Archive for August, 2005

Schooled to be ideal wives

charukesi August 8th, 2005

What a perfect start a dreary Monday morning - this post from Uma where she says there is hope for her yet. Ho to the wide open spaces of Bhopal.

I had blogged about this a long time ago - here it is for your Monday morning amusement - I cannot find the original link on the Hindu where this article first appeared (August 31, 2003) - but this piece appeared on rediff around the same time… But his ideas are now gaining popularity outside Madhya Pradesh. He recently held a 10-day camp for youngsters in Ahmedabad and Junagadh in Gujarat and will soon visit Jaipur in Rajasthan.

Uma, let us not rush to pack our bags for Bhopal - just hang on there, and carry on being the imperfect bahu and biwi - there ought to be a camp in Bombay soon…

*****
Puzzle : why do all the K women fall under one of these two groups :

devi (goddess; she is patience personified, willing to give her all for her family, i.e her husband’s extended family of brothers, their wives, assorted uncles and aunts and their near and dear ones and…. you get the picture)….or,

dusht (wicked; the bad woman, who simpers all the time and wears saris with sleeveless blouses, elaborate bindis and dreadful eye make-up - the more garish the eye, the more wicked)

What we used to know as the goodies and the baddies……

Have wondered for long and fruitlessly about this….. have finally cracked it….

The first category of women viz. the devis have attended the “training school” outside Bhopal, set up to school young girls of marriageable age (have a look at typical descriptors here on this matrimonial site - they embrace a large range from ‘body type’ to ‘diet’ to ‘family values’, ) to be ‘ideal wives’, and by extension daughters-in-law.

The Hindu today (August 31, 2003) carries an article on this “institution” under the heading Trends…. I shudder to think, is this The Shape of Things to Come ??

It is, the article says, an institution set up to train women to surrender to the powerful in the family - the husband and the in-laws.

Read what one of the institution’s pupils has to say …..is teaching us how to keep our minds and bodies pure, our tempers in check. Right, the surefire way to a successful marriage.

The head of this institution (who, surprise, surprise is a man) has authored books on this topic – Grahasth Mein Vyavaharik Jeevan (Practical Married Life) for one. For the uninitiated, this book scatters many pearls of wisdom, such as too much sex is the cause of diabetes and tuberculosis among men .

Diabetes ??? AIDS maybe? but Diabetes ? The author goes on to declare, men build societies and women build homes…..

Or break them…. If the dusht types are allowed a free run of the household…. These woman have obviously not attended this institution….. and therefore, manage to get their way within their married home, winning everyone’s hearts and trust along the way…..

The author/head has other plans too…. Training ‘boys’ in this area….. (yeah, right…. Try telling ‘boys’ that too much sex is the cause of diabetes and TB…. I can see you are going to be very popular…..)

Moral of the story : head for Bhopal this winter (summers are unbearably hot there…. Or is the ideal woman supposed to ‘adjust’ to everything??) if :

- you are the wannabe devi type, who is willing to grin (and occasionally cry and challenge the baddie) and bear it, and
- you have the patience to wait for your reward –viz. having the entiiiiiiiire family fawning over you and calling you devi, and
- you don’t know where to start…..

Or, if you just wanna keep that eye make-up on and chill with your Bacardi and have everything but the last laugh (who cares, these ‘mega-serials’ go on for years anyways…..), stay on where you are…..

Now, where did I hear this was the age of instant gratification ?

Now bigger and better…

charukesi August 7th, 2005

Er, not quite bigger.

Indsight was down for a few days for “maintenance activities”. Now we are back in action - in a new and improved version. Or so says my blog host Madhu Menon. Thanks, Madhu for all the time and effort.

The research on age cohorts is still on. Please take some time and leave your thoughts there… And a request, please spread the word around so we get a large range of responses…

Father / husband’s name

charukesi August 7th, 2005

I bought a new mobile phone from the Reliance outlet (upgradation - so I can take pics from my mobile phone and so on - ahem). And had to fill out a longish form before they handed over the new handset to me.

Among the interesting personal details they (reliance ? government?) wanted to know is : father / husband’s name.

Now why would the government be interested in my father / husband’s name? Of what use is such information to them? Especially considering neither is paying for this phone - I mean, they want my PAN number and not theirs…

Also wondering, why is my husband never asked for father / wife’s name?

Research on age cohorts

charukesi August 2nd, 2005

I had initiated a small research on my blog a long time ago. On understanding my generation. It was then trigerred by my loss of faith in the “younger generation” after they voted for Smriti Malhotra (of kyunki keta kapoor pays my salary fame) as a potential youth icon on MTV.

Someone recently wrote to me after seeing this post - she is doing her research on the Doordarshan era - to understand how it influenced our social perceptions. Reading her mail, I decided to restart this research again on this blog to see if it gets anywhere.

Here is the idea - partly taken from my earlier post (for which I lost all comments which came in when I transferred my blog to this new url) and edited…

And yes, this is not limited to my generation alone - if you have any interesting thoughts about your growing up years, do share them here…

I have been wading through many Indian blogs…. And came across quite a few Indian bloggers born in the mid-70’s..… What I see as the post-flower, pre-mouse generation…..

I was born in the mid 1970s…. And I am interested in understanding my age cohorts. The concept of age cohorts was highlighted by Rama Bijapurkar a few years ago in discussing cultural changes in India post liberalization. I’ve attempted to loosely explain the concept of age cohort : a group of people (who may be born around the same time frame) who grow up sharing the same social, cultural, political, educational experiences…

The concept of age cohorts is significant because this shared set of experiences determine the values and beliefs they will carry all their life. For instance, the post-war baby boomers in the US.

Coming back to my age cohorts, I am very curious about what experiences we grew up sharing…. That has shaped they way we are today… This idea kept growing when I realized how much my husband and I (who were born in the same year, 1975) had in common even though we grew up in different parts of India. Me in metro, middle-class Madras. And he in small-town AP. There are so many shared experiences we keep exchanging that I wanted to see if others of that time also empathized with this.

So what are these shared experinces?

Internet ? Technology ? : No, I don’t think we grew up with technology. We approached it as grown ups. (I do not consider a job with an IT company and being able to send e-mail as being “tech”). I am talking about being born internet-savvy, the way kids are today……

Communication ? : We saw the STD booth boom in the country….. is that significant ?
Or is it mobile technology ? Are we the typical sms generation ?

Liberalization ?: Certainly, we witnessed the birth of McD and the re-birth of Coke in India…. Reebok and Ford….. Is this significant ?

The Y2K demand ?

Coalition Governments ? Our youth witnessed the end of single majority parties and the birth of coalition politics….. the shape of things to come and stay…..

Private TV channels ? MTV ? The Bold and the Beautiful ? Quick Gun Murugan ? Cyrus Broacha ? Or is it Giant Robot ?

And where does Doordarshan fit in all this?

The end of Angry Amitabh and the entry of sugary Shah Rukh ?

Or is it a combination of all these ?

I thought it might be fun to share ‘growing up’ with others who grew up elsewhere in the country at the same time……… I do not want to get into a stricter definition of age limits… is too traumatic for me :)

The idea being :

1. to understand the events, ideas, values that have shaped my generation (mid-70’s born, the over-20, 30 ish)

2. to experiment with the possibility of blogs as a tool for primary research….. blogs as a tool for expression, blogs as a tool for lobbying….. and now this?

Personally, I would consider this data more credible because participation is voluntary and not coerced or coaxed as in case of conventional research…

This is going to be a sticky post for some time. Do leave your thoughts and spread the word around - hoping to see something interesting come out of this…

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