I think most people can understand the benefits of having a chinese boyfriend. Language, culture, new experiences and so on.
But you know whatβs better than having a Chinese boyfriend? Having a male Chinese best friend. You see, with romantic relationships there are all kinds of social restrictions of things you can and canβt do.Β For instance, most relationships are kept secret from parents sometimes for years. Unless you are 100 percent going to marry, you just donβt tell your parents.
But with friendships, those rules go out the door, and as a foreign girl being best friends with a chinese guy, things get even looser.
If youβve been reading my blog even casually, youβll know that Color is my best friend.Β And not just a normal best friend, but one of the best best friends Iβve ever had in my life. Weβre very Odd Couple-ish. He is a traditional Chinese guy, while Iβm a modern American woman. So our word views are so different, but like Felix and Oscar, somehow it just clicks.
Our random discussions/arguments opens up Chinese culture for me in a way nothing else has. For instance when I stayed with him in Hong Kong for a few weeks I forgot my travel towel and bought a new terry cloth towel. When I was packing up to leave, the fluffy towel couldnβt fit in my bag, so I told him I was going to give it to him.
βBring it home with you,β he said.
βI canβt. Itβs too big.β
βWell, I wonβt use it,β he said.
βColor, itβs practically new. Just wash it and keep it. Itβs nicer than yours.β
βYeah,β he said looking at me like I was an idiot. βBut youβve used it. Itβs touched your body.β
βSo?β
This set off a 2 hour discussion of personal hygiene. Like most people in China, Color washes his clothes by hand. He has a plastic tub he pulls out once a week or so, and gets to work. The plastic bucket, he explained, was his. And if any of his roommates used it he would be extremely upset, and would have to buy a new one. But of course they know better, have their own buckets, and wouldnβt dare use his.
βBut itβs just a plastic bucket,β I said. βOnce it dries, itβs fine.β
βItβs not fine, he said. βItβs dirty. No one else can use it except for me.β
Turns out even in his own family, where his mom does all the washing, they have different plastic buckets for each family member. And if he ever came to America he would probably just bring, and use, his own towel (βWould your family be offended?β He asked earnestly. βOffended if you used your own towel? Um, no.β) To him, sharing something like a soda, or food is fine. But a towel? Even if it was washed itβs still βdirty.’ And after we talked about this I talked with some other Chinese people and they said they felt the same way. I mean, who knew? Who could even guess about something like that?
I also get to be involved with his family. I stayed at his hometown, ate eggs cooked by his grandma and walked arm-in-arm with his mom. This is more than just best friend benefits but also because Iβm foreign. He said, if I was a chinese girl who was just friends I couldnβt go to his house or meet his family. Also, his parents wouldnβt allow him to visit my family.
But since Iβm foreign, and thanks to movies and TV shows they know that in the West guys and girls are often friends, itβs totally okay. In fact, itβs MORE than ok. His parents and family can relate to me in a carefree, pressure-less way that they couldnβt act with a girlfriend of his. They donβt need to judge me, and I donβt need to impress them. We can just be very natural together. And I can break all laws of civility and culture and they can forgive me because Iβm foreign.
In fact, Iβm going to his house to experience Spring Festival (Chinese New Years) in a few weeks. He lives in a small village and they have a lot of strange (to me) customs and traditions that I cannot wait to experience (Even if Iβm a little scared..I mean, will I have to eat fish heads or duck tongues or something?!) And again, if we were anything other than friends, it wouldnβt be possible.
I also love that I can tell him anything, and ask him anything and heβs not shy to answer me back. He doesnβt try to make me feel comfortable or relaxed like some other people do. He just wants to tell me the truth. This has especially come in handy with dating. βColor, a guy just said this….What does he really mean?β is a question I have asked him many times.
And while he helps me out a lot, I think (hope) that I do the same for him. He can tell me about actions and thoughts that might be not acceptable to a Chinese person, but for me itβs fine. Like I said, Iβm a modern woman, so talking about sex and stuff isnβt shocking to me like it might be to a Chinese female friends. And just like he gives me honest answers, I give him ones too. Although I get very exasperated when he starts talking about the perfect wife who βlikes to cook and clean for him and spend all her time taking care of him.β
βWhy are we friends again?β is usually how I respond to that. Like I said, traditional guy, modern girl.
So even though we live far away from each other, and have opinions that are galaxies apart, something about our friendship just works. And works really, really well. So while having a chinese boyfriend is good, having a Chinese best friend is the best thing of all.
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Great post! Actually this is the first time I hear that a Chinese person doesn’t wanna use other’s towel or wash their clothes together. I have heard some Chinese students like to wash their clothes by hand, but didn’t realize there might be this kind of reasons behind it.
It’s so great to hear you have such a great friend as Color!
Thanks Sara! When I was just at Color’s house for spring festival I brought my own travel towel so luckily it wasn’t a problem at all, hah ha!
This post reminded me of my mother, who strictly separates our clothing and towels growing up. Yet, she’s the type that had no problem of licking uncooked meat to see how much more soy sauce she needs to add. I guess it is a Chinese thing. But I wonder if the whole hand wash thing relates to the environment you grow up in. All of my family, who used to live in China and those who still live in China, all lived in large cities. None of us washed anything by hand. Everyone had a wash machine.
Maybe it’s also an economic thing. Maybe the people in the big cities have more money to buy washing machines where my friends family didn’t. Although, at my school there are plenty of machines in the dormitory, but all my students refuse to use them saying they are too dirty. So they wash the clothes by themselves which is not only hard work, but is freezing cold in the wintertime because they use cold water!
Such a positive post π Very nice to hear a good story coming from a resident ‘foreigner’ in China. Make the most of visiting Color’s hometown.. It’s so cool to experience China with a Chinese person. EVERYTHING is just so different π
Great blog! Do you have any suggestions for aspiring writers? I’m planning to start my own site soon but I’m a little lost on everything. Would you suggest starting with a free platform like WordPress or go for a paid option? There are so many choices out there that I’m completely overwhelmed .. Any tips? Bless you!