Sunday, 15 September 2019

Sammi, Andy and one named Jacqueline.

Forbidden fruit is always sweeter? But sobriety can turn that bite into a nightmare.

For Andy Hui, the aftertaste left him in tatters, broken to be exact. 

His dalliance with actress and former Miss Hong Kong Jacqueline Wong in a taxi ride and beyond was captured on camera. That 16 mins video will sadly mar his marriage to Sammi Cheng, 46, for a long time to come.

The leak showed Andy, Jacqueline and another man sharing a cab. When the man alighted, Andy assured the man that he and Jacqueline will go home separately. 

“After the man leaves, however, (Andy) and (Jacqueline) provide only one location to the driver and begin holding hands. At one point, (Jacqueline) leans over to kiss (Andy) as his hand rests on her thigh.”
They then left the cab together - End of leaked video. 

A little background here. Andy and Sammi’s love affair and marriage (no kids yet) is touted by Comedian Dato Wong as “Hong Kong’s Last fairy tale.”

It was a 30-year fairy tale. They met and dated as far back as 1991, after they recorded the duet “Actually, Do You Have Me in Your Heart.” 

They broke up in 2004 and after seven years apart, they got back together in 2011. They then married in 2014. 

As for Jacqueline, she has been openly dating another TVB actor Kenneth Ma. 

After the leak yesterday afternoon, Andy was emotionally devastated. He must have felt exposed. Hours later, he showed up in a tear-ful seven-minute appearance. 

Andy’s head was bowed and he said: “Sorry, Sammi.”

“I want to apologise to my family. Sammi’s family, friends and people who love me. Because I did what I cannot make up for, something that will not be forgotten.”

Andy then cried and continued: “I drank a lot that night but I feel that being drunk is definitely not an excuse to do something so wrong, very bad, very disgusting and very unfamiliar. I reflected on why I could not control my lust.”

Lesson? Actually, the duet “Actually, Do You Have Me in Your Heart?” is the question all wives occasionally asked of their husband. Indeed, the heart is a strange place for married men. 

While a woman’s desire is the desire of her man, the man’s desire is at most times just desires - period. That is why that last confession is quite familiar to us men, “I reflected on why I could not control my lust.”

It is strange (and I would not say as Andy said, “very unfamiliar”) that the institution of marriage always has a dark and wet basement leading to a secret backdoor of extramarital indiscretions. 

Alas, it is hard to define cheating in a marriage, especially in a world of virtual experiences. When Bill Clinton said, “I did not have sexual relations with that woman,” was he cheating. 

Jimmy Carter once admitted in a Playboy magazine interview that by Jesus’ standard of lusting in the eye, even he has “cheated” in his marriage. 

Author Esther Perel wrote: “Is chatting cheating? What about sexting, watching porn, joining a fetish community, remaining secretly active on dating apps, paying for sex, lap dances, messages with happy endings, girl-on-girl hookups, staying in touch with one’s ex?”

One frequent visitor of strip club said, “I watch, I talk, I pay, but I don’t touch. Where’s the cheating?” 

And nowadays, with virtual platforms like Second Life, for example, where you can play out your alternate-fantasy of another life with another man in virtual worlds of your creation, is that cheating? 

One commentator called it “customized pornography.”

So, I return to the heart, the only organ in our body that bears the greatest responsibility (or culpability) for and of our conduct since we metaphorically blame it for all the extramarital indiscretions (and other immoral deviations) we commit, when its only role (and wholly vital one no doubt) is to be no more than a dumb pump, circulating and renewing blood in our body to keep us alive. 

When we fall, we don’t hear people accusing us of a bad or corrupt liver or deceitful kidney or an immoral spleen. It’s always the heart which gets all the bad press when the two organs truly responsible for our actions should have been the brain (impulsivity, emotionalism) and the only extendable and retractable organ in our body (and mind you, I am not talking about the tongue).

Let me end with Andy’s own heart-rending words: -“I have no soul. I am a broken man. I hope everyone can give me time to find myself.”

Well, I wish Andy well. I hope he can find himself, to find his soul again. 

As for their marriage, it is a personal and private affair, and it’s really none of anyone’s business. They must be given their own time to confront, confess and reconcile in whatever ways that the offender and the victim can live with. 

Like Andy said, he needs time to find himself and I am sure Sammi needs hers too, that is, to process the betrayal, a broken promise (that risks triggering the breaking of all other promises after that). 

My takeaway from this is that in the institution of marriage, you can’t bolt-shut all the doors and pull the blinds over the windows. 

A straying heart is not one who sees no evil, hears no evil or speaks no evil. That’s not possible, and it’s surely not a marital institution. It’s a mental and emotional asylum of two distrusting souls living together in a panopticon tower of high and insecure 24-hour mutual survelliance. 

Before long, it will suffocate love, eviscerate trust and eliminate all hope. 

A resilient marriage, even after a betrayal where one is genuinely remorseful and prepared to make amends, is an institution where the doors and windows are always clear and opened. 

At the center of this institution is trust, which may be vulnerable but it is not inconsolable or irreparable. At its boundary is hope, which may be lost at times, blurry even, but it is not lost forever if the couple are prepared to forgive, heal and move forward. 

And at its foundation is love. This love is not perfect, for we are human after all. But what makes this love exceptional, even in our failings, is its willingness to go beyond oneself to heal and bridge the gap. 

In the end, let’s not be too quick to be over-indignant about our own state of the heart after reading about Andy’s fall. 

We should always guard our heart because at times, it is not about how much we can boast to others about our invulnerability to fall like Andy did. 

But it is about what it takes for us to fall, and for some of us, if not most of us, it may just take far lesser than what we think is necessary to trip us over. Cheerz.

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