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Stories
The Best of Both Worlds
by Vikram Karve
A
middle aged woman watches the sun set from the balcony of her tenth
floor flat of one of those ubiquitous residential “townships” rapidly
sprawling and proliferating around the once remote suburb of Aundh on
the outskirts of the once beautiful and picturesque city of Pune in
western India. The doorbell rings. It’s her husband back home from work.
He’s tired and aching all over after the long bone-rattling,
back-breaking and lung-choking commute on the terrible roads and in the
polluted atmosphere.
“Good news,” his wife says exuberantly, giving him his customary cup of
tea.
“What?” the husband asks nonchalantly, carefully pouring the precise
amount of tea from the cup into the saucer and lifting the saucer to his
lips to enjoy his tea in his usual habitual manner.
“Nalini is pregnant,” the wife exults.
“At long last! I’m so glad she found time from her busy schedule,” the
husband comments acerbically and noisily sips his tea in his customary
style.
“Don’t be sarcastic. She’s a career woman. Aren’t you happy?”
“Of course I’m happy. I’m over 50 now – it’s high time I became a
grandfather.”
“I’ll have to go?”
“Where?”
“For her delivery.”
“To Seattle?”
“Yes. Her due date is sometime in November. I better go as early as
possible, maybe in September. Poor thing, it’s her first child. You
better get the visas and all ready well in time. Nalini wants me to stay
for at least three-four months after her delivery.”
“Three-four months after her delivery? So you’ll be away for nearly six
months.”
“Yes. I’m her mother and I have to be there to help her. It’s her first
delivery. And that too in America!”
“What about me?”
“You also come and help out.”
“I won’t get six months’ leave.”
“Come for a month. To see the baby. In December.”
“I’ll see. But I don’t like it there. It’s too cold.”
“Then stay here.”
“I wish we hadn’t shifted from Sadashiv Peth.”
“Why? Isn’t this lovely apartment better than those two horrible rented
rooms we had? And it’s all thanks to Nalini.”
“I know. I know. Don’t rub it in. But sometimes I wish we hadn’t pushed
her into IT. We should have let her study arts, history, literature –
whatever she wanted to.”
“And it would have been difficult to find a decent boy for her and she
would be languishing like an ordinary housewife with no future; slogging
away throughout her life like me.”
“And we would be still staying in the heart of the city and not in the
wilderness out here. And you wouldn’t have to go all the way to
America!”
“Don’t change the topic.”
“I’m not,” says the husband firmly. “You are not going for Nalini’s
delivery to America. Let them, she and her husband, manage on her own.”
“But why? She is sending the ticket.”
“It’s not the money. The fact is I don’t want to stay all alone at this
age; it’s difficult. And in this godforsaken place full of snobs I don’t
even have any friends.”
“Try to understand. I have to be there. It’s her first delivery.”
“Tell me one thing.”
“What?”
“Don’t American women have babies?”
“Yes. Of course they do.”
“And do they always have their mothers around pampering them during
their deliveries? And then mollycoddling their babies for the next few
months, maybe even a year?”
“I don’t know,” she said evading an answer, “for them it’s different.”
“Different?”
“Our kobra girls are najuk.”
“Najuk?”
“Delicate. Fragile.”
“Nonsense. They are as tough as any one else. It’s all in the mind. It’s
only our mindset that’s different.”
“What do you mean?”
“Thousands of women who have migrated from all over the world are
delivering babies in America every day, but it’s only our girls who
can’t do without their mothers around, is it?”
“Don’t argue with me. It’s our culture, tradition. A daughter’s first
delivery is her mother’s responsibility.”
“Culture? Tradition? What nonsense! It’s not culture. It’s attitude! Our
people may have physically migrated to America, but their mental make-up
hasn’t changed, isn’t it?”
“Please stop your lecturing. I’m fed up of hearing…” the wife pleads.
The husband continues as if he hasn’t heard her, “What they require is
attitudinal change and to stop their double standards. Nonsense! Nobody
forced them to go to America! They went there on their own and it’s high
time they adopt the American way of life instead of clinging on to roots
and values they themselves cast off…”
“Please. Please. Please. Enough! I beg of you. Don’t argue. Just let me
go.”
“No. I can’t stay alone for six months. Why should I?”
“Try to understand. I’ve told you a hundred times. It’s our only
daughter’s first delivery. I have to be there.”
“Okay. Tell her to come here.”
“Here?”
“Yes. Here. We’ll do her delivery right here in Pune. We’ll go to the
best maternity hospital and then you can keep her here as long as you
want.
She’ll be comfortable, the weather will be good and you can pamper her
and her baby to your heart’s content.”
“No.”
“What do you mean ‘No’? You went to your mother’s place for your
deliveries isn’t it? And came back after the babies were more than three
months old.”
“That was different. I wasn’t working.”
“Oh. It’s about her job is it? I’m sure they have maternity leave out
there.
She can take a break. And if she wants to go back early we’ll look after
the kid for a couple of months and then I’ll take leave and we’ll both
go and drop him there.”
The wife says nothing.
“Give me the phone. I’ll ring her up and tell her to come here as early
as possible. I’ll convince her she will be more comfortable here,” the
husband says.
“I’ve already spoken to her,” the wife says.
“And?”
“She wants the baby to be born there. Something about citizenship.”
“So that’s it,” the husband says, “She wants the best of both worlds,
isn’t it?”
October 29,
2006
Image under license with
Gettyimages.com
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Stories

The Week of October 29, 2006
Will the PM Abet Corruption? by Rajinder Puri
US Elections and the Hell Shaped Curve by Gaurang
Bhatt, MD
United States Neurotic Obsessions
with
Pakistan's General Musharraf by Dr. Subhash Kapila
India's New Defence Minister:
The Dilemma of Honesty or Efficiency by Col.
Rahul K. Bhonsle
Criminal Freedom versus Civil Thralldom by V.
Sundaram
Is England Becoming 'Little England'? by V.
Sundaram
Do They Speak ... These Statues? by Pradip
Bhattacharya
Death – An amazing phenomenon! by Pradeep
Joshi
Beware! The Land Slides by VK Joshi
Home, Home On the (Nuclear) Range by Stephanie
Hiller
James Rennell: The Father of Indian Geography
by Kumud Biswas
Michael Schumacher – the man and the champion
by Yamini Ayyagari
Parenting with Love by Atasi Sen
Love: A Pleasurable Pain by Julia Dutta
The Best of Both Worlds by Vikram Karve
Chega Tchega Sega! by Naiya Sivaraj
The Witty Side by Melvin Durai
America's Weakness by William R. Stimson
The Global Village Is Tilted in America’s Favor
by Glory Sasikala Franklin
I Want to be a Drop-out by Prakash Pathre
For the Sake of Laws by Aruni Mukherjee
Would Gandhi Win Today? by Rita Manchanda
The State of Saffron by Elsa Sherin Mathews
Don't Stop the Flow by Gagandeep Kaur
Bringing Health to their Doorstep by Sushmita
Malaviya
'I had an Abortion at Home' by Michelle R
Bayaua
Mother's Recipe for Quality Schools by Malvika
Kaul
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