Friday 15 May 2015

Will The Real Mother Stand Up?

mother baby hands
Courtesy    Free Photos
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         All the brouhaha has subsided and the declarations of love for the mothers and salute to motherhood have died down for the next 364 days. Don't get me wrong. I have nothing against all the beautiful sepia toned snaps as status updates or the the notes of gratitude dedicated. I am, because I too have one. And I share her with two other siblings. And no. This isn't another one dedicated to one more mother. In fact, this post is to pose a question to all the mothers. You have had your share of limelight on the 10th of May and are mighty pleased with the attention showered by the worthy offsprings. There have been accounts of how youngsters have been emotionally blackmailed and threatened by the mothers to change their 'dp', status updates with the loving mom's snap in all social media or groups worth their bytes, short of probably fixing them on bank papers. Mothers too demand their pound of flesh to flaunt on wherever they exist digitally. Hmmm... just made me wonder whether the Mother India  avatar had changed with times. But no, that incarnation also comes in handy when nothing else works. More of that later.Well, actually these niggling thoughts have been plaguing me of late and what I elaborate on, may tantamount to blasphemy.

  Shall we recall a regular scenario of the neighbourhood park where you may have strolled in with the apple of your eye awaiting compliments at how well your genes have manifested. You have enjoyed all the cooing and the warm glances thrown at the bundle in your arms by total strangers. Back home when you have recounted the delightful little details to your neighbours or the others in the family, the comparisons cropped up. " Oh! When my Chunnu was this young, the entire neighbourhood would be fighting over each other to hold him..." In all those noddings and affectionate clicking of tongues, somewhere deep down a tiny bit of resentment crept in for having tried to hijack the attention showered on your darling. As they grow up and you get older, it only gets more obsessive. This desire to have constant spotlight on your own.  

   Or shall we talk about the time when your child was not selected for a competition or a race and that just didn't go down too well with you. Instead of saying " maybe he or she was better than you", did you say " let me go and talk to your teacher and find out"? Did you just plant the seed of cut throatism instead of striving for a healthy competition? Or the time when your neighbour's daughter got into the most sought after engineering college, did you badger your own to follow her footsteps? You want your own to stand out and yet you push them into a herd.

  And then you have sighed and recalled the great difficulties surmounted when raising them. The sacrifices made. The opportunities missed. The sleepless nights. The more you repeat the more the child grows up thinking what a tyrant he or she has been. The more he or she thinks thus, the halo around your head just gets bigger and brighter. And you have got them right there. Wound around your little finger, your creation is your entitlement. Never mind that they could have a mind of their own.  

   You would say, they are your own. They ought to be aware of every hardship faced by you in bringing them up. But then every mother is saying the same to their's. Tell me something... did the child beg to be born? Now, of course I shall not get into the details of their conception. The child came into this world because you wished it to. Well! When you did wish one of your own, but naturally, the onus of raising it lay with you. There is no  best way to raise them. How you raise them shapes them as individuals. I have seen mothers jumping into the fray when children are squabbling at play.
" Why are you not playing with my Minni?"
Children will play and children will fight. They will go back to playing again forgetting the past. Adults need to keep their eyes and ears open not their mouth. Do intervene if it gets out of hand but let them sort it out first. In most cases they do a wonderful job of it when left to their own devices. These are important life skills. The ability to sort out one's own issues instead of waiting for someone else to do the dirty job. If they have made a mistake, encourage them to accept it and make amends instead of conjuring a smokescreen of excuses. Most often the general perception is that your's is the cherubic angel who can do no wrong and the 'other' is the red horned devil. And this rosy tinted vision continues well after they have tied the knot and have had children of their own. Your child can do no wrong. Just step back a little and see that they are all children. There is no harm in embracing the 'other' child with all his little imperfections.

   Why am I saying all this? Of course there has been no dearth of illustrations borne out of your children's matrimony. Yes, yes the TV serials have only added fuel to the ghar ghar ki kahanis and the family politics theories.  The daughters-in-law are these scheming beings who  need to be shown their right places while the daughters are not to be taxed with unwanted burdens. The sons-in-law ought to be paying more attention to their wives while the sons should be advised subtlely to keep the wives in check. More so, because you have toiled hard to raise them and now the wife reaps all the benefits. This is the time when the Nirupa Roy and the Mother India incarnation comes in very handy. This play of power within the family will continue as long as people marry and refuse to grow up as individuals.

   The reason why I think on these lines is because the role of the mother is much higher than these petty skirmishes. In the light of two incidents in Delhi, all the mothers need to do a reality check. A mother allegedly incited and instigated her teenaged son to thrash a rash DTC bus driver who later succumbed to his injuries. Now the teenager's future is in doldrums. The mother forgot to learn and impart an important lesson " as you sow so shall you reap". Your actions and your reactions in a given situation will catch up with you sooner or later.

  The second incident was the 'bricking' of a traffic constable by a mother in front of her children. First the mother jumps the red light and then refuses to produce the necessary documents when asked for by the traffic police. She allegedly gets abusive and the situation turns for worse. And all this, in the presence of her own school going children. What a contradiction in the lessons learnt in school and lessons perceived in the real world! If the lady had any sense she should have owned up her mistake, shown her documents and paid the fine. If she had any courage she should have told her children that the traffic cop was doing his duty and that the law exists for our protection and safety. The children would have imbibed an important lesson in honesty, civic duty and courage what hours in a classroom would not have achieved. Most importantly she would have earned their respect.

   Is it fair to ask for a better world when you have not contributed in any way to build it? You may lament about the indifferent, callous and inhuman ways of the world but remember to ask whether you sowed  the right seeds. You may go hoarse telling the child the dos and the don'ts but they will register in their impressionable minds only what they see and perceive. So be a Real Mother and help your child to take the right step forward with a sound judgement. Don't tell the child. Show the child how you do it.

25 comments:

  1. Interesting viewpoint. I am totally with you.
    I am sure if you ask Mother's, most of them will not have any issues with what you have asked them of.

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  2. Very well penned. Thought provoking. I totally agree.

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  3. Lots of food for thought here.In these days of cut-throatism we are harming our own children to further our own goals.The mothers of today's senior citizens were i think ,more on the right path-they let us be,grow and evolve with the right values.

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  5. I agree with you Indu. The mothers got more involved in the children's life than was good for all.

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  6. Very thought-provoking! Loved it Ilakshee :) Cheers to all our mothers (and hope they don't get more involved than necessary) :)

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  7. I agree Nilakshi. How we raise our children has a major influence on how they grow up. If I always think that my child is always right or should always do better than others, then I am imposing my ambitions on the child, rather than guiding the child to grow up as a sound individual.

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  8. Every woman has to play a role in the 'mother child relationship' drama two times in her life. First time as the child and next time as the mother. Sometimes both simultaneously.
    She also has to play a double role of two opposite characters at the same time ; the mother and the guru.
    To justify such a difficult character and to keep the balance she needs to be really educated or she should very be strong.

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  9. As I am the one who never does the mother day DPs I am even more with you. Kudos for writing this.

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  10. Ah! THAT's a rarely honest take. There are a few subjects where everyone and his uncle feels that nothing negative can ever be written - and, thus, nobody provides a reality check. Motherhood is one of them and the way people almost HAVE to talk of mothers one would forget that they are women, too, with their own flaws and, thus, you WILL have the good, the bad and the ugly even in mothers. Great to see you grasp the nettle on this one and so effectively.

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  11. Yes Alok,agreed, many wouldn't. But in reality things do go little awry with most mothers.

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  12. Yes Alok,agreed, many wouldn't. But in reality things do go little awry with most mothers.

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  13. Thank you, Archana :) It's bouquets and brickbats for the mothers...

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  14. Very true, Somali. The basic is to accept that the child is an individual and not an extension of ourselves. Thanks for stopping by.

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  15. Thanks for your thoughts, Dipak. Maturity and wisdom is what I would wish for in mothers.

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  16. Mridula, same pinch :P frankly I have nothing against the DPs. It's the mothers maintaining a balance that I am delving on.

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  17. Suresh, I guess the idea of motherhood has moved very little from the eastman colour days.

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  18. Thankfully, there is something called as Karma. Otherwise, human greed will know NO ENDS. Mothers are not alone in being greedy, btw. All humans are. Including you and me.

    Destination Infinity

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  19. Thjanks for your thoughts, Rajesh. Depends on what you term as greedy. Material acquisition is one thing but to smother another life by imposing one's own unrealised ambitions is another is far more harmful. I hope not to be greedy in the latter way..

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  20. wowww... that was a post which gives you a lot to ponder about!!! Its just an awesome read... :)

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  21. Your post is the perfect elaboration on the quote: Children follow your example, not your advice.

    Hope more parents heed you and follow the right way to help their children develop...

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  22. Mothers are naturally selfish. Weaker the sibling more selfish she gets.. You'll notice that she always remains with her weakest child and will always try to hide the weaknesses.
    On the other hand the guru is selfless and will always try to amend and rectify the weaknesses of his students.
    If the woman in the mother is strong and truly educated ( not in terms of having some university degrees) she will be successful in maintaining the balance.

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  23. Of course, even mothers are humans and capable of being all that humans can be. I appreciate your candid post, the way you have begun and ended and allowed me to read between the lines. But history will remain obnoxious in the way it can repeats itself.

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  24. Well Ilakshi as I am the one who find it totally useless and somewhat shallow to join the mother's/father's/valentine day DPs- posts bandwagon ,I COMPLETELY agree . and that halo you wrote about...well it dims after realization strikes. Mostly children of such great moms go through unpleasant phases in life and affect other too negatively.
    Truth only .

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Your words keep me going :)