Recently a Facebook friend confided in me that she has been
putting up with domestic violence for a while now. She has been married for
around 6 years and has a 3 year old child. Although she is qualified enough to
get a job and fend for herself, she understandably feels lost when it comes to
thinking about getting a job after being forced to give up her career soon
after marriage because the in-laws saw it as a disgrace to their affluent
selves to let their daughter in law go to work.
Marriage is such a gamble. You never really know what you
are getting into, because some people change drastically after marriage when a
relationship demands more than showing up on time for dates or looking good for
each other. Love makes perfectly logical people complete idiots. It makes an
educated, capable woman set aside her career goals and her financial
independence. Blame it on love, which makes her believe that her needs will be
taken care of, forever. Blame it on blind trust, that to her, a child that they
bring into their ‘world of love’ is a welcome addition in their lives.She may
never understand that to her husband, their child is another ‘responsibility’.
Another weight on his already burdened shoulders.
My mother is the strongest woman I know. I may never really
understand the pain, the heartburn involved in bringing up her children
singlehandedly because her husband never did enough to provide for his wife
and family. Some day I will get around to writing a lot
more about her, to capture a few fleeting moments of glory for her and the way
she brought us up against all odds. Far too many women like her live and die
without being adequately appreciated.
She has told me several things about a time when we were
living in Sharjah and my father had no steady job. We kids grew up seeing our
parents bicker all the time. I never agree with people who say that the world
gives money far more importance than it deserves. Because I know the true power
of money and have seen how the lack of it can wreck a person’s home, family and
spirit.
My mother used to work as a secretary at a law firm. Her
salary wasn’t enough to feed and educate the four of us, pay the rent AND pay
off the debts that my dad constantly piled up. I wish I could understand his
thought process but from the face of it, he probably believed that taking loans
from every friend and colleague to manage expenses at home and take more loans
to pay off old ones was still a way of ‘providing’ for his family.
She had cut off the wires to the calling bell because
everytime the bell rang, her heart would pound with fear of having to face
angry people asking where her husband is and when he would return their money.
We kids would find a corner to sit quietly in and watch from behind the
furniture while she stood at the door, unable to answer for her husband’s
actions.
On many nights when she felt there was no hope for us she
started plotting a way of escaping that life – killing all of us when we were
asleep and then, herself. She didn’t want to leave her kids to the mercy of an
irresponsible father. She knew he wouldn’t be able to deal with the
responsibility alone. So she began planning how it should be done.
She though the best way would be to set the house on fire so
none of us would escape. She would douse the bed and then the whole house in
enough petrol to ensure nothing was spared and then set the bed on fire while
we kids were asleep.
She told me it was impossible to get enough petrol to do it
without arousing suspicion. So she would have to buy and stock small quantities
of petrol until she had enough. The best way for her to do this was to buy
small amounts of petrol from the petrol pumps on the way home from work. She
took a taxi home everyday, so she planned to stop far away from a petrol pump
each day and walk towards it with a container that would hold a decent quantity
of petrol. She would wear her specs to look like a serious, professional woman
and tell the attendent that her car ran out of fuel on her way home so she
needed just enough to fill the tank to get her home. She’d make it sound like
the car is parked a little away from the petrol pump so that nobody would
suspect she is making it all up.
She told me she spent many sleepless nights planning to do
this. I do not remember what reason she told me for not going through with her
well thought out plan. I think it was because she managed to land a better
paying job that would ease the noose around our necks just a little…just enough
to manage a little better.
My mother was a meek, frail, undergraduate who couldn’t
speak English. She thought she could give up the struggle of being a working
woman and just look after her husband and kids. Life mocked her simple plan and
threw unbelievable challenges her way. She went on to work for a renowned Lebanese
lawyer, handling all the office work including legal documents better than a
management graduate would.
When I ask her in
awe, how she managed to do it, she smiles and says she just did. She sometimes says that when God gives us burdens, he also gives us the strength to bear them. However she may have done it, at the end,
what matters is that she did. And if she
could, every woman should TRY.
5 comments:
My dearest pie,you sculpted out the true Mother India much stronger and brave than specked in celluloid.the heart crumbles but the smile on her face never ever sets.Her true spirits shook the cruel fate and she paved her way to succeed in the eyes of her gem children.No award can give her better glory than ur recognition of her struggle and pride u hold for veliamma.My love and respect for my Godmother have no heights and ur piece of art has pedestallised her to hold a space in my heart with an aura of halo encircled around her.We blindfolded ly search for the rolemodels all around but ever fail to look into the lives of our own nearest one in which u have succeeded and proved to b a true daughter of a deserving mother.Ever proud of u veliamma.thanx molu for the pains u took inamidst ur motherhood to bestow so much lov and glory to ur mother .well done my dearest
Thankyou so much for the kind words and appreciation :-)
No words to explain the sufferings of many mothers like yours have undergone in their lives.. Let your friend be inspired from this story to find a way to come out of her struggles.
Yes, money (regular income, not dowry) is what makes a girl powerful .. no doubt
Very true, regular income makes all the difference. It gives the woman in such an unfortunate situation to walk away with dignity without needing to depend on parents.
I was in tears when I was reading and such an encouraging words. thank you dear sangeeta
Post a Comment