pull down to refresh

The prospects in Indian Matchmaking and Jewish Matchmaking have got it all wrong. They come up with a comprehensive wish list regarding their non-negotiables when it comes to finding a partner. A list that comprises physical attributes, personal traits and professional accomplishments.
Which is all fine and dandy when you want to fall in love with your soulmate and live happily ever after. But what people don’t realise is that when shit hits the fan, as it inevitably does, what you desperately need is someone who can stay unflappable.
Okay, so stay unflappable sounds cryptic. What does it entail, anyway? Let me flesh it out with two anecdotes that happened to me just this week.
On Thursday, my wife was putting our two children to sleep while I was preparing to shower. All of a sudden, I heard popping sounds. Before I could respond, all the lights in my house went out. My home was plunged into total darkness. My daughter started crying. Not a conducive environment for calmness to prevail.
It was a long-drawn ordeal, but to cut a long story short, our electrician came close to midnight. It turned out that our electrical cables in our circuit board had burnt.
Our electrician installed new cables and due to his hard work, some order was restored in our home. I wish I could say that that was the end of it, but our electrician said that we ought to look into changing the electrical wiring of our entire house soon. Our house was old, so the electrical cables and system needed an overhaul.
Guess what my wife told me at dinner the next day? She unveiled her plans for renovation, suggesting that here was the chance to build an extra room out of our relatively spacious living room and incorporate a long island concept into the kitchen. Spending money sucks, but she declared, “It will be money well-spent.”
Staying unflappable means that you will want a partner who can perceive a crisis as an opportunity. No point dwelling on things that you can’t control.
We had an emerging cockroach situation, so my wife laid a trap and sprayed our shoe cabinet with a water-based insecticide yesterday. I opened up the sock shelf, only to find 3-4 cockroaches scurrying around.
There was no time to waste. We took up our respective roles instinctively. My wife sprayed like mad; I gathered the struggling roaches with tissue paper and threw them into a plastic bag. She picked up the eggs with a pair of chopsticks. No screams, just hard-nosed determination.
Staying unflappable means the ability to work with your partner as one half of a pair of chopsticks because you know that s/he has your back.
In conclusion, when you want to spend the rest of your life with someone, don’t become preoccupied with physical appearances and credentials. You want someone who can swiftly open up an umbrella when shit hits the fan.
this territory is moderated
175 sats \ 3 replies \ @anon 7 Jul
That sounds incredibly refreshing. -10-year husband of a suffering, overwhelmed, self-loathing partner
reply
I’m surprised you remember how long I have been married haha
reply
Lol ask any prisoner and they will know their sentence by heart
reply
reply
Amazing! But because you said Indian Matchmaking got it wrong, I want to submit my revolt. In India, or more specifically in Hindus and Muslims living here, the majority of marriages are arranged. The parents decide who you're going to marry. In most (above 90%) of the cases, these marriages are successful. Traditionally, Hindus respect marriage as an act of God and don't think of outward appearance too much.
I've an uncle who is highly educated and wealthy too but he was married at an young age to a woman who is short, not fair in colour, not educated, not so beautiful (as I can see), yet they have had 5 kids and I've always viewed them as an ideal couple for their relationship has been flawless.
reply
Thanks for the cultural insights! I should have made myself clearer. I was referring to the Netflix show “Indian Matchmaking” rather than the ancient institution of matchmaking
reply
you will want a partner who can perceive a crisis as an opportunity
I've heard that "crisis" and "opportunity" are the same word in Japanese, but I've always doubted that. If true, though, it might explain your wife's attitude.
reply
You know everything!
In Chinese, the ideogram for the word crisis 危机 is made up of two characters: danger 危 and opportunity 机.
The ideogram exists in Japanese too: 危機. Just that the second character comprises more strokes.
reply
Something that's always intrigued me is how language might impact thought.
Do things like that make Chinese and Japanese people (and Korean, I assume) perceive crises differently than others?
reply
An electrician arrived at midnight, that’s impressive and fortunate
reply
That’s true. Things could have gone much, much worse
reply
Teamwork and being on the same page is so important. You don’t need to agree on everything but you need to be rowing in the same direction.
reply
Can’t have your own teammate sabotage your efforts!
reply
My favourite couple is Biden Harris
reply
49 sats \ 1 reply \ @Satosora 7 Jul
Very good. Physical appearance is what brings you together initially, everything else is what keeps you together indefinitely.
reply
How did you meet your wife?
reply
Great Article!!
reply
Nice article!
But I agree to Coins that Indian matchmaking isn't doing it wrong.
reply
One of the key advantages is the extensive involvement and support from family members in the matchmaking process. This can provide a strong support system for individuals seeking a life partner, ensuring that decisions are not made in isolation but with the collective wisdom and experience of family members
reply