Saturday, November 29, 2008

Anatomy Of A Chinese Wedding

"Oi, can you please say something nicer or not leh?"

The voice of the zhi mui (literally: 'fellow sister', actually 'she-devil') rings out across the gates and into the streets. It is the morning of the wedding, and the bridegroom is finding his way to his bride a little more difficult than he had hoped.

The zhi muis are one or more female friends of the bride employed for the sole purpose for making the passage of the bridegroom as arduous as possible before he can reach the ultimate reward that is his blushing bride, normally hidden from view in a bedroom, adorned in her wedding gown.

The groom has his heng tais ('fellow brothers') with him, who will help him defeat the evil zhi muis and end up rescuing his bride.

The groom normally has to perform a series of tasks to satisfy the zhi muis. This can involve something innocuous, like singing a love song loud enough for the bride to hear, or professing his love for her in a romantic way. (Most Asian males will falter at this early stage!)

The tasks may range from the physical (doing fifty push-ups, piggybacking your groomsmen while promising your wife you will carry her throughout life in the same manner) to the downright lewd (your groomsmen have to eat bananas dangling from your waist area! What is that supposed to signify?). Some are more creative, like my piu je's (cousin sister's) wedding a few years ago.

The zhi muis had gotten a napkin, and had ten people (guys included!) to plant lip-sticked kisses onto the napkin. The groom, in order to pass through the door ('koh mun') had to guess which lipstick print belonged to his bride-to-be, and had to pay ten dollars for every wrong guess. Let's just say he was thankful there was only ten lipstick prints to choose from.

The koh mun exercise can sometimes be an extortion effort as well, as the sisters will demand a certain amount of money (as is the Chinese way) of auspicious value ($888 dollars, $99 dollars, $388 dollars and so forth).

Some of the other activities carry some meaning, like I remember, as one of the groomsmen, being served a platter with sweets, raw chilli, lemon slices and bittergourd, each signifying sweetness, spiciness, sourness and bitterness. These signified the emotions of any marriage, and it symbolised that the groom was ready to share life's platter with the bride, through any season(ing).

Finally, when the poor groom has been tortured to the point of leaving his bride (hahaha!), the zhi muis will finally relent, and allow him through, taking his first of many happy steps to the door that opens into the room where his bride sits demurely, waiting for him.

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'Let me in! Let me in! I have waited too long for this moment, battled too hard to see you, and I can't wait for you to finally be my wife! Won't you please let me in, and not frustrate me, when all that matters to me is within reach, just the distance of a shout away; when all that stands between me and my happiness are these horrible friends of yours! Let me in!'

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

hey,
cant wait for u to come back aa.. we have arranged a SHUSHI NITE on Sunday, 7th Dec with karen,ur brather and li... :) u are included. cant make it or not?

dc

mellowdramatic said...

Should be okay, sounds good! I'll be back in the blink of an eye!

LiveByFaith79 said...

horray..:) can't wait.
Want to praise your brather..

Your brather very gud leh.. Cooked and washed for me for dinner last nite and also helping me with Pre-AGM preparation even on Sunday....:) really using his Love Language "Acts of service" very well.. :) wah.. feel soo loved..:)

LiveByFaith79 said...

IN return, we makan out and i iron ur brather's baju... "sob sob".. hehee

Nicole said...

hahaha do i hear someone dreading to be "heng tai"???? hehe is all for fun anyway!!!

mellowdramatic said...

DC - See... Love butler, just like you wanted! Good that you are both speaking each other's love language!

Nicole - Yeah, you're right... It is all for fun only anyways... I suspect the fun belongs mostly to the zhi mui side! Hahaha!

Unknown said...

Don't worry Khuen... When you get married I'll be your head Heng Tai!

(There is nothing like the site of an Indian man yelling 'Yammmm Seeennggg!')

mellowdramatic said...

Hahaha, Rajes! It would be great to have you as my head Heng Tai! You can drink everyone else under the table, and the last three people standing will be you, my bride, and myself! The whole banquet hall filled with intoxicated people on the floor!

What a sight! (Then you can go and vomit in the hotel rooms and pay them money again!)

Unknown said...

Sounds like a plan...