Friday, November 07, 2008

the D word

After what seems like ages, i chatted with S. He is in India right now for his Visa. The last time we talked was last year when i visited the States. After that, we dropped out of each others' lives. This has always been the way with us - we can spend years not in touch and when we meet/chat again, it is like we have never been apart from each other. He is someone i like talking to because he is the one person who would always tell me the harsh truths.

He is someone who taught me that i do not have to accept everything; the one who made me feel that being stubborn and selfish is ok.

S told me his sister is getting divorced. Of course, my first reaction was "A divorce?!!". And then i told him how just typically middle class was my reaction. As if getting a divorce is a smear on one's character. He told me she tried and after 5 years of trying she decided she had enough. i admire her strength. Of having the courage to decide that enough is enough, that devoting 5 years of your life to a relationship does not mean that you have to endure it for a lifetime.

It takes guts to untie the knots, to unglue the memories, to undo the vows. It takes guts to walk away with your dignity intact.

And why is that people expect that once a woman gets married, she has to give up her dreams and live his and his family's dreams? Why is that they expect her to give the first priority to his parents before her own? i thought marriage was about building new ties, not about breaking old ties to foster new ties. Why is she expected to make all the sacrifices, all the compromises? Why is she supposed to merge her identity? Isn't marriage supposed to be a journey to be undertaken by two souls hand in hand, not a journey where the woman has to follow where the man leads?

5 comments:

Does it matter said...

This is a tricky question you raise. Is it always a simple, walk-away is the right answer?
You say: Walk away, it takes guts to do that. And that reminds me of another thought - Committing suicide also takes guts. But to others, it is one of the easiest escapist routes. To live it out takes guts, actually.
Ditto the D word. It might be the tougher decision, it might be the easier one. Depends on the situation and one's circumstances, maybe?

Rain Girl said...

yes, sometimes even i wonder...
agree with DIM, too. Living it, giving everything to a relation also requires guts.

gypsy said...

Matter and rain (it is raining matter!!) --

It takes guts to walk away from something you have nurtured for years. To accept that something is not working is so difficult - you keep thinking, hoping...But when it begins to eat away your dignity, your self-respect, i don't see any point in continuing. Do You?

Pinku said...

gypsy...u are right it takes guts...it entails being thrown of the pedestal of 'good girl' where society hitherto had placed you.

and not just strangers but also close family and friends drop you of their radar.

I have done it, I can vouch for it, it takes guts, to search for your happiness and declare yourself a human being with equal rights.

gypsy said...

pinku: What fun is it being labelled a "good girl" if you cannot be yourself and live your dreams?

You are brave. Salaam to you!!