Showing posts with label taggy tags. Show all posts
Showing posts with label taggy tags. Show all posts

Wednesday, 23 February 2011

Evolving roles among three generations of women...




It came to me while trying to make aloo parathas a couple of evenings back. While battling with the dough and the rolling pin, I was remembering with envy the skill with which the ladies in my family perform this task. My mother says that she learnt how to roll a perfectly round chapati  in her early teens. My grandmother had to make more than fifty chapatis every night for a family of twenty members. And here I was, their direct descendant, rolling a paratha for the first time in my thirties and making a mess of it. I did not know whether to be ashamed or perversely proud!

Growing up in pre-liberalized India, it was natural for our mothers to stay at home and look after the house and us. Marriage and homemaking, reminiscences my mother, were matters in which she along with the women in her generation (1960/70s) were not given much choice in.  Women in average Bengali families were brought up and educated with the sole intention of managing her shongshar/sansar (household).  In fact, my mother continues, her generation of girls who went out to work, were seen as poor or unfortunate or 'too modern'! 

Not that managing a joint family with all kinds of cantankerous members was easy! Her days were long and tiring-- organizing meals, tending to  regular dropping-in-without-prior-announcement guests, looking after an invalid father-in-law, raising me and my brother and socializing with my father's varied groups of friends. I remember the tantrums I used to throw if dinner was not to my liking or how my mother had to cope with various members of the joint family, with a cool head. My father has always been a very involved husband and did more than his fair share in running the house. But the primary responsibility was always Ma's.  My brother and me, we often rued the fact that how Ma would have made an ace diplomat and how India lost one of her promising bureaucrats to homemaking! When I speak to my mother about her youth, what comes out strongly is her regret in not having choices in life! Be it college or an arranged marriage at an early age, it was all dictated by my grandfather. Maybe that is why she decided that I, her daughter would have all the opportunities that she never had and live life in my own terms.

Still, my mother says that she has had an easier life than her mother, my grandma. Orphaned at an early age, four siblings were split among relatives. My grandmother was sent to live with an elder cousin brother who was a bureaucrat. With his family, she traveled around the country. Then in her teens she was married off , her in-laws lived in rural Bengal. So from government bungalows of  Delhi and Lucknow to a mud house in Seerandi village of Bengal's Birbhum district. That too without the husband, my grandfather worked in Kolkata, she was in the village to look after her in-laws. Also money was tight in those days and my grandmother always had to run her household with minuscule budgets.

My grandmother being the feisty lady she is, completed her Inter examinations after marriage, studying the whole night, after pulling an eighteen hour work day-- cooking three meals for twenty people and other household chores. She had three children, was/is a skilled dress maker, embroidered and knit like magic, a movie buff (she still remembers each and every one of Bimal Ray, Pankaj Mallick, Kanan Devi and Uttam Kumar movies), a huge football fan (Mohonbagan Club) and loves reading Bengali novels and poetry. She loved playing cricket as a kid, but the widowed aunt with whom she lived soon after her parents' died, put a stop to that. So instead she turned umpire! I often wonder what my grandmother would have made of her life, if she had even half the choices that I had!

Asked about choice, my grandmother gives a tentative smile. I can feel she is a bit unsure, I pester. "We were not given choices sonaburi (my dearest granddaughter). We knew our role in life and family and strove to make the best of it." Yes but imagine a time in your childhood/youth when you could study as much as you wanted, go to college, not get married till you were ready...It sounds a little blasphemous to my traditional dimma (grandmother) so she starts a lecture on the importance of husband and family in a woman's life. But once she had blown off her steam, the conversation turns to education...how lovely it could be if she could go to college and study, she muses wistfully! Coming back to homemaking, my grandmother says that right from childhood they were groomed for the time when they would be running their own households. During her time, Bengal of 1940/50s young girls were taught to cook, to sew, to maintain a budget-- so that they could in future run a household successfully. Even education was seen as necessary so that she could help in the primary education of her own children!

Born in late 70s, I grew up, free of gender discrimination, sent to a co-education school, was taught to fight it out fairly in life. Nor did I get many extra perks for being a girl. My mother spent substantial part of her energy in educating and pushing me. I remember as a child whenever we would go by famous colleges of Kolkata, my mother would say 'one day you would come to study here'. Seeds of self confidence were being sown right there! My parents not only supported me in my career, most times they staved off inquisitive relatives when they pestered me with questions of marriage. In fact my mother always used to threaten me that she would never let me marry till I finished my Ph.D.! 

We sure have come a long way! Not only in my family but in other Indian families as well. Women have not ceased to be homemakers, rather men have been sucked into the role too! Thankfully the division of labour is no longer so watertight. Also as families become nuclear, there is a lot more scope for a woman to have her say. In our shongshar/household of my husband and me, if I do not feel like cooking,  my husband cooks or we eat out. In my grandmother's time this would have been unimaginable!

On the occasion of International Women's Day, I want to pay homage all those brave and spirited Indian ladies who turned homemaking into a fine art--managing big families under severe restrictions, working long and hard hours without much appreciation, often facing discrimination and torture, yet using their talents to make their lives interesting and carving a space for themselves in the midst of opposition and hostility. Most importantly for daring to dream and passing those dreams onto their daughters. Concept of homemaking is changing rapidly in India and we, the modern Indian women, have it way better than our grandmothers and mothers. We have choices they never had, we take up opportunities, they would have never dreamt of. 

Saluting the past and eagerly looking forward to the future.

I am tagging the following non IL bloggers to participate in this contest:


Anubha who writes @ http://anugem.blogspot.com/

Sapphire who writes @ http://sapphiredrops.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, 17 November 2010

This or that...

Letters or emails-- letters any day
Phone call or text messages-- Phone calls
Starters or deserts--Deserters
Day or night-- Night
Fashion or comfort-- Comfort
Classic or modern-- Classic
Black or white-- Black
Dark or light- Dark
Sing or dance- Neither, ok dance
Pray or fight-- Both, cannot choose
Mountain or sea-- Mountains
Tall or short-- Tall
Girl or boy-- Girl
Fair or dark-- Dark
Sun or moon-- Sun
Veggies or fruits-- Fruits
Vegetarian or non vegetarian-- Non, of course
Bright or dim-- Bright
Moral or immoral-- Immoral
Straight or crooked--Depends, if it is a road, crooked, if it is a character trait, straight
Impulsive or cautious-- Again depends
Planned or spontaneous-- Depends on mood
Acting or recitation-- Acting
Reading or writing-- Both....but mostly it would be reading
Drink or eat-- Eat
Past or future-- Future but a bit of past too
River or lake-- River
Sea or ocean-- Sea, ocean is way too big for me
Science or humanities-- Humanities
Designer labels or local products-- Local products any day
Organic or inorganic-- Organic
South or North-- South, I am from South Kolkata, after all
West or East-- East, after all the sun rises in the east
Sailing or flying-- Sailing
Trains or planes-- Trains
Cars or bikes-- Cars
Hilsa or Salmon-- Hilsa any day and every day
Eggs or milk-- Eggs
Coffee or tea-- Tea
Gold or silver-- Silver any day
Jewels or furs-- Jewels
Shoes or bags-- Bags
Ear rings or rings-- Ear rings
Blue or green-- Green
Pink or red-- Red
Butter or jam-- Butter
Cakes or cookies-- Cakes
Sunset or sunrise-- Sunset....hardly seen sunrises in my life...but when seen, loved them....
Fish or meat-- Meet
Sculptures or painting-- Paintings
Marble or wood-- Wood
Hard or soft-- Soft

Tuesday, 16 November 2010

Three's of Me....

Don't remember if I have done this one before. Got time to waste so here I go....

THREE NAMES I GO BY
1. Suchi
2. Guria
3. Tinku
I am so relieved that my pet names are pretty respectable compared to the rest of the Bong ones! Thank God for small mercies....

 THREE JOBS I HAVE HAD IN MY LIFE
1. Teaching Assistant
2. Project Manager
3. Volunteer Coordinator (fun job)

THREE PLACES I HAVE LIVED IN
Not mentioning Kolkata 
1. Delhi
2. Toronto
3. Oxford

THREE THINGS THAT I CANNOT LIVE WITHOUT
Now this is super cheesy!
1. Believe in God & self
2. Hopes and Dreams
3. Peace of mind

THREE THINGS I AM PROUD OF
1. My identity
2. Ability not to give up
3. Fighter instinct

THREE THINGS THAT I DO NOT LIKE ABOUT MYSELF
1. My figure
2. My nose
3. My height

THREE TV SHOWS THAT I WATCH
1. Sarabhai vs Sarabhai....love this show...
2. IT Crowd....cos of my husband, but like it too :)
3. Come Dine with Me...our fav show here in the UK

THREE PLACES I HAVE BEEN TO
1.Kalimpong
2.Quebec
3.Jaipur

THREE PLACES I WANT TO GO
1. Ireland & Scotland & Italy & Belgium & the Netherlands & France
2. Morocco & Turkey & Egypt & Mongolia & Tibet & Vietnam &.....
3. All of India
To make matters easy, can I just say the whole world and then some???

THREE FAVOURITE MUSIC GENRE
1. Rabindrasangeet
2. World folk
3. Country

THREE THINGS I AM LOOKING FORWARD TO
1. Finding my way back into the groove of things
2. Friends
3. Love lasting ever after

THREE FAVOURITE DRINKS:
1. Green tea
2. Cold water
3. Recently getting into coffee, black and strong...

THREE FAVOURITE DESERTS
1. Cheesecakes
2. Moong Dal Ka Halwa
3. Kaju Barfi


THREE OF MY FAVORITE CUISINE
1. Dimma ar Ma ar haat er ranna (food cooked by my mom and grandma)
2. Vietnamese
3. Biriyani (complete cuisine in itself)

THREE MUST HAVES IN MY PURSE/BAG:
1. Money
2. Cell phone
3. Oyster Card
Pretty boring? I know....;)

THREE FAVOURTIES FROM MY WARDROBE:
1. My saris...
2. All things black...
3. My new brown sweater...

THREE FAVOURITE ACCESSORIES
1. Silver jeweleries spl ear rings, now and ever after....
2. Red boots
3. My scarves...

THREE MAKE UP ESSENTIALS
1. Kohl for the eye
2. Lip gloss/lip stick
3. Oli of Olay moisturizing lotion...

THREE BEAUTY/MAKE UP TIPS
Ghosh whoever thought a day will come when I will give beauty tips!!!!!
1. Wash your hair with beer/cider to make it shine
2. Clean your face after coming back from outside
3. Use organic beauty products...

THREE TIPS TO RELAX
1. Long bubble bath with scented candles...
2.Curl up with good book with a packet of crisps...
3. Evening with friends, laughing over inane stuff....

THREE INDULGENCES
1. Chocolates
2. Perfumes
3. Flowers
I could write about 300 of these :)

THREE ESSENTIALS IN MY GROCERY LIST
1. Meat
2. Yogurt
3. Fruits

THREE GOOD HABITS I AM TRYING TO PICK UP
1. Eat only organic food (have converted to the veggies and fruits, got to switch the other stuff as well...problem is budget shoots up)
2. 5 a day of fruits and veggie helpings....
3. Use  plastic as less as possible (in modern living this is almost impossible, but can be done with bit of thought and planning)

THREE LONG TERM PLANS
1. Live an organic, plastic free, chemical free life
2. Work at the grassroots with vulnerable groups
3. Be more creative

THREE HOBBIES
1. Reading (my salvation)
2. Cooking
3. Exploring and experimenting


THREE FAVOURITE FESTIVALS
1. Holi
2. Bhaiphota
3. Saraswati pujo

THREE THINGS I AM GOOD AT
1. Organizing, planning and executing with what my husband says surgical precision
2. Understanding and empathizing
3. Dreaming

THREE THINGS THAT CHEER ME UP
1. Gifts
2. Friends
3. Family

THREE INTERESTING THINGS THAT I DID RECENTLY:
1. Explored a bit more of London
2. Had great dinner on Friday, good food in nice ambiance and loads of laughter...
3. Made lamb roast with Indian masalas (came out really well)

 PEOPLE WHO EMAIL ME REGULARLY:
1. Angira
2. Soumitro
3. Srimanta dada

PEOPLE WHO CALL ME REGULARLY:
1. Chordi & Rima
2. Dupu (used to...till he got busy or....)
3. My parents

Wednesday, 22 July 2009

3s of you...

Got this in Facebook, decided to do it here, since lately all I have been doing is writing about marriage. This is like a breather and something different.

Three names I go by:
1. Suchismita (all formal and Sanskrit)
2. Suchi (mostly by friends and colleagues)
3. Guria (mom & dad)

Three Jobs I have had in my life:
1. Graduate Teaching Assistant, Uni of Toronto
2. Assistant Director, HRLN
3. Reporting & Communications Officer, GD

Three Places I have lived:
1. Kolkata, India
2. Delhi, India
3. Toronto, Canada

Three Favorite drinks:
1. Water
2. Aam Panna
3. Pina Colada

TV Shows that I watch:
1. Sex and the City
2. Friends
3. How I met your mom

Three places I have been: (well loads, listing my favs)
1. Dharmshala & Maclyod Gunj, Himachal Pradesh
2. Quebec City, Canada
3. Gangtok, Sikkim

People that text me regularly:
1. Chordi
2. Swati
3. Indranil

Three of my favorite foods:
1. Indian Chinese
2. Bengali cusine
3. Continental

Three friends I think will respond
1. Muthu
2. Sapphire
3. JELL

Three Things I am looking forward to
1. Getting married
2. Going to live in Oxford
3. Getting a development job in Oxford

I tag Muthu, Jell, Sappire, Anubha from blog, Soma, Anu, Jayshree, Anant, Jai, Divya Jyoti, Sushmita from FB and Swati from Orkut.