Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Parents and children



“Children begin by loving their parents, later they judge them, never do they forgive them.” (An old saying)
Strong parents give a cushion, a safety net to their children. With its help, children go on to find themselves confidently in the world.
I remembered the above while pondering over two recent books:
1. ‘Hamrasta nakartana’ (Marathi): Sarita Awad, Rajhuns Prakashan, Pune, August 2019.
2. Inside out: Demi Moore, HarperCollins, September 2019.
My thoughts led me to memories of a friend during my teenage years. These three mark three distinct points on a continuum.
 

         Demi ------Sarita--------------------- My teenage friend

It is a continuum of girls growing up and turning into women. One end of the continuum, representing total lack of parental support is Demi Moore’s and the other end, of my friend. In between, closer to Demi Moore will come Sarita Awad.
My friend believed in conservatism and had a very strong mother. She was a reticent girl who suddenly became very conscious of herself after going to college. Her mother had begun the preparations for the marriage of her two daughters years earlier. My friend’s college friends were worldly wise young women hell-bent on getting married early. Marriage was the only career option they were interested in. Their life revolved around nothing else. To cap it all, a brother of one of the college friends, proposed marriage to my friend and she was in seventh heaven. After a prolonged courtship, she duly got married and became a mother within one year.
Then suddenly things changed. “Is that all there is to married life?” she plaintively asked once. The abyss of self-discovery was before her and marriage was of little help there.
Sarita Awad’s mother was a famous writer. There was parental discord and Sarita opted for inter-caste marriage. Her parents cut her off. From a young age, she had to fend for herself. Her marriage was no cakewalk either. She took up a bank job to run the house and raised two children. Reservations in employment helped her and her family but there was struggle at each stage. Sarita was a bit activist with left leanings. Her journey of self-discovery continued and now her autobiography makes a significant addition to the rich field of women’s’ autobiographies in Marathi. Sarita has created herself on the basis of her decisions, struggles, hard work and grit.
Demi Moore’s parents fought continuously. Both were alcoholics and promiscuous. They were continuously on the move to dodge creditors. Demi and her younger brother were separated early. The only time of safety and stability in her childhood that Demi remembers is a two-month period when she was left with her grandmother. At the age of 15, Demi’s mother left her in an empty house the key to which was with her (mother’s) boyfriend. She pocketed $ 500 for this service.
Her extraordinary looks landed Demi an acting role but she had to struggle hard to come up. The struggle involved working on both her body and her mind. It was an on-going heroic battle to reclaim herself after self-rejection. She was happy with Bruce Willis but surprisingly, he did not want her to continue with her acting career. A break-up followed. There have been many more, both before and since.
Striptease is a riveting movie which made Demi famous. Her own daughter has acted in it as her daughter. The girl’s name is Rumer – after Rumer Godden, the famous writer (and my favourite!). She has two more daughters and she has vowed to be a good mother to them and to make up for what her own mother was not.
While nursing her second daughter, she found that the baby had not put on any weight. Doctors advised Demi to stop exercising for a few months to help her daughter gain weight. This she could not as she had to be ‘leading lady thin’ in two months for her next role. These are the problems that celebrities face and that we lesser mortals are ignorant of.
All along her life, Demi has bravely faced situations where most of us would give up. She has tried alcohol and drugs but has given them up. Hers has been an epic struggle and her story is one of triumph in the face of unimaginable odds.
Conclusion: Struggle is important. It makes or breaks you. It is necessary to leave your comfort zone, to deviate from the path laid down by others and to follow your own heart and mind.

             --------------------------------


3 comments:

Subhash Joshi said...

Request: Please change the colour of the fonts. Make it darker.
The meaning of Marathi book title is not clear to me. It's my limitation.
Interesting stories of struggle by both. Is such struggle inevitable? Your friend the loser due to caring parent. Should conclusion be struggle is important or managing balance should be the conclusion? 'Strong parent' needs clarification. Who is strong? Constantly caring, guiding or one who gives freedom of self-expression, growth without being uncaring? I can only have questions, never a definitive answer. I am sure the old saying will have a counter saying in some language!

Vasudha said...

Hamrasta nakartana means, broadly, on rejecting the beaten path.
Will change the colour scheme of the blog.
The strong mother of my teenage friend made her knowledge of human behaviour constantly available to her daughters. She taught them social skills and the importance of sticking together among outsiders. All these have practical value. I meant strength in these terms.

Vasudha said...

Struggle is more important any day. Balance is what you talk about in old days!

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