While growing up, I shirked house work because I knew Mummy would do it. The only hard work I did is to eat whatever she made. Mummy would wake up early in the morning, bathe, do the pooja, make breakfast and lunch and then of course, my task was to eat it away as if nothing else matters.
Of course, she would ask me to help her out and learn some basics but do you think I listened? Not seriously, I simply didn't. I used to tell her not to worry so much. I always felt there would be a magical Alladin's Lamp that would manifest and take care of everything when it was my turn to take care of a home. Her wise words "Start early, or else later you will find it difficult to manage simple chores in your home" always fell on my deaf and dumb ears. Those were the years I wish I could turn back time....(sigh, dreaming, dreaming!)
Marriage, Introspection and the Pressure Cooker
Suddenly, I found myself married. Unlike most girls who were mentally conditioned for this official 'lifetime' position, I lived in a dream world created by Charles Dickens, Thomas Hardy, Charlotte Bronte, Jane Austen, you get the drift. 'M' which means MARRIAGE it transforms even the laziest girls into hardworking 'ants,' to scurry alone from dawn to dusk, unfailing carrying out tasks. You know what I mean, right?
So I learned:
- how to make tea without burning the milk
- how to get kitchen chores done
- how to survive on different variations of Maggi during a working week
- how to make curd rice without the curd curdling
- how to make upma without uppu (don't strangle me, but it happened!)
- how many teaspoons of sugar makes it okay to drink so that your better half doesn't drown in diabetic sweetness.
I grew up seeing the 'Prestige' pressure cooker ad for housewives and wondered a lot of times why a couple's marital happiness seems so dependant on that cooker.
Once I began my disastrous experiments in the kitchen, I got a fairly good idea of how critical a cooker's role is. The guy who created that ad is a genius, must say!
Well, after many trial and error sessions and self humiliation by burning most stuff that made it inedible, there were days when I would simply sit and cry because well, cooking was rocket science to me.
I found myself learning to make rice/Maggi variations/upma without all of it sticking like glue on the teeth. I learned to remember to add salt and not too much of it, little things like that got me going and growing. I began to understand that when some women friends try to help you with their suggestions, they are either laughing at your inefficiency at the next kitty party or just eager to prove that ultimately, your competence as a home maker boils down to 'being a woman stuck in the kitchen.'
Ms Intellectual Waits for Hubby to Cook
In Delhi, I've understood from scraps of social conversation with women in my building, a lot of your ability or interest in cooking or doing housework is attributed to the region you come from. I don't agree with the perspective because I think it depends on the kind of lifestyle you've led, the family background and your own inclination to it.
Lets call Ms. Intellectual. She has a literary bent but she is a housewife who is devoted to her family. I know her personally and see how much effort she takes in looking after her family.
An interesting thing she told me is that there are three things the women in her family have never done for three generations unless it was some kind of a life threatening situation:
1. Wash dirty dishes.
2. Wash laundry.
3. Cook.
My first thought was: wow, I wish I belonged to that three generation of women because the snippet of information came at a time when my routine, besides a crazy, hectic job at the time, involved doing all three! And I don't feel any admiration about the fact that her husband who worked very long hours would come home and then cook the dinner for the family. Of course, they are helping each other and that's none of my business.
When Ms Intellectual's Mother came to stay, I was sure that maybe she would cook, bend the generation rule a little but I was wrong. The mother and daughter would wait till the hubby came home and cooked for them all.
I am not sharing this to be mean or critical because in today's world, marital life is all about sharing everything. However, I wouldn't like to follow Ms. Intellectual's style because I don't like the thought of making my spouse do all the hard work every evening after he's had a very exhausting day. My feeling is more to do with not burdening a loved one when he is already wrapped up his day and ready to just unwind after a day's hard work.
Ms Liberated Will Marry Only Hubby Cooks
I also knew some girls who were very independent and not married at the time when I met them. They used to tell me they would marry only if they met men who would do all the cooking and home chores.
And my thought: Yea, right! Wait till you are married, gal!
In Kerala, when a girl is about to get married, the first question that is asked is, "Do you know how to cook?" Since my marriage was a love marriage, I could happily skip the question and face reality directly. Ouch!
In Delhi, I've heard a majority of mothers say that their daughters don't want to marry because they aren't interested in cooking and cleaning for men. And yet I have also heard a close friend of mine who taught her 4 year old son to make his own milk and rotis on a proper stove on his own because she is working and returns late. And now the little boy makes sabji for himself and makes tea for her when she comes back home with a headache. Her explanation is this, "It is my gift of love to my daughter in law, the best gift one woman can give to help another."
Wow!
Perhaps this debate will go on. The new generation may change things for the better so that tasks and chores are shared equally. Perhaps there may come a time that men can become socially acceptable home makers.
I don't know whether there is a perfect answer to this. It differs from family to family, person to person. How about you? What do you think?
Comments
I started reading this post... and felt .. I am also a part of it.. and it did bring a smile on my face..
Lazy bones become responsibe.. when the letter M is introduced.. in their life.. and more responsible with the new little one's arrival...
hahah..i don't think responsibility sits easily on my shoulder even after 2 kids...!!
Yu know sometimes we do spoil our men...it is an Indian mentality...anyway do what gives happiness is my thought on this...
Ha ha . . . .I wonder if those questions still exists. . . .and if it does then the girl better not get married to that family (my personal advice)
But all said and done, its the sharing of the work between the partners that makes things go smoothly.
Now a days when girls plan to marry in kerala... it is asked... "athu veno" Is it needed?
and when boys it is asked
"jeevichu mathiaayo?"(are you fed up of your life)
kidding...
After-marriage problems are common with all couples with respect to cooking and laziness.
Mutual understanding, helping tendency, sharing and proper synchronization can solve everything.
No boy or girl should take the responsibility on their shoulders, rather try to share it.
The more you share and depend, the more you are free. The more you are ready to accept, the more you balanced.
Balance should be there otherwise, sab kuch "udumbaaaaa..."
I think the practice (Do you cook ?) is just not in Kerala, its prevalent everywhere. The " Do you sing?" is only now slowly going away. So "Do you cook?" will definitely be there.
As Abilash said, Mutual understanding, helping tendency, sharing and proper synchronization can solve everything. But you should be lucky enough to have such a partner who thinks along the same lines. If only one of them is of that view point, then you are a goner :)
thats soo true..after marriage, every lady is hard working..though she was not at all before hehe..but it makes one happy and lead a happy family life.. i'm not married but i have seen my frnd, whos lives were changed after marriage...thanks for posting this..
I think cooking is a survival skill for men and women alike these days - knowing it is more liberating I feel...
It's about sharing ,prioritisingand all that crap..am happy to be a bachelor :D
but next month wen i go to my home for my delivery i will be d same as before..alwayz lazy at home.. :)
Do drop by whenever you have time.
and i don't mind doing the dishes as long as i have licked my fingers clean before i start on the dishes :)
Can't help sharing my thoughts too:
@Sandhya: True, Lazy bones we are till the word M comes into our life.
@Storyteller: Same here, I hardly think responsibility comes to me naturally even after so many years.
@Haddock:Yes, sharing of work is a good way to make things move smoothly.
@Soin: Men as acceptable home makers? I think we have a long way to go before Indian men and women learn to accept that.
@Maria: Thanks:)
@BK Chowla: Good to hear that!
@After-marriage problems are common with all couples with respect to cooking and laziness.
@Abhilash: I liked your points about mutual understanding, helping, and sharing. You are right. It can solve a lot of problems but not everything.
@Lavanya: Thanks for sharing your personal thoughts. Personally, I am sure I'd make it to the top slot for the 'Do you sing?' question than the 'Do you cook?' one:)
@Being Pramoda: Thanks for sharing info about posting your friend, that was so nice to know about.
@Shahid: Hmmm, I don't think helping your wife with chores is a very bad thing to do. Eventually, it depends on your lifestyle, working hours, hectic schedule and so many other factors where you may need to share or support a wife. Let me suggest that when you do marry, just share your thoughts and perspectives about it and be open to inputs from your better half too and not reject suggestions outright.
@Petty: Good for you! We all need to find that balance correctly.
@Swati: Trust me, Ms Intellectual is as real as my neighbor:)
@Uma: I agree, it is a survivial skill.
@Toon India: Dumb husband or smart husband, we will never know who gets the last laugh.
@Lena: I am so glad to hear that you made your parents proud. Waking up late, what a luxury that is, though i agree, its not exactly a great habit. I too join the Wake Up Late club.
@Pari: Sure, will definitely visit.
@American Desi: Good for you. I am glad to see how proud and confident you are about what you do. Keep growing that confidence.
@Sudeep: Ha, thats pretty interesting and its nice to know you dont mind sharing chores.
Gautam, dear lazy soul, I think I'd love to see and know what happens when a beautiful girl comes into your life and you learn to share the good moments and sometimes, the good chores too:)
Corine, I think its supercool that you love what you are doing. Thats the way to grow and experience joy in the little things that mark our daily life.
Thanks so much for sharing your thoughts with me here on my blog. I sensed it came from your heart.
Sharing my thoughts straight from the heart too:
I can connect with what you are saying because after marriage, I felt the same too. I wanted to be a proper housewife like my mom and grandmom - taking care of the family. I mean, what on earth can be more beautiful and fulfilling than that? Somehow in my life, I have never got my way. If i have Plan A, Baba tosses me into Plan D. By now, I am getting used to the divine rollercoaster ride. Coming back to your comment, it truly is a dream job and you are blessed to live it. Stay blessed as always :)