[Winter Contest Entry 2012] Concerning That Wedding!

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leonard267 FAKKU Non-Writer
That said, I think I should ask Xenon about this one day, am I supposed to write a story?
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Xenon FAKKU Writer
leonard267 wrote...
That said, I think I should ask Xenon about this one day, am I supposed to write a story?


The contest is open to all forms of writing, including poetry, prose, fan-fiction or even commentary and rants. It's honestly a refreshing and unique read. You need to beware, however, for when you write in this style, it is much easier to make the mistakes you might when writing too casually. I can provide exact details I found of your story once the final poll and judging ends.
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Sorry I couldn't write you a review like I promised, but it couldn't be helped. But at least I'm here now.

So first off, I find this is really new to me coz I have little experience with cynical writing (I got the name right, right?) like this one. I have mixed feelings for this, I must say.

The positive, is that I find this really fresh and is a new thing to me. I guess you could see a new side of marriage, huh? And I like the way you use words in dome parts. I haven't found any mistakes in grammar or phrasing of things like that, like I have in other entries.

The negative, though I enjoyed reading it, there are some things I don't. First, it's like I have said, I'm not familiar with writings like this one, so I find it strange and, in some way, to someone, maybe offensive. I'm young and broad-minded, so I can take in others' ideas more easily, but I guess I'm the kind of guy who believe in the traditional values. I think everyone is free to think and express whatever they believe in, but I must say, I don't agree with everything you said, although I do with some. One thing that I kinda think like you, it's that marriage is not the end. And it has never been about the marriage. It's not the destination that counts, but the journey. Love is all about what you have done in the past and what you will in the future, as lovers to each other. The wedding day is just another day to be remembered in your journey of happiness. Once you get old and look back on the things that you have done, you'll be seeing more than just the wedding day. Moreover, I don't personally think that the wedding party is somewhere for you to get free food =.= It's for the couple's loved ones to share the happiness with them. I rarely go to weddings, too, but I go when they are people that are closed to me, not just to eat food (And I don't know about you guys, but wedding food here usually sucks!). I don't know if those were your real thoughts on marriage, but I think it's worrying nowadays lots of people, especially young people, don't believe in love, marriage and all that. Ana marriage is not just about sex, you know. I think it's clearest when you only think about why you are where you are right now.

And another thing, I must say this ahead: I'm very sorry to all you who read this and find what I will say down here offensive, when it may not be true, it's only what I think and assume. Though I have said I like your usage of words sometimes, I find it really really tedious to read through your piece. I mean, I can barely read three lines without using the dictionary. I think you have exaggerated the words you use in the writing. Although you have use every word right, but you use really little-known words and that make it really hard to understand what you are writing without looking up a word every fifteen seconds. If you tried to make readers curious in what you wrote by making paragraphs hard to understand, I think you have overused the method. While using it here and there sometimes make us interested, it may backfire, it may make readers really bored with lots of difficult words. I don't know about the others, but it did to me. Have you ever read Shakespeare? The most frustrating thing is that you have to look down to the explanation below a page to understand what he wrote, every page. The similar situation happened to me when I was reading yours. I think using it sometimes prove helpful, but sometimes it makes things worse. If you really like to write like that, I think you should join a Old English class where they teach about archaic words and how to use them, coz I can see your skill is not completely perfect. Maybe it's because of my poor vocabulary, but I don't think any normal folks can have that levels of vocabulary. Your entry reminds me as the reading exercise back in school, I find it get really frustrating not knowing a word, or two, or a lot =.= If you just happen to write like that, I guess I must deeply apologize, but I think you should keep it simpler next time.

I guess those are the problems that I have, I think we are just not on the same page on the subject, huh? Well, that pretty ends this wordy review, which may contains as many words as there are on the writing =.= And I apologize in advance for offending you, Leo (is it all right to call you Leo?) and everyone else who read this and well, offended.
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leonard267 FAKKU Non-Writer
Dawn_of_Dark wrote...
Moreover, I don't personally think that the wedding party is somewhere for you to get free food =.=

Though I have said I like your usage of words sometimes, I find it really really tedious to read through your piece. I mean, I can barely read three lines without using the dictionary.


It is interesting that you should say that. From where I come from, the food served in a wedding are prepared by caterers and restaurants. If you have the opportunity to come to participate in any Asian wedding (that includes Indians), you may find the food much more palatable.

I am half hoping people would share their experiences attending weddings by posting that. I am not so sure if you have seen the video that I have posted in the thread. If you do, remember to tune down your speakers.

Thank you for pointing out why people may find this entry a bit off-putting. I thought it would be due to the sarcasm that I employ in my writing. But this is the first time someone pointed out that it is more to do with the language used.

Writing to me is like me trying to craft a joke to share with everyone which is why I go around the website asking people to read it. Writing angrily with long and big words makes me laugh inside and I would really like to share it especially with those who see humour in it.

And most importantly, the views in most of my writeups are not really representative of what I think. I tend to be more ambivalent to matters such as these. It is just that thinking the worst humours me somewhat. Wouldn't you agree that there is something to laugh at overly-pessimistic people? Like the Doomsday predictions for example.
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leonard267 wrote...
It is interesting that you should say that. From where I come from, the food served in a wedding are prepared by caterers and restaurants. If you have the opportunity to come to participate in any Asian wedding (that includes Indians), you may find the food much more palatable.

I am half hoping people would share their experiences attending weddings by posting that. I am not so sure if you have seen the video that I have posted in the thread. If you do, remember to tune down your speakers.

Thank you for pointing out why people may find this entry a bit off-putting. I thought it would be due to the sarcasm that I employ in my writing. But this is the first time someone pointed out that it is more to do with the language used.

Writing to me is like me trying to craft a joke to share with everyone which is why I go around the website asking people to read it. Writing angrily with long and big words makes me laugh inside and I would really like to share it especially with those who see humour in it.

And most importantly, the views in most of my writeups are not really representative of what I think. I tend to be more ambivalent to matters such as these. It is just that thinking the worst humours me somewhat. Wouldn't you agree that there is something to laugh at overly-pessimistic people? Like the Doomsday predictions for example.


I can see where you're coming from, hmmm. Yeah, I do find people who really believed in Doomsday (Though I'm not sure if they DID believe in it, or did they just pretend to be?) stupid. I mean, whatever happens, happens, and everyone dies eventually, right? So why get worked up on such a thing, just live a life which you don't ever have to regret something, don't you think so, too?

And I guess you didn't know this, but I'm living in an Asian country, too! And we don't really celebrate Chirstmas here, too, but we do have Chirstians and there are things made for the day, just that they are not our country's official holiday. So I'm getting a feeling that maybe you're living really near me... Do you celebrate the normal New Year's day, or the Lunar New Year?
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leonard267 FAKKU Non-Writer
Dawn_of_Dark wrote...


I can see where you're coming from, hmmm. Yeah, I do find people who really believed in Doomsday (Though I'm not sure if they DID believe in it, or did they just pretend to be?) stupid. I mean, whatever happens, happens, and everyone dies eventually, right? So why get worked up on such a thing, just live a life which you don't ever have to regret something, don't you think so, too?

And I guess you didn't know this, but I'm living in an Asian country, too! And we don't really celebrate Chirstmas here, too, but we do have Chirstians and there are things made for the day, just that they are not our country's official holiday. So I'm getting a feeling that maybe you're living really near me... Do you celebrate the normal New Year's day, or the Lunar New Year?


Lunar New Year. And I agree with your outlook of life though I feel very numb inside for staying at home and sleeping for too long.
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leonard267 wrote...
Lunar New Year. And I agree with your outlook of life though I feel very numb inside for staying at home and sleeping for too long.


You mean on Christmas? Well, I went out on that day. We don't celebrate it like the Western countries, but I do like to join in the fun :))

And I'm becoming very interested in where you are living right now :)) Maybe your house is just right at the corner :))
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leonard267 FAKKU Non-Writer
Dawn_of_Dark wrote...
leonard267 wrote...
Lunar New Year. And I agree with your outlook of life though I feel very numb inside for staying at home and sleeping for too long.


You mean on Christmas? Well, I went out on that day. We don't celebrate it like the Western countries, but I do like to join in the fun :))

And I'm becoming very interested in where you are living right now :)) Maybe your house is just right at the corner :))


No no. I don't celebrate Christmas or the 1st of January. At least that part of my entry is true where my life is concerned. But I do celebrate the Lunar New Year.
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You have wasted my time yet again. I enjoyed it though.
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leonard267 FAKKU Non-Writer
GiantBeardedFace wrote...
You have wasted my time yet again. I enjoyed it though.


Pretty much everything I write wastes everyone's time! But I must thank you reading it.
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Xenon FAKKU Writer
A humorous take on the evidently increasing number of superficial marriages, however, a bit casual. The style is refreshing for the contest, though.

FYI: I am an editor by nature. I read word-for-word and I pick up almost every little thing. So, the only way I can express my corrections is by directly reposting your story. Additions are in red, comments are in dark red, removals are strike-through. Here you are.

Spoiler:
Where 'special connections' are concerned, the first thing that came to my mind is my problematic internet connection that turns on and off unexpectedly, much to my frustration. The second thing that came to my mind, after sending a personal
message to the contest organisers and repeatedly banging my head on the computer(Breaking the fourth wall, or just a reflecting piece? An interesting take.), was the special connection of marriage and where it all purportedly begun,: the bloody wedding ceremony.

I noticed that there are two camps of opinion pertaining to marriage.

The first camp thinks that marriage completes romance and marks the beginning of an eternal bond.

The other camp thinks that marriage finishes romance and marks the beginning of eternal bondage.

For the reader who can't distinguish the difference between those two, allow me to elucidate:

The first camp tends to see marriage as a happy ending to a fairy tale, without realising that it is a happy beginning to what will be a very unhappy nightmare. When they log on to Fakku, they would browse for comics that depict characters
engaging in intercourse and end intercourse feeling very happy about themselves, and they would think that these characters would perhaps go through a wedding, and live happily ever after.

The second camp tends to see marriage as an ominous beginning to a lifetime of hell thereafter, without realising the need to delude oneself to see marriage as a happy beginning to a non-existent lifetime bliss (What is this? A non-existent life of bliss? Or a non-existent blissful life?). When they log on to Fakku, they
would browse for comics that depict characters engaging in intercourse and end intercourse feeling very happy about themselves, then they would hope that the characters contract some venereal disease (What). Or in the worse scenario, engage in intercourse, feel happy about it, have a bun in the oven, go through a wedding, have to deal with the fact that they would have to live with their spouse and their spawns for the rest of their lives or until a divorce is filed and either way land themselves in a financial rut.

So, I decided that it iswould be a very good idea to talk about marriage and see which of the two camps I agree more with. And(You shouldn’t start a sentence with †˜And’) sSince it would take too much time to get married and live to tell how it is like after my spouse dies, or too expensive to
get married and then file for a divorce immediately, I decided to share and analyse a few observations I made at a wedding, purportedly the point in time when marriage begins.

The wedding was held sometime atin late November. Before the wedding proper, I showed up at their house as part of a long abided custom and, surprisingly, I was looking forward to it! It is not every(space)day that you see people dressed in strange
costumes known as wedding gowns and wedding suits, being photographed with a group of people, known as myself and my extended family trying to look pleased about it(Were you trying to look pleased about it, or was your extended family? Both?). It was then that I realised that the bride and groom aren't really happy about this, rather it was everyone else who were enjoying themselves looking at the bride and groom suffer from the humiliation.

And(Don't begin your paragraphs with the word †˜And’) iIt iwas at that point I realised, marriage is not about love! Marriage is all about putting up a show in front of friends, family and society, and meeting their expectations! Do not let the comics in Fakku fool you! Couples who are in love need not have to go through the drudgery of going through(Repeated word usage) that wedding or enduring marriage. But(Also don’t start a sentence with †˜But’) It is for the fact that they have something called a social circle that they are forced into this charade!

One can continue talking about how marriages are traditionally a social contract between the families of both bride and groom, and I can continue pouring cold water and excretement(What) on the notion that marriages are inspired by love but I still have the wedding ceremony to talk about, don't I?

To put it simply, the wedding ceremony was an extension of the pre-wedding ceremony(In that it felt superficial. Probably could have been better stated.), except that it was held in a restaurant located in a hotel, with even larger cameras and a larger audience. It was held later atin the evening when I was showned to a seat by a round table accompanied with another group of relatives, where I partaooke in emotionless gaping. I am glad to say that the other people at the table reciprocated the same way.

But(Just like 'And,' you really shouldn’t start with †˜But’ at the beginning of a paragraph, let alone a sentence.) wWe were spared the discomfort of staring at each other for long as the wedding ceremony begun with a series of slideshows accompanied with pop music which was, like all pop music, very jarring to my ears. Whoever was in charge of the slideshow slapped in photos of the couple-to-be-married from the days when they were brought into this world all the way to the very present.

Those in charge of hosting the ceremony then suddenly proclaimed that what follows next is "the time that I have been waiting for" --- more costume role-play, it seems, as if therey hadven't been enough people blighting my eyes by trying to pretend to be someone they aren't in an attempt in healthy escapism!(Could be shortened.) (I did say that I was looking forward to it, earlier that day but that is precisely the reason why it did not amuse me that much later on!) Both bride and groom marched down the aisle, exchanged saliva through an act most people would describe as kissing and I couldn't care less.

But(Again) tThen what followed iwas really the moment I amwas truly waiting for --- the ten-course dinner.

I will admit that I am a glutton, but I am guessing so are the rest of those people who would take time off to take part in a wedding. For a gift of money as little as 2 US dollars, you can sink your teeth into well-cooked meals prepared by chefs of consummate culinary skill, and at the same time gloat at the fact that whoever who forked out money for the wedding had paid tens of thousands of dollars so that we can freeload dinner!(Run-on sentence, create a break somewhere.)

For persons who are not familiar with how wedding dinners are conducted in my part of the world, be relieved. You need not put up with giving your hosts a toast, wishing them a long marriage, a large progeny and other horrifying prospects by yelling your lungs out for as long as possible. Towards the end of that dinner, you will definitely have a chance to take yet more photographs with the bride, groom and their parents as go from table to table. That is all right with me, but definitely not all right for the bride, the groom and those who brought them to this world.

Notwithstanding that, there is a reason why I enjoy stuffing my face with a 10-course meal. It is because it gives me the opportunity to observe people and then find reasons for me to be a pessimistic, emotion-drained and generally unhappy wreck with these observations. Now, let me give you an opportunity to peer into the lens of a pessimistic, emotion-drained and generally unhappy wreck as he saw the bride, groom, the in-laws and everyone else, namely my lens.

The groom appeared to look rather agitated. One could suppose that this is because of the hard work he put in for most of the day. I decided to interpret this in dark and Freudian terms. He can't wait to make sweet sweet(I get what you're trying to get at, but avoid repeated words like this.) love to his newly acquired sex slave.

The bride on the other hand looks more happier, but I can't help but to feel that the grin on her face was more sinister than it appeared to be. So, I also decided to interpret that in dark and Freudian terms as well. She can't wait to make her husband her new slave by making her husband think that she is a newly acquired sex slave.

But(Again) tThe in-laws appear to be even happier than both the bride and the groom! There is nothing dark or Freudian about that. After being slaves to their children for so long, throwing so manyuch resources into educating them, giving in to their whining and pining, essentially slogging their guts out for them, it is finally their turn to make their children their slaves!

But(Again) tThe happiest of all ought to be everyone else for reasons I am more than glad to repeat. They managed to freeload ten-course dinners and most of all, they are glad not to be in the shoes of those whose lives will be irrevocably changed by that wedding! For the worse, I might add.

So after the wedding dinner, those invited to the wedding, including myself, scarpered. That ends my recollection of the wedding and begins the post mortem of the wedding. This post mortem, as required by the contest rules, will be dominated by this question: What does the wedding tell us about the special connection that is marriage?

And(Again) tTo tell you the truth, going through the wedding could be one huge red herring after all! You (or rather I) must be stupid to think that one stupid ceremony will dictate how the marriage will turn out. Yet, one can pick up hints here and there or make stupid assumptions based on biased 'observations' as I have done for most of the above paragraphs. (Clever observation.)

Nonetheless, I believe I know and you know which camp I fall in, where opinion about marriage is concerned. And(Again) dDue to my nature, I am forever doomed into rationalising many matters, marriage included, as an endeavour undertaken by people who have lost their marbles.

That said and done, after you have wasted precious minutes of your time reading this (And grading it, asshole), I really wonder if you could feel better about marriage and all other things in life when I wish you:

A Happy 2013! (I won't wish you a Merry Christmas. I don't celebrate it!)
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The way you described the wedding proves that you too hate the consumerism and commercialism of weddings. While I accept happily accept the idea of marriage as a social contract that allows you to sue if your spouse cheats, weddings, however are shoved down the throats of men as a nearly obligatory behavior in many cultures around the world. The girls around the world aspire to make their man give them a macabre and truly ancient ritual in order to satisfy a dream that the medias forced them to beloeve in since they were small children. For them, it is probably some sort of fairy tale to brag about to their friends.

OT: The monogue was hilarious. The way you described the feast and the guests made them look like animals in search of thir next free meal. "Horrifying prospects of yelling your lungs out for as long as possible" made me imagine a neanderthal ceremony or insane natives around a fire- loved it. You also made a very good point (some are too idiot to not see) about the high expectations of sex in marriage. Many men expect to have acquired a "sex-slave" (LOVED the basic term to describe expectations on wife) and end up in lifetime blue-balls (I have met many men wih said situation).

I loved this monologue, it felt like reading a magazine article. 10/10 :D
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leonard267 FAKKU Non-Writer
SolidShark wrote...
The way you described the wedding proves that you too hate the consumerism and commercialism of weddings. While I accept happily accept the idea of marriage as a social contract that allows you to sue if your spouse cheats, weddings, however are shoved down the throats of men as a nearly obligatory behavior in many cultures around the world. The girls around the world aspire to make their man give them a macabre and truly ancient ritual in order to satisfy a dream that the medias forced them to beloeve in since they were small children. For them, it is probably some sort of fairy tale to brag about to their friends.

OT: The monogue was hilarious. The way you described the feast and the guests made them look like animals in search of thir next free meal. "Horrifying prospects of yelling your lungs out for as long as possible" made me imagine a neanderthal ceremony or insane natives around a fire- loved it. You also made a very good point (some are too idiot to not see) about the high expectations of sex in marriage. Many men expect to have acquired a "sex-slave" (LOVED the basic term to describe expectations on wife) and end up in lifetime blue-balls (I have met many men wih said situation).

I loved this monologue, it felt like reading a magazine article. 10/10 :D


^ I am attacking the romanticisation of weddings by 'vanilla' lovers. I am of the opinion that marriage, if I am not mistaken, is a social contract and a breeding contract between families not individuals, otherwise why the elaborate ceremony? I am afraid this is the reason why we are forced to feel obliged to get someone to breathe down the necks for the rest of our lives (i.e. get a wife).

I take it that you are of the male species just as I am, this means we will most likely die before our spouses (should we get one) and I think that validates the statement that 'Marriage is not a word, but a bloody life sentence.'

I posted a video on this thread on the yelling ceremony. It is an actual ritual practiced in weddings from where I come from. It is a potential comedy gold mine. Imagine getting someone alien to these rituals to attend these weddings! Imagine an anime scene depicting that!
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