My mom had a QR code on her table at Ikea. You wouldnโt have noticed it unless you knew what to look for. It peeked discreetly from under her plate, like a small, secret weapon. Another elderly parent, balancing a plate of meatballs and lingonberry sauce, would walk by and scan it without a word, a quick, quiet transaction.
This wasnโt her first attempt at matchmaking. My mom used to go to Nanjingโs marriage market with an umbrella advertising my name, age, appearance, major, and future career prospects. Sheโd even written in bold characters that we didnโt care if a man didnโt own an apartmentโmy parents had already bought one for me.
She was frustrated that I wasnโt dating. I was 27, unmarried, and, according to her, wasting the best years of my life. Once, I hid behind some bushes to watch her in action. It was unsettling. She stood there as other parents glanced at her umbrella, dismissed it, and walked away. Her shoulders tensed each time, but she stayed rooted, waiting for the next passerby.
โWhy are you doing this?โ I asked her afterward. โI donโt need you to find someone. Iโm fine on my own.โ
But the dates she arranged kept coming. And they were excruciatingโme sitting across from equally uncomfortable men, both of us asking obligatory questions like, โDo you want kids?โ Neither of us cared about the answer, but we knew our mothers would.
It was on one of these dates that I met Bajin. Unlike the others, he didnโt take the situation seriously either.
โYour mom uses QR codes too?โ he asked, incredulous. He leaned back, his fingers tightening around his glass, as if he could squeeze some sense out of it.
I nodded, and we laughed, swapping stories about awkward encounters and over-the-top profiles curated by our parents. His mom had added a video montage of him volunteering, smiling at babies, and posing with carefully chosen props to suggest success and stability.
โSometimes,โ he said, โI feel like my mom has built this version of me that I canโt live up to.โ
I nodded slowly, my gaze drifting to my drink as I twisted the glass in my hands. A sigh escaped before I could stop it. โSame.โ
As the night wore on, we vented, mostly about our families. He gave a wry smile and shrugged. โMy parents are divorced. Dadโs moved on, but my mom? Sheโs like a hamster on a wheel, always running in circles trying to fix my life, but hers hasnโt gone anywhere.โ He chuckled, though there was a tiredness in his voice that I understood.
Iโd had the same thought about my mom. โMaybe we should turn the tables,โ I said, half-joking. โWhat if we tried finding dates for them?โ
He raised an eyebrow. โYouโre serious?โ
โWhy not? Theyโre already spending all this time matchmaking for us. Letโs give them a taste of their own medicine.โ
He hesitated, then grinned. โOkay, but if this backfires. Iโm blaming you.โ
We brainstormed profiles for our moms and strategized about where to find potential matches. My mom spent her afternoons at the gym, so we figured she might be into someone who shared her fitness interests. His mom loved group dancing in a square near his home, but the male participants were few and far between.
The next day, we went to the local gym together. I pointed out a man in his 60s lifting dumbbells. โThink heโs your Momโs type?โ
Bajin grimaced. โHonestly, I donโt want to think about it.โ
I laughed. โYeah, I wouldnโt want to either.โ
Bajing’s eyes brightened, a grin spreading across his face as if the perfect idea had just clicked into place. “What if we swapped? Iโll find someone for your mom, and you find someone for mine.”
It was a practical solution. We exchanged QR codes, and over the next few weeks, we threw ourselves into the bizarre world of elderly matchmaking. It was equal parts ridiculous and fascinating.
My momโs QR code was a masterpiece of digital overreach. Along with her photos, there was a well-curated video of her jogging on the treadmill, followed by clips of her in yoga class, looking fit and spry. Bajinโs moms wasnโt quite as nice, but heโs still built her an impressive portfolio, including a photo of her at a traditional dance competition, proudly clutching a trophy.
We spent evenings brainstorming different ways to market our moms and how to get them on a date. At one point, Bajin suggested I film my mom at the gym doing squats. โSheโll look so strong,โ he said.
I burst out laughing and reached over to scratch the idea off his list.
We learned more about each other than weโd expected. Bajin had a way of asking questions that didnโt feel intrusive, yet always seemed to get to the heart of things. โDo you ever get tired of it?โ he asked once, his gaze steady. โThe whole matchmaking thing, I mean. The pressure.โ
It was a simple question, but it felt like a punch to the gut. โAll the time,โ I admitted. โBut my momโฆ she doesnโt see it. She just wants me to be happy. Sheโs stuck in her own way of thinking.โ
โThatโs what my mom does too,โ Bajin said. โSheโs stuck in the past, but she thinks if I just marry someone, everything will be fine.โ
We both shared a moment of silence, both lost in the same complicated feeling of guilt, love, and frustration.
In the middle of all the madness, I started noticing something. Bajin wasnโt just helping me with my momโs QR code. I found myself telling him things I hadnโt shared with anyoneโabout my dadโs death, about the feeling of being caught between two cultures, about my momโs suffocating expectations.
We didnโt realize it, but somewhere along the way, weโd begun to build something that had nothing to do with QR codes.
One afternoon, I suggested a plan. โWhat if we go to the park and flash the QR codes at old guys? Just see whoโll take the bait.โ Weโd started speaking in hunting and fishing terms a lot lately.
โYeah, letโs do it! We can be like those obnoxious people who shove business cards into doors at night,โ Bajin said with a nod. I loved that he was always game for my schemes.
The first test runs were far from perfect. We spent hours at the gym and at the park, watching the elderly men go through their routines. It felt like a weird scavenger hunt, trying to match our moms with their potential partners.
โWhat do you think of him?โ I asked, gesturing to a man in his 60s lifting weights.
Bajin shrugged. โHe looks okโฆyeah, letโs try it.โ He said with growing confidence.
Then, the unexpected happened. Weโd been spending so much time on the matchmaking project, we hadnโt realized how much weโd started to rely on each other for support. Bajin and I had become friends, allies in this strange and absurd journey. Weโd vented about everything from family pressure to the odd reality of navigating love when all we wanted was to lay in our beds and look at our phones.
But then, my mom pulled me aside. โI know what youโve been doing,โ she said, pulling out the QR code Iโd tried to hide in my bag.
I froze. โWhat?โ
โIโm not angry,โ she said, smiling a little. โBut Iโm curious. Whatโs your plan here?โ
I hadnโt expected her to take it so calmly. โI justโฆ I just wanted you to see things from my perspective.โ
โAnd now I do,โ she said before handing me my dating profile QR code that she kept in her purse. โBut whatโs your plan? Because the guy you matched me up withโฆhe seemsโฆwell I think Iโd like to go out with him.โ
It turned out that our little experiment had done more than just find dates for our moms. It had opened up new lines of communication and for the first time in years, my mom and I were talking about something other than MY marriage prospects.
Meanwhile, Bajin and I were texting more frequently, sharing our progress. Heโd set up a date for my mom with a man named Mr. Zhang, who was also into fitness and had similar interests as my Mom. My Mom took to the idea way faster than I expected.
โI think sheโs this guy might be the one,โ Bajin said one evening, texting me the update after helping them to arrange a date at my Momโs favorite restaurant.
โIโm not sure how I feel about it,โ I replied. โI donโt want her to get too attached, but I also want to see where this goes.โ
The dating experiment had become something unexpected. Bajin and I had started out trying to play matchmaker for our moms, but somewhere along the way, weโd found ourselves falling for each other.
It wasnโt perfect. Nothing ever is. But it felt real, and for the first time in years, that felt like enough.
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