too many cheap beers because I’ve been feeling slower than usual in the cranium. No, really. I’ll try to write something on Twitter and I’m like, “Uhhhhhhhh, hi guys. Whatcha doing? Oh that’s cool.” I’ll try to speak in sentences and I’m like, “Ohhhhhh yeah uh huh so … wanna … pizza?” It’s very annoying. I hope my brain cells replenish soon.

I also think I might be getting sick. This sore throat has been prarie dogging it for weeks and it’s just like enough already! Am I sick or am I not sick? If I am, please let me know ASAP so I can change into sweats, pop some drugs and rent High School Musical 1 & 2. The indecisiveness of germs kills me.

Wait, what were we talking about? Oh yes. In five days, I will be 27, I didn’t really want to write an OH-MY-GAWD-I’M-ALMOST-27 post because it’s kind of insensitve to anyone who’s 28 or 29 or (Lord help you) 42. But I suppose much of the reason why I’ve been feeling the way I’ve been feeling is because OH MY GAWD I’M ALMOST 27. Did you really think I could let a birthday pass by without a proper meltdown?

The best word to describe this feeling is … restless? Confined? Stuck on the hamster wheel of life? Oh wait, that’s seven words. I’m not quite sure. I’ve just been experiencing this swelling urge to catapult myself to someplace new. Like with the whole moving in together thing. With Matt, I’ve been blurting out this kind of nonsense all the time and I need to stop. I’ll be asking him about plans for the evening: “Do you want Thai food? Do you want to order the yellow curry? Do you want to rent a movie?” And then I’d casually let it slip: “Do you want to get married?” I’ve probably proposed to him 38462014 times and each could win the prize for most awkward and unromantic.

But I don’t even know that marriage is what I want at this very moment and he realizes this and I love him for giving my many proposals the eye-rolls they deserve. In all honesty, I don’t know exactly what I want in any area of my life right now and it’s driving me insane. Careerwise, it’s an even bigger issue. I’ve whined about this before, but my industry is a sinking ship and yet I’m still here, treading water. How can I move forward? When will things level out so that can I have clear goals again? I need to start running. Not sure where, but somewhere.

Or maybe I should just chill out for a little while. Take a breath. Maybe even take a might-be-sick day.

I’ll be okay. After all, I’m only going to be 27.