Skip to content
Capilano Courier
Menu
  • Home
  • Sections
    • News
    • Features & The Profile
    • Arts & Culture
    • Letters
    • Humour
    • Video Production
  • About
    • Advertise
    • Contribute
  • Meet the Crew
  • Online Issues
  • Events
  • EIC Election
Menu

Editor’s Desk: Her Favorite Colo(u)r

Posted on February 5, 2018February 5, 2018 by Carlo Javier

Volume 50, Issue 14: Editor’s Desk

Her Favorite Colo(u)r

CARLO JAVIER // EDITOR-IN-CHIE

“We found love in a hopeless place,” – Rihanna

I met this girl at McDonald’s nearly six years ago – not in the lobby lining up for value picks, but inside, in the kitchen. I was a crew trainer and she was a new hire.

At the time, no one would have thought that we would end up together. She was in her own steady relationship, while I thought I embodied what my colleague Justin Scott describes as the Holy Trinity – “young, single and good-looking.” Of those three, only one still applies to me today.

Eventually, her relationship status changed, mine didn’t, but my BMI did. Nearly three years after we met and countless text conversations later, we ended up dating. Evidently, it took a long, slow burn for a spark to manifest, but here we are.

I have always been fascinated with the accepted cultural norms that surround heteroromantic relationships. At the same time, little insecurities have always clouded my then life as a single person. While I didn’t go around Tinder putting “5’7 on a good day” in my bio, being on the shorter end of the height spectrum has always lingered in the back of my head. Not to mention many other factors that could affect one’s dating choices: be it heavily serious elements like race and ethnicity, or important, but seemingly trivial things like the ability to drive – or even the luxury of a car.

It is a terribly minute detail, but my girlfriend is ever so slightly taller than I am. She drives and I don’t. We also come from different backgrounds, her of being British and First Nations descent and I am a Filipino. We don’t even listen to much of the same music, nor do we watch the same TV shows.

Conversations about dating, or even about finding matches tend to centre on the hunt for commonalities. And yes, the things we share do bond us, but let’s be real, these commonalities that bring people together are ultimately just on the surface. I’m far from a relationship expert – that title falls to our news editor, Christine “got too many dates” Beyleveldt – but if the things we share bring us together, could the differences that we learn to appreciate be the locks that keep us together?

I think that the value of differences is an increasingly more valid question to ask, particularly considering our ever more polarizing social environment. If an office or a group of friends can coexist in harmony in spite of differing opinions on a myriad of things, then I would think that a partnership should have no problems in combating such a challenge. D’Angelo and Lauryn Hill did once say, “Nothing Even Matters.”

Category: Editorial

Post navigation

← Editor’s Desk: Real recognize real
CSU supports new student lounge for Bosa building →

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Upcoming Tabling Hours: Thursdays, 12:00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m., at either the Learning Commons entrance (LB 126) or Birch Cafeteria.

Latest News

  • CapU Students to Monitor FIFA Impacts in New Summer Course
    Five instructors, a conference with global participation and publication of findings with the Capilano Courier Laura Morales Padilla […]
  • CSU President and VP Finance Removed from Office Due to Alleged Misconduct
    “Improper use” of in camera proceedings led to two executives being removed five days later Laura Morales Padilla (she/her) // EIC In the […]
  • Meet CapU’s New President
    An interview with Dr. Jason Dewling Ben Taylor // Crew Writer (he/him)  Capilano Courier: Questions for President March 11, 2026   […]
  • Yuri Fulmer Pt. 2
    Students reactions to the political aspirations of CapU’s chancellor Ben Taylor // Crew Writer (he/him) Andrei Gueco (he/him) // […]
  • Summer Intensives at CapU Squamish
    The university launches new summer programming with a focus on land and sustainability  Ren Zhang (they/them) // Contributor Anna […]
  • CapU lost 81 full-time-equivalent faculty—with more losses to come
    Letter from Michael Begg, president of the Capilano University Faculty Association (CFA) Note: Michael Begg sent the following letter to […]
Video Production
What’s it actually like to make a movie on acid?

Ben reacts to a short film he made while tripping — complete with a probe lens, a dentist storyline, and a very questionable creative process.
Trip to the Dentist
Subscribe
What even is a Zine? Mia shows us a behind the scene of how this little publication comes together, the vision behind it, and how to become a paid contributor of the C.C. Crumb!
Indigenous power means something different to every student, but it always begins with voice, community, and truth. Hear what CapU students had to say.
What does campus clean-up day look like?
© 2026 Capilano Courier | Powered by Minimalist Blog WordPress Theme