Three India trips since 'D' and I set up home together, as a couple, here in
Northern Virginia, and it's funny how I have gone through the same set of
emotions before and after every one of those trips...
We've been relatively fortunate to have our parents/family visit us
reasonably often in the last half a decade...So while every time we bid good
bye to our parents , the heart strings wreak havoc , the tear glands show no
mercy, the knees feel weak...in retrospect, it's comforting to realize that we
have been able to spend some quality time with our folks despite setting up
"home" so far away from "home"...
Having said that though, every 1.5 to 2 years, there is this sense of
urgency to visit India...Assam... "Anandam"...home, as I knew it a
decade and a half back...there is this almost irrepressible urge to revisit
childhood memories...to be around the folks I grew up with(despite being well
aware that most of them are not around anymore:( )...to be engulfed in the aroma
of favorite childhood dishes being cooked up in Mom's kitchen...to just sit out
in the terrace garden and look out at the horizon of the ever expanding skyline
and "land line"( if I may call it that) of my home town of
Guwahati...just sit there...do absolutely nothing other than gaze out at the
horizon...looking back at what a journey it has been...the distance traveled...where
we were...where we are...and looking ahead at what potentially lies ahead in this
unpredictable,exciting journey of life...
This India trip was even more special because we went with little Raya in
tow...it was her first trip to India ....and boy did she have fun...getting
royally pampered by both sets of grandparents, uncles , aunts and bonding ,playing
or more appropriately “ bullying” :) her little cousin(D’s niece)!! Other than
a few moments in the incredibly long flight journey from Washington to Guwahati,
Raya seemed to absolutely love India ... all the attention... the huddles and
cuddles from everyone she met...the sounds and views of the people, vehicles
and animals on the streets...being able to gaze out of the window of the car and
soak in the views without being restrained by the “leashes” of a car seat...the
morning and evening strolls with the grandparents...just the general feel of
the place and people... let’s just say this...she seemed absolutely “at home” in India right from the
beginning, putting all my apprehensions at bay ...She seemed to soak in, delight in and be fascinated by the transition from
the quietness of life in US suburbia to the hustle- bustle of life in Bangalore(where
my brother, Ash lives) and Guwahati...from an environment, where folks would be
super sweet to her on the streets, but would definitely think twice before
touching her, to one, where every second person on the street was pinching her
cheeks, without us or them feeling the need to be alarmed....from being
strapped up on a high chair in a restaurant here in the US, with coloring
paraphernelia/phone/ ipad to keep her engaged so that we , the parents, could
have a peaceful , quick dinner before her patience waned out, to being entertained
by the servers /waiters in Indian restaurants while we gleefully sipped away at
our cocktails and leisurely nibbled away at the food on our plates...I think
our little girl did really well :)
Anyone living outside India would agree that a trip to India is always
preceded by weeks and months of excited anticipation...In India, of course, we
bask in the glory of undivided attention from family and friends, incredible pampering,
delicious food, shopping sprees, ”addas”...all along ,engulfed in that sweet
and heady feeling of nostalgia...we marvel at how the country has progressed
economically...how the skylines and “land line” of the towns and cities are
ever expanding...the streets getting broader...crib about the general mindset getting
narrower, as the newspaper headlines scream about politicians trying to dictate
what “women should wear, how they should talk and walk”...talk about the "reverse brain drain"... gape open mouthed,
as we are dealt with punch after punch of “sticker shock”...essentially bask in
the glory of a life with no work, but all play, thoughts and talk ...No wonder
in those 3-4 weeks , life seems perfect , just as it did two decades back....when, as
teenagers, all that we had to think about and take care of ,was ourselves ,while
everything peripheral aka managing the
household help, cooking ,cleaning, driving, paying the bills ,all household
chores was taken care of by someone else...albeit that someone else was “Mama and
Papa dear” and their entourage of contacts and helpers....One could get used to
living like that, so much so that like I mentioned in my post three years back, before
you realize it, you could get spoilt beyond redemption in India , and forced
to unequivocably judge where life is better… It is very easy indeed to get
carried away by the rosiness of the vacation and “holiday spirit”, where friends
and family make all the time for you and for three short weeks set aside the worries that bog them down in their day to day lives...
There were countless instances when I was rhetorically
asked that bringing up a child in the US must be tough, without the family/household/societal
support system:), especially since I was a working mom!! This question about
whether it is more difficult bringing up a child here in the US (as a working
mom) vs in India was thought provoking, indeed. I agree that the love, affection,
warmth, moral and physical support provided by grandparents and extended family
is irreplaceable . I wouldn’t have been able to make it through the first and most
important year of Raya’s life without the physical and moral support of my dear
parents, and Raya probably wouldn’t have had even half as much fun in the first year of
her life or developed like she has, without her grandparents being around for
extended periods. But that aside, I have realized that bringing up a child,
managing a home, a family, a job , life in general is just as difficult or as
easy as you want to make it, no matter where you live…Not that it would have
been any easier bringing up Raya if D and I had set up home some place else in
India, other than Guwahati …no one would agree with me more on this than my dear friend, Rush, who has set up home in Gurgaon while her parents live down
in South India….Given today’s nuclear family set ups, no matter where home is,
at every point, you are faced with a set of challenges…at every point of time,
you have a set of choices…you make the choices you make and move on…letting
time decide the effect they have on the course of your life…
I enjoy getting royally spoilt ,like I do, every time we
are in India...At the end of the three to four weeks of what I like to call “unadulterated
all play and no work time”, I am always engulfed with sadness and choke in
tears at the thought of yet again leaving behind loved ones and my childhood
home in Assam…Paradoxically and funnily enough, however, I am also subconsciously( and
I know I have mentioned this before) ready to get back to the grind...to office
work, cooking, cleaning, driving, doing the grocery, fighting with D about
household chores, paying the mortgage, facing the challenges of bringing up
Raya and generally getting back to “real” life...that’s “real”…that’s “life” as
I know and love…as long as those weeks
of “unadulterated all play and no work time” keep getting squeezed into our
busy lives, ever so often , we should be good, I guess:)…
Having said that though, hopefully we will be able to make
more frequent trips back home to Assam with Raya, and also our parents /families will
continue to be able to visit us often enough, so that she can grow up with the warmth
and affection that only grandparents and family can provide…Fingers crossed…How that pans out, only time will tell….It's definitely tough for us, staying away from our parents and siblings...we miss them so much...but it's even tougher for our parents now, for grandparenthood has given birth to an absolutely different set of emotions that has made their grandchild the absolute centre of their lives ....
For now though, it’s been a good start to the new year for
all three of us with the fabulous, refreshing trip from “home” to “home”
back “home”, if that makes any sense at all :)
Wish all of you a very happy 2013…may the new year bring
in health, love and happiness into all your lives…
3 comments:
hey Priyanka!!! Great to hear about your India trip and a very beautiful post indeed. :)
Hey Rush...great to see you back in blogosphere ...your post inspired me to come out of hibernation again and finally have something to write...so thanks:)...Looking behind the rosy picture that a short Indian vacation tends to paint, I can perfectly understand your frustration .,.Hoping 2013 brings in love, luck, cheer and just that "settled in" feeling you are seeking ..much love...Priyanka
Dipanjan Das, Vidya Sabesan, Preetam Rajkhowa, Sanchita Bhattacharya, Smitha Kalappurakkal,
Meghna Goswami, Anjali Garg, Menoka Bose, Bosky Mukherjee, Ravi Prakash, Dehu Rajkhowa, Darshana Barua, Sukanya Bora like this
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Darshana Barua:
Loved going through ur blogs....could relate our lives with each n every line
January 16 at 6:38pm via mobile
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Priyanka Rajkhowa Thanks folks...
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