RooBaRoo

All my Public writing

Judged by WhatsApp Forwards

Lately, I've felt judged.

Yes, I am a “helicopter parent”. Better a helicopter parent, than a dead child, maimed child or raped child, what say?

"Benign neglect". Hmmmmmmm. Let's see. I'm a product of that. How did I fare? The children of "pushy parents" from when I was a kid have by now established a world for themselves. While I, of intelligence without ambition (which, by the way, is like a bird without wings, did You know?) am still "in process" ... So, no. I do not buy this one either.

Yes, it's true that "parenting" is a new word. It did not exist before our generation. But how about us? Do we exist in our generation? Or before our generation? Last I know, the "Ancient Indians knew Time-travel"- machine had not yet been dug up from our stupendous past! & even if it had been, I'm not much a fan of being a child bride, a 3rd wife , a Sati ... 

No, thank you. I am gonna live in this generation. & I'm gonna prepare my child for what is my assumption of the coming generation.I do not KNOW what it will be, I am not Alvin Tofler, am I?

All around, I felt judged. Which was weird. Because, I have a very, (VERY), co-operating husband, awesome in-laws, amazing parents, incredibly cool colleagues(touchwood), friends when I need them! (actually, touchwood all around!!!) So who the hell is judging me? Why do I feel constantly judged? It's an uneasy feeling, which brings out the “rebel-without-a-cause” in me!!!

Beauty & harmony. Let go. Transcendence. ... advice, & preachvertisements. Analogies, & allegories. True stories, & ancient fables. To help me be “a better me”. Why? Do you ever stop & reflect? Why do random strangers need me to be a better me? Why am I not enough? Why all this “lifestyle education”?

After puzzling for a long time, I realized that !!!!!! Yesssssss!!! (Read the title to this write-up!) Keep it coming, guys & babes! Daadis & Taus!! Self-styled spiritual gurus & one-book psychoanalysts!!! Now that I know WHO I am facing, I am prepared. I need to have my financial independence. I also need “Mumma-baby time”, “couple-time”, time for the needs of the 2 sides of my family, & then, yes, I need some “me-time”,  some crafting, some activism.

A spic-n-span house ? ? ??? It's a luxury for "other people. An uncluttered Zen mind-space? ..... Umm! It's me you're talking to?

In my me-time I read & re-read Agatha Christie. THAT is my meditation.


Rasoi


The Kitchen”, speaks intimacy. Even in today's modern design, where the kitchen is as sleek as the sitting room, & does actually open into the lounge/ living room, still, if you are joining someone at the cooktop, if you are operating someone's blender – you are close to them. Kitchens are the centre from which the business of living a good life is conducted. They are the control room of house parties, the board room of school projects – preparing the “ghost fluorescent slime”, sprouting seeds for “plants need light” experiments. Kitchens are where pre-teen gangs with little to do on scorching summer noons, but heads bubbling with new mischief, hang out, with endless pop-corn.

Those persons, that you let into your kitchen without feeling that your personal space has been invaded, are those who you are ready to take a bit of constructive criticism from, to expose a bit of your vulnerability to! Since childhood, I've been inside the kitchens of “Aunties”, who were mothers of close friends. Ramen cooked with a tempering of Cumin & Mustard, Idlis smeared with Milk-fat & sprinkled with sugar ... fattening food for never-still school-children. Upon growing up a bit, on becoming teenagers, it was considered good manners to offer to help the hostess whom our family was visiting. This included entering her kitchen & carrying the tray of cups of Chai, that she had prepared, & later, carrying back the used cups & plates to the sink. However, any shy & adult-interaction-averse teenager would only bestow this special favour upon really special Aunties!

The kitchen window is where the heart is opened to the world at large - where the sparrows flock to peck at rice flakes, where the mangy runt cat comes to claim its share of milk & love, & meow its world philosophy to those who care to lend an ear. Kitchens also stand for traditions, & belief systems. We lived in identical apartments which were company quarters, & inside the kitchen was a store room made entirely of shelves. Many families had their mini temple/ worship place in the Store room. Floor decorations & wall decorations with traditional rice powder & rice paste often adorned the Kitchen.

I remember getting offended by “No entering kitchen during menstruation” rule in the house of an orthodox religious family. I simply decided to never let them know I had my periods. My own mother's kitchen was the place of her sorrow. She did not, & does not enjoy cooking, it is very rarely that she cooks willingly. Still, one has to cook. & cook she did, dutifully, punctually, measuring every nutrient, instilling in me a deep-seated “need” for “veggies” & lentils. But that was not her sorrow. The sorrow was my grandmother, my father's mother. In India, it is common for aged parents to live with their sons. However, my grandmother was extraordinarily interfering, immature, & basically a pest to my parents' relationship. Somehow, the kitchen represented to my mother, the entire injustice of her life ...

Thankfully, I have not inherited my mother's luck in Mothers-in-law, nor her disdain for cooking. My husband & I belong together in many places, also the kitchen. I discovered my life partner quite early in life, in Undergrad. At that time, we were quite inseparable. Going to the same places, seeing the same sights, experiencing the same events, eating the same food, we developed similar taste. We were often present in the same kitchens apprenticing with the person who was cooking for us non-hostel-mess food. It was delicacy for us - hostel-dwellers, & that person a master chef! Now, we assist each other, & prep for each other, & share our kitchen duties naturally. If a family that cooks together stays together, then we can definitely hope to.

The Kitchen, also, is the reflection of the time of one's life. Out of necessity, whoever moves out on their own, first sets up their kitchen. Purchasing one's first set of “Tea, Coffee, Sugar” jars, is not the general matter of poetry. Yet, it is one of the enthusiastic rites-of-transition from a protected life in the fold, to youth, where every little chore has to be hand-performed. I remember preparing our first Besan Chilla on our single-burner LPG stove. My roommate & I, though we knew that Besan Chillas are a beginner level recipe, were unsure that the chilla will “hold together” in itself, we added an egg to the batter. The memory never fails to make either of us smile, as we soon discovered that Besan is very sticky, & is indeed used to bind together other loose ingredients.

Living in a country which has two seasons - hot & unbearably hot - the Winter wonderland has been conceptualized by story-book illustrations - "blanket" of snow with sparkly blue magic outdoors, & contrasting yellow-red fire inside! I imagine aromas which I have not personally experienced! Remember the  kitchens in fairy tales? In the gruesome killing of the evil witch by the abandoned Hansel & Gretel, the scalding of Big Bad wolf as he comes down the kitchen chimney … climaxes happen in kitchens. Then there are the Russian fairy tales, where Baba Yaga meets her seekers by the hearth, Masha cooks pies for the bear, & the most atrocious - Yemela travels by his kitchen by the blessing of the fish!

 “Grandma's tips” all originate in the kitchen. Turmeric is an anti-inflammatory, Water boiled with carom seeds will soothe an aching tummy ... I came across the term “Hearth Witch” as my horizons broadened globally. You come to realize the the respect of the elderly & experienced woman as the healer. Where these women were content to perform their functions, with satisfaction simply from happy family members, & recognition only in the form of being taken for granted, we are more vocal about our needs & position. Still, the bond with the kitchen remains. The bond of the kitchen & the kitchen garden surfaces, & with awe you proceed to search for  the point where a herb becomes a medicine. Just a bit of mystique is invoked! There is magic all about the kitchen!

Kitchens are also the first to be neglected in the face of adversity. The living room is “maintained”, pretence of well-to-do-ness is kept up as long as possible. The kitchen's exhaust fan whose motor has burnt-out is not sent for rewinding. The sunmica of the dining table, the tiles of the platform get chipped, & remain so ... It does not affect the smells and aromas, the warmth of the flames, or the warmth of the provider, the mother figure. & so, in partial neglect lie the appliances, in disrepair, but lovingly cleaned with soap-water & scrub. & when the mother figure is ill, is taking a holiday elsewhere, or is, sadly, dead, the kitchen shouts aloud its complaint & lament, cockroaches rear their heads, coffee stains become the very pattern of the surfaces. Even as political debates gather storms around eating habits, & gender roles transform, get confused, & transform again constantly, the actual, physical kitchen welcomes all, continues to be a woman's kingdom, yet yields to whoever will take over with love.

As of every animal, food is a human need. However, "eating" does not seem to be getting "digitalized" in the near future. The Kitchen will continue to be a real, tangible, fragile, impermanent fixture in an increasingly virtual world!

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About Me

Why does anyone write? Mostly, because they cannot help it ... Speaking requires an audience. Writing does not require a readership. When I started this blog, I was new at my job, just about to get married, highly confused about what to do with life, highly dissatisfied with myself, & devoid of any "responsibilites" as they say in Indian Middle Class. Oh yes! Also, I used to imagine the populace to be divided into 3 equal thirds, economically, & the middle third was the middle class. I was a "Young adult". Now I am a middle-aged auntie. & I have found out that the lower 90% is the lower class, the top 1% is the upper class, & I am the 9%.

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