| The proof is in the pudding (or, rather oatmeal): I do indeed eat breakfast! |
However, a little bit later when I got
up for more coffee, he commented that it made sense that I would need a lot of
coffee, given that he was pretty sure I didn’t eat breakfast. When asked how exactly he arrived at that
conclusion, he explained, “It’s simple.
You don’t have a husband, so you don’t eat breakfast.” “Ah, now, I see,” I responded, “So are you
saying you would make me breakfast if we got married?” “Oh no,
no, no,” he exclaimed, “But if you married me you would have a husband to give
you money to buy breakfast every single day!”
He then proceeded to create a pretty compelling (albeit totally
make-believe) case for why we really ought to get married, crowning it off with
the very pragmatic point that it’d probably be good for his English. Feigning indignation, I questioned him as to
whether this meant he was just using me for my knowledge of the English
language. His response: “No, no, of course not! I am marrying you mostly for a love!! And a little bit for English! But mostly for love!” That being settled, we went ahead and
invited the others in the class to our impending wedding, provided, of course,
that I felt like getting married at all the next day or the next.
Things took
a dramatic turn, however, when the apartment we have class in lost power and,
with it, Internet connectivity. Unable
to continue with what we were doing on online, the other volunteers and I took turns giving an impromptu English lesson, reviewing vocabulary of all the rooms/ objects
in the house and inviting the men to share full sentences with the new words
they were learning. When we started going over vocabulary pertaining to the bathroom, my friend turns to me, and, in perhaps
the only English sentence I heard from him all morning, told me with a giant
laugh, "Love, you neeeeeeeed a shower!”
And that, as you can well imagine, was the end of that. Doing my best to act as pretend-outraged as
possible, I threw my hands up in the air, “No more wedding! No more getting married! Nope, nope, nope!” And so it was that my imaginary-engagement came
to a swift, uproarious end!
As absolutely absurd as this whole morning might sound (and yes,
to be sure, it was), I am also seriously quite thankful for it. Given that the refugees that show up to
computer classes have, at least up to this point, been exclusively male, and come for the most part from societies where gender roles are even more deeply entrenched than our own, I have
sometimes felt at a disadvantage in terms of being able to make them feel
comfortable around me/ easily establish rapport. However, our super silly, not-real-at-all
almost-marriage seemed to span that particular bridge, in some ways freeing
everyone up from the constraints of formality through the simple act of sharing
in a few ridiculous, mischievous moments together!
** Final note, for any friends/ family who might yet be harboring feelings of concern, please rest assured that both my refugee friend and I were being 100% silly. I would never marry someone for breakfast. Dinner, possibly, but never, ever for breakfast. So no worries there!
** Final note, for any friends/ family who might yet be harboring feelings of concern, please rest assured that both my refugee friend and I were being 100% silly. I would never marry someone for breakfast. Dinner, possibly, but never, ever for breakfast. So no worries there!
Hey Jannelle! I very very very much enjoy reading your blog. You're a great writer. You know that whole medical interpreter thing? Have you read the titular story from Jhumpi Lahiri's "Interpreter of Maladies"? You're totally like an intepreter of maladies.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the feedback, Daniel! I haven't, but I'll be sure to look it up as a study break sometime this week!
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