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LIVING: MARRIAGE EQUATIONS |
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| Space Odyssey | |||||||||
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Today's couples redefine the institution of marriage as they assert their individualities-and demand their space. |
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The apple may have been the biblical provocation for the alpha couple, but the banana could soon be rooting for the much-maligned title. Shakuntla Dawesar should nod her head in agreement. Instead, she shakes it in perplexity. A Delhi-based marriage counsellor for 30 years, she is yet to come across a more bizarre reason for marital discord. The near-divorce couple that recently came to her was ripped apart over bananas. "I like them placed spine up in the fruit basket, otherwise they rot faster," says the miffed wife. "He says it doesn't matter. It matters to me." The reasons for sparring are, of course, keenly contested. Another couple, firmly entrenched on the MNC ladder, is fighting over who should pick up whom after work, if at all. "She has this notion of togetherness which means going home together after work and it just doesn't suit him," says Dawesar. The matter is nowhere close to being resolved.
The crossover from sacred matrimony to formidable
divorce seems to have been reduced to seemingly inconsequential issues.
But while experts are divided over definitions-some like Dawesar call
it "bickering over trivial issues", others like psychologist Sanjay Chugh
refer to it as defence of "comfort zone"-they agree that it is leading
to a restructuring of marital boundaries. Space, or as Ritu Menon of Kali
for Women, a publishing house, calls it "negotiated space"-who gets to
call the shots in a relationship, and how much-has always been an issue
in a marriage. But due to, what Menon calls "the economic independence
of women" and what Chugh calls "the breakdown of the male-female prototype"
in households, space in the modern Indian marriage is being negotiated
to such an extent that it has pushed the boundaries of the institution-no
longer a coupling, but a cohabitation of individuals-making it almost
unrecognisable. Whether it is with separate bedrooms, territories marking
out his books and CDs from hers or even friends with invisible His and
Her labels, space has become a zealously guarded possession, and in some
cases, the new mother-in-law in a marriage.
If separate living spaces signified marital problems
earlier, for post-liberalisation adults in their late 20s and early 30s
with too many channels, choices and work pressures that make time a precious
commodity, it is an acknowledgement of individual preferences and lifestyles.
"Women are no longer expected to conform to the traditional stereotype
of the ideal spouse and men are no longer allowed to conform to it," says
Chugh. As a result, staking separate ownership does not apply only to
gadgetry and bathrooms, but also to social circles. Richa Lahiri, a pr
executive in Delhi, says, "We have seen our parents live out of each other's
wallets and cupboards. It does not have to be that way anymore." For her,
space means being able to have a social life different from her husband
Toto, a marketing manager with a management consultancy. "My mother was
required to accompany my father, an army man, to official parties. I am
thankful I'm not expected to do it. There is no peer pressure either;
it is understood that women have careers and don't have to tag along with
their spouses." While most agree that men have not changed as much as women, there is a decided shift. According to Anupam Mittal of marriage portal shaadi.com, the profiles of male clients on his website show they are not resisting the trend, but welcoming it. "The profiles of both men and women reflect strong independence in choosing partners," says Mittal. Men are realising that to get space in marriage they must ensure the women have theirs, and vice versa. But in a bid to avoid the togetherness from intruding into space, they may now have to deal with too much space intruding into togetherness. with Arun Ram in Chennai |
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