Friday, 3 December 2021

16. Mumbai- Boston Travel Experience

 Mumbai -Doha-Boston Qatar airways November 10th on B2 Visa

At Mumbai - checked vaccination certificate and returned it. Then asked for one copy of RT-PCR report, Qatar airways Passenger Consent Form duly filled in and CDC forms 1&2 of USA requirements. All documents submitted. Checked in 2 luggages (23 kgs each). Was allowed one cabin baggage of 7 kg and my hand bag with laptop in it ( around 2 kgs). Security Check done. Boarded flight - 3 hrs to Doha At Doha - international transfer - went through and waited. The layover was for about 8 and half hours At about 5.50 am gate number was announced for 7.50 am flight to Boston Asked for vaccination certificate and passport and checked laptops, jackets, watch, belts, shoes etc. Selectively. Not everyone was told to remove shoes. Ready to board. Landed one hour early at Boston. Immigration - they asked how long is the stay, what have you brought in your luggage and how much cash you have? Baggage claim - tool an hour for baggage to come in the conveyor belt. Got luggages. 6$ for trolley. I didn't take trolley. Came out. In short - comfortable and no difficulty journey from India to US.

Thursday, 22 July 2021

15. The Wait

 The Wait

In the womb, you wait to be out into the world. Once outside, you want to turn around, crawl, stand, walk and then you cant wait to run. 


Once into school, you wait for holidays. When in holidays, with all the new books, new uniforms, new pencil box, colour box, new water bottle, lunch box and of course new shoes, you can but wait for the school to reopen. 


While a student you wait for exams.  If it is your favourite subject you wait. If it is not your favourite subject, still you wait for the exam to be done and over. Once exams are over, you wait for the results. Results out and you wait for admission into a college of your choice.  For that you wait for your name to appear on that list, in which you want your name to be in. 


Slowly you grow up and realise that by now, you are waiting for multiple things. You wait for exams, results and also wait for someone to come into your life and bring in fun, happiness and feeling of adulthood. While at it, when you fail in an exam or when you have a heart break, once again you find yourself waiting for better times to come. You work harder and again start hoping and waiting for better grades and a better person to be your partner for life. 


In the meantime, at home, your parents are waiting for you to complete your graduation, then post graduation and then a job and then a job with a very handsome salary. 


The more handsome the salary, the faster the wait for expansion of the family.  Your parents wait to hear from you that you are ready for marriage while you wait for that someone special to enter your life,  like in the movies. 


Cut the scene. Nothing happens in real life like movies. The parents fix your marriage to their choice of a groom or a bride, as the case may be. They then wait for the engagement ceremony, plan for the wedding and then again wait for the wedding functions. Ofcourse, you are now with them into this, so you also wait for the next, next and next. 


You have your dream job.  Its appraisal time and you wait for your scores. You wait to hear some recognition and praise. Alas, that wait never has never ever made any person the happiest yet in this world.  So naturally, you think about the change of job.  You give interviews and wait to hear from them. You get a new job and then you just cant wait to get there as soon as possible.  If you have a transferable job, you wait for the transfer orders. If you get a posting of your choice, you just cant wait to be there soon. If you get a posting other than your choice, you just wait to finish that tenure. 


In the meantime, domestic progress is expected too. The family is waiting for  your family to  be  made. Thats hard work and the ultimate test of your patience.   You have to work on the economical, social and emotional aspects.  If you invest, you have to wait for your money to work according to your expectations, if you look to buy a house or build a house, you have to wait for the construction to be completed.  If you have one child, you are expected to have another. So you wait for your first child to grow up little faster. And while at these things, not a single moment you can become emotionally weak.  Whatever ups and downs, come and go, you have to keep hoping and waiting with an attitude   that “This too shall pass”


In the household, you wait for the delivery, if you have purchased a TV set, or a refrigerator, or an air-conditioner or some furniture set.  You wait for the plumber or the electrician or the internet service provider after you have made a complaint.  Why nowadays, one  even waits for the food to be delivered home. Online orders for clothes, medicines and even garden implements and plant seeds.  Yes, anything under the sun can be delivered to you and your home.  But ………. you keep waiting for it. 


Just a year back, you were dreaming of a world tour and the pandemic arrived. Now you wait for the pandemic to end and you wait for normalcy to return. When you plan a trip, you cant wait to start your journey and while your trip is nearing the end, you cant wait to go back to your normal routine.  


When you are sick, you wait to recover soon.  When you are terminally ill and undergo treatment, you wait for death. 


But but but…. of all the waits you patiently wait, all the time throughout your life, the wait for that one beep of sms or a whatsapp message of something that is bothering your mind at that particular moment about that specific person, is the worst time of the wait, I believe. What you say? 


Life is just waiting and you thought it was a mystery to be solved :)


14. Mothers - Then and Now

 MOTHERS- THEN AND NOW


The other day, my daughter called me from Chicago, “Amma, I am having a terrible headache”. Another day,”Amma, I feel cranky”, and yet another day, “Amma, my periods are getting delayed”.


So as a mother what am I supposed do from here in India, more specifically from Mumbai? I am helpless. Nevertheless, its just those few words like “ Drink some warm water” or “ have a banana” or “ its just that you are worked up, relax a bit, take a shower, eat something and remember amma, loves you loads” or go to sleep and morning you will feel better or just an “ok, I am listening”, that makes the trick and then the next phone call comes a l voice telling that she is fine. 


Born in the 1970s, I have this opportunity of being with my mother, who was born in the 1930s and my nieces, born in the 1980s.  So then, I sure have been able to observe the vast difference in the role of mothers, their activities, their responsibilities and their struggles to do their best for their children. 


Back then, girls were not allowed access to higher education and were impressed upon to be married, do household work and raise children, as many as they could.  If we see around, families which started around the 1940s and 1950s had atleast 5-6 siblings on an average. The mothers would cook, clean, communicate with their children in their mother tongue, teach them whatever they knew and tell them mythological stories and significance of various festivals and rituals  that happened in their families. 


The families that started in the 1950s belonged mostly to a similar income group.  The rich were very few and the very poor remained unknown and were left to fend for themselves in order to survive. Only this group being neither poor nor rich nor lower middle class nor upper middle class, just existed trying to manage their ends meet by working hard,  day and night to provide two square meals and basic education for their brood. 


My mother was a stay-at-home mom, who kept herself busy with cooking, house work, stitching, reading and learning hymns and bhajans and shlokas.  As a child, it was taken for granted by me that mother would be at home at any time of the day and night. I went to school without any anxiety knowing that I just have to return back home after school and mother would have kept lunch ready for me. Even if I had to attend any extra classes or sports practice at school, I could just go home after that.  Mother would be at home.  For any project work, I could depend on my mother for some ideas and most of the time, she would help out with some of the waste material lying at home. She would be an expert for best out of waste ideas. 


Then in the 80s, I saw my sisters treaded the same path as my mother.  But they had to balance home and work as they were all in full time employment.  Since in many households, still there were siblings yet to be married, the nieces and nephews could be taken care of by the maternal or paternal grandparents and aunts and uncles.  Still the mothers in the 1980s had to manage home, in-laws, formalities and also be punctual, sincere and adept at their place of work. Moreover, those days, there were internal examinations for promotions.  So there was this added opportunity to move ahead at work simultaneously with managing family, of course with the support of the extended family.  Women were slowly getting access to better opportunities but home management was still on their own shoulders.  Men were becoming aware of the changes and they started doing their best at house management.  I would see my brothers-in-law take up the job of laundry and ironing the school uniforms, dropping children at school, wife to the railway station or place of work etc.  Times were changing. 


But sooner, the trend of unprofessional day care homes started to emerge. Working mothers would throng to let their children in a household with children of other working mothers, with the hope that their children could get a hang of living at home like how they had in their childhood.  But for this too, the mother’s heart needed to be worked upon to make it as hard as a stone.  To facilitate travel and to help them be away from their children for minimum time during the day, came the concept of learning to ride a two-wheeler or drive a car. 


The late 80s started seeing many Indian mothers on their two wheels, with 4 bags around them ( 2 for themselves, 2 for the children at the creche).  Once home, they tried to emulate their own evenings spent with their mothers and followed a ritual of lighting the lamp and saying prayers together.  


The world was moving at a fast pace. The 40s, 50s, 60s, 70s, and 80s were being left behind with many new inventions, new technology, higher education and new opportunities becoming open to women.  The unprofessional homely daycares started to turn into professional creches.  The need was felt that children need to learn more life skills to deal with the outside world. 


Well into the 1990s, the families started to become nuclear.  The parents of the 1960s started to realise that they had a life of their own.  Their dream was to travel the world, learn new things of art, music, dance or improvise their own in-built talents (which they were denied  opportunities when they were young).   Fair enough.  But that left the mothers of the 1990s in lurch without support from family to help them make a family of their own. 


The mothers in the 1990s, were faced with a larger responsibility of juggling between in-laws, parents, work and house management.  Added to this, was the new trend of developing the personality of their children.  Their children needed to be competitive to remain in the competitive world.  The children were expected to pack their own things, they had to understand the meaning of different touches on their bodies  at the creche, they had to learn self- defence techniques like karate and taekwondo.  The inner strength and alongwith physical development  had to be worked upon.  So swimming, cycling and skating were a must.   Mother had to run around buying groceries and vegetables and shopping for the home essentials, so for that duration the children spent some time learning art, drawing or math. 


The children were left anxious for most part of the day.  They went to school in the morning in a bus and after school they took a different bus to reach their creche. They could not share their thoughts immediately after school with their mothers.  They would have to wait till their mother returned  from work in the evening.   Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, they had Karate classes, Tuesdays and Thursdays they had music and dance classes.  Some children had to juggle from one class to another. Saturdays were drawing and art classes, Sundays were swimming lessons. The children were getting used to remaining in an anxious state of mind. 


And how could I not talk of food  yet.  Yes, after the shopping, the housework of arranging the purchases made.  The 1990s was still seeing every household have normal indian food of rice, dal, rotis, bhaji, salads and chutneys, curds and pickles and papads, puran polis, vadas, idlis and dosas too. The guests too could be expected to have whatever the host has prepared.  More or less, the concept of food remained largely alike in the friends circle or office get-togethers or family functions. 

The working mother was aware of the food choices of the family members and she could definitely manage with a one-time maid to clean and cook for her family.  Some special dishes, she could herself  make, to give that personal touch to her children.


Definitions such as quality time, emotional quotient began to appear.  Many children were started to be dealt with as slow-learners.  Had the same children been around in the 1970s, they would have just enjoyed learning things at their own pace.  But no, we were in the 1990s. The world was moving fast.  How can we let our children lag behind? So new professionals who could read stories for children started to emerge. 


This phase went on till, maybe mid 2000s, when the whole concept of a responsible mother went through a sea change. From mothers being the first teacher to teach kindness, compassion, sharing, honesty and sincerity in the 1950s, the mothers in the 2000s had to do this and more. While they were to teach the children good virtues and attributes, they were also to sensitise the children about the bad and cheaters out there. The children were to be adept at multiple skills and also top the class with good grades in all subjects. The timid, loving and caring picture of a mother turned to a tiger-mom.  The mother had to herself learn newer things to direct the energies of her children in the right directions.  There were no elders at home, who could teach bhajans or narrate stories to children or share the responsibility of bringing up the children.  The whole onus was on the mother alone.   


The kitchen took over a massive change. The traditional dishes were now time consuming and quick 2-minute ready to eat became the trend.  The rice and roti took to the back stage too. The mothers realised the traditional food was suitable for that particular time and nature of activities then.  They were not conducive enough for todays’ activities.  For example: though the traditional vegetarian meal has a lot of simpleness and is a healthy diet, it has been realised that the diet includes more carbohydrates (which help people doing physical labour) and less of protein.  Whereas the generation today have more or less a sedentary lifestyle and their activities relate  to usage of technology through digital devices.  So only carbs in food only made them heavier and sluggish.   Moreover, every mother now had to necessarily  have knowledge of baking and making international cuisine which could range from chinese, japanese to italy, mexico and puerto rico or australia.  This, because children discuss in class what they have in their lunch boxes.  The normal roti sabji was looked upon by peers and so the lunch boxes had to be trendy with such international cuisines. So the mother had to learn new recipes, lest they lag behind. 


Did i tell you about the preferences of food of the guests in the late 2000s? 


No ?


Well,  when i was young and whenever my aunt or any relative visited home, mother would make poha or upma or any other south indian snack. In case anyone visited late at night without notice, the guest would be happy to just have curd rice with pickles.  But in the 2000s, the scene was different.  The non-vegetarians look lowly upon the vegetarians and may ask what was for them among the various spreads on the table.  Within vegetarians, most people have different choices of vegetables.  The traditional ones don't suit a dinner table, for example broad beans or snake gourd.  The names of the vegetables need to be trendy, say like bell peppers, capsicums, tomatoes, spring onions etc.  normal white rice too is not trendy enough. It should either be a biryani or a pulao or quinoa or brown rice or millets. 


When you go out for a picnic or a social do, the vegetarians are treated like an outcast and are sneered at and teased for not having tasted the flesh and the bones.  


Be that as it may, the world has surely undergone a massive change in terms of lifestyle, food habits, recreational activities and communication languages.  There is no more space now for sitting together and having the same food by all the family members.  The mother tongue cannot be spoken any more.  Because most parents come from different regions and have different mother tongues and there is no time to converse the same sentence in multiple languages.  The smses, emails, and WA texts in English as a common language is enough for communication.  What has one to achieve by learning the mother tongue?  The roots and familial bonding are a thing of the past. To bring that into our lives now, is too much hard work with no real benefits.  


All the same, one  cannot tell that the 1950s was better than the 2000s.  It is just that time flies, the world changes, one has to find ways to survive in the world and feel reasonably comfortable.


Life has changed more, since the pandemic of the past one and half years.  The mothers have to help children in their homeschooling - taking note of the time tables, scanning and uploading answer sheets, maintaining files of the test papers apart from their own busyness of working from home.


The mothers. Yes, the mothers, they take the blame for all the changes in the world and all the drifting that happens by the men of the family.  But mothers being mothers, their love towards their children does not change whether it is 1950s or 2000s.  It is just that they can't afford to remain like a mother in the 1950s, whose work revolved only around the house and children.  The mother of the 2000s needed to know how to ride, drive, shop, be a financial manager, a secretary to the family,  a cook, a teacher and also know the language of her children to communicate and the knowledge to operate devices with new technology.  


A mother’s journey never ends.  Once a mother, the journey that starts keeps on and on. On her deathbed, my mother called me one night and said,’I am worried about you.  You have to take care of yourself. You are juggling too many things at a time. Eat well.’


Wednesday, 12 May 2021

13. How to plan a wedding in lockdown times- A practical guide

 HOW TO PLAN A WEDDING IN LOCKDOWN TIMES

 - A PRACTICAL GUIDE 


The past year has been a teacher in many respects. It has shown us how tiny we are in this universe and the atheist of the atheist would have come to believe that there is altogether some other hand working overtime, in order to safeguard us and our plans and our priorities. The year has taught us that plan whatever or howsoever, but what has to happen will never be according to your desires or your plans. 


Why am i writing this today? Because I have spent a year and a half, each month, every day, every hour, every minute and every second – making a Plan A. Then when the time nears the Plan and I find it cannot be worked out, I make a Plan B.  When this plan does not look like it would work, I make yet another Plan C. Between Plan B and Plan C, I spend sleepless nights and wakeful hours by the days trying to make different plans other than the Plan B and Plan C.  So on and so forth. There must have been about a lakh or more of dreams, thoughts, desires and the plans on how to fulfill them.  One night I plan to take a flight to the US ( to visit my daughter and solemnize her wedding there with a handful of people) and next night the plan gets crushed by my daughter’s plan to visit India and have a function full with cousins and relatives. 


The background to this topic, is that, last year we could conduct the engagement ceremony in January, 2020 between parents of the bride and bridegroom in Mumbai with few of our relatives and friends and by live streaming the event having our daughter and would-be-son-in-law (both were in US) virtually at the function.   This, after about 8-9 months after the bride and the bridegroom got connected electronically in the US.  The bride and bridegroom wished to visit India  only once for the wedding with all their friends and relatives in attendance and  thats it.   Accordingly, we, parents had decided to have a small function for confirming the alliance and fixing of dates for the wedding.  The wedding was fixed for August, 2020. Little did we know then that we would be facing lockdowns on account of covid-19 for a long time to come. 


Come January, 2021 and the situation in Mumbai looks promising for getting together few people for a function.  So we start making plans again. We print invitation cards and make daywise  time table to execute our plan. March 30th,2020 our daughter and son-in-law arrive at Mumbai. Unawares of the rising covid cases, we plan each day to tick our pending job lists of shopping, tailoring, dentist visit, opthalmologist visits, beauty parlour visits etc.  Meanwhile, the TV news is jarring about the impending lockdown from April 15th,2020.  Already, the weekend lockdowns were in force ( our wedding dates were on a weekend- 24th & 25th saturday and sunday).  We then tried to advance the dates to April 21-22 and asked the hall management to help us get permission from the local health authorities and shift the dates to weekdays.  However, we got reply from them that if lockdown is declared, whether weekend or weekday,we will not be permitted to conduct weddings and the hall will not let us perform the wedding.  On 12th of April, while just lazing around, we felt that since everything is in place and bride and bridegroom are present, what are we waiting for? Are we waiting for the lockdown to be declared and then run from pillar to post for permission from the local authorities?  We were back to square one – talking, talking, talking and making new plans and thinking of new dates with weaker hopes as the bride & bridegroom had come to Mumbai only on a month’s leave and if we missed the April dates, the wait would have turned another year or two longer. So shifting our burden on the Almighty, we decided to go ahead with the function on 14th April,2020 i.e. was within next 40 hours. We called up the cameraman, the caterers, the decorators, the make-up artists etc. 13th of April, 2020 was gudi padwa, an auspicious day for new beginnings, we arranged for Mehendi for the bride after the noon. Few friends and local relatives had come.   The hall management allowed us to enter the place in the night itself.  So few of us were at the venue from the night of 13th April itself.  On 14th, the wedding was conducted in a traditional manner. 


Coming to the point, how to conduct the wedding the lockdown times, it is very easy.  In fact, looking behind, I had wasted a lot of time making plans. The execution of it had to be in a short notice.  So friends, to have a practical approach, I will try to emphasize on a few things here. 

  1. First things first, keep a list of Muhurta dates for each month for almost a year in hand for ready reference.

  2. Book atleast 2 venues for an approximate date.  Keep in touch with the hall management for any formalities in writing for permission from local authorities.

  3. Prepare 3 types of guest lists - 

 • List A – 10-12 persons – only bride and bridegroom,, their parents and siblings 

 • List B- 20-25 persons – which will include 2-3 sumangalis from both sides

 • List C 40-50  persons – people who will surely be present, if invited, friends of             the bride and bridegroom and few neighbourly wellwishers.

  1. Do not invite nor expect any outstation guests. It is a huge risk to take for them and for the host too.

  2. Do not print hard copy invitation cards more than 25-30 numbers.                     Definitely speed post, wedding invitation cards to family deities and outstation relatives (who will not be able to travel any way)

  3. Purchase all costumes, dresses, accessories, gifts  and get things tailored for the bride and bridegroom well in advance as when the shops are open.

  4. Pay in advance for photography, caterers, make-up artist, beauticians and decoraters and keep them informed to kick off the event in as short notice as 36-48 hours.  That said, keep 2 credit cards and pre-decide funds from which bank account will be paid for which expenses for eg. for caterers  - one credit card, for decorators or photography - another credit card etc. Extend the limit of credit cards to upto Rs.15 lakhs. 

  5. Pack Bride’s / groom’s costumes, dresses and things separately in a suitcase which will serve as all-in-one for her and pack suitcases for the other members of the family separately in advance and keep them aside. This can be done as early as the wedding gets fixed and slowly items getting collected in the respective suitcases. It will avoid duplication of packing and repacking work. 

  6. Make a checklist of things to be taken to the venue in advance  especially photograhs of our beloved parents, trays, scissors for cutting flowers etc.

  7. Last but most important. Do not panic. Keep calm. Do not take to heart any remarks or comments made by any family member. No one knows how the other person feels or how the desires of each member of the party is getting crushed one by one and slowly.  Be cheerful and observe the way things are happening with the spirit of humour. The Almighty is on the job,  not you. 

All the best, believe in the Almighty and that whatever happens, happens for the best.