Tuesday 27 August 2013

Monday 27 May 2013

One Happy Year

And so last week my baby boy turned one. As always, the party didn't even come close to the gala celebration I had started planning somewhere in my second trimester. Which turned out to be a good thing.

While I am already legendary for taking impractical ideas further than they should ever go, even I was rather impressed with my performance this time around. I could barely keep up with all the brilliant ideas zooming and crashing around my head. Maybe we should have a carnival theme....or go insane and have a true - blue Mallu theme, with the baby in a lungi! (No, for the three happy minutes that I dreamed of this I did not find it weird at all. Now I wonder what was wrong with me.)

Finally I decided on a Rainbow theme because that's what I'm tripping on right now, and I suppose its a fair enough guess that I won't be having a rainbow themed 30th birthday. So for about a month, a typical early morning conversation between my husband and me sounded something like this:


Me : ''Babyawakeupwakeupwakeup.......I have the perfect centrepiece for the buffet table!''
The Husband : ''zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz&^^*^^$^%$%$"$£!"!!$$% !!'
Me: ''We'll have a chocolate fountain....''
The Husband : ''Its 6:25. On a Saturday morning. You woke...''
Me:  ''And every now and then we can make it spew Gems. You know, a rainbow coloured chocolate fountain!''
The Husband : ''How old are you again?''
Me : ''Eh?''
The Husband : ''Who's going to get a chocolate fountain to throw out Gems instead of chocolate?''
Me : ''I don't know, but I'm not the one who loafed around an engineering college for...''
The Husband : ''And what buffet? I thought you were making a traditional Kerala spread. You were asking me to hunt for banana leaves in Delhi!''
Me : ''See?! You don't love me anymore!''
The Husband : (snooooore. grunt.)

And so April passed calmly enough thanks to my saintly husband. But the first week of May was a whole different story. Husband happily skipped off to San Fransisco, thrilled to be putting a few continents between him and a rapidly unravelling wife. And I sat back to enjoy watching my baby twist his newly arrived grandmother around his tiny finger.

All went swimmingly well until two days before the event. Just as my house was filling up with two sets of grandparents and an uncle my water purification system went bust, the guest bathroom door got jammed and my precious, antique sofa set completely fell apart! Add Delhi temperatures to it, and it wasn't a pretty picture. And then two of the guests called to say they couldn't make it. That was bad - I had only invited three guests.

Dad :  ''Wait... 3 guests? You throw a birthday party for a kid and only invite three of his grandparents' friends?''
Me : ''Aaah. Hmmm. Eh?''
Dad : ''What about his friends?!''
Me : ''He's 1 year old! I'm his best friend and I'm right here!''
Brother :  ''Well its a good thing anyway. We don't have sofas, remember? Or drinking water! Hah!''

By then I was a depressed, morose mess. I had dreamed of this day for so long now, and had desperately wanted it to be picture perfect. Absent guests and broken sofa sets were never part of the lovely dream.

But then I slowly acknowledged that my baby really couldn't care less about any of this. His party had started two weeks ago when his grandparents arrived to pamper him senseless. For two whole weeks he had people who adored him fly down from all parts of the country just to get him to drool over them. He was the hero and it appeared that nothing could sabotage that.

And so I got down to enjoying what turned out to be a party to celebrate one year of parenthood and grandparenthood. A party we threw ourselves for exceeding our own expectations.

It was better than anything I had planned. It was perfect!








Monday 21 January 2013

"Your Son Is Just Like You!"

My baby boy scorns all toys that are not noisy. Also, he refuses to reach for anything apart from his diapers, wipes, the remote control and my phone. I'm hoping this is temporary.

His other favorite plaything - noses. Other peoples' noses. He's developed this sudden fascination and squeals and giggles as he reaches for the biggest, shiniest nose he can find. We were at a wedding yesterday and as we stepped up to the happy couple to congratulate them, my son shrieked and lunged for the groom's nose. When he saw that his Amma was about to play spoilsport he held on with both hands and screamed delightedly at the top of his all too impressive lungs. This soon developed into a free for all that included a highly thrilled baby, a polite but not-thrilled groom (who I have never seen before and will be avoiding for a very long time) and a very embarrassed, blathering me. I managed to pry my baby's hands away by bribing him with my ponytail, and hastily made my apologies as he happily tugged my hair out with both his pudgy hands.

My own Amma was watching all this happily from the audience. And as I huffed up to her she beamed, "Serves you right!" And I knew exactly what she was talking about.

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Circa 1989 : Amma was not pet-friendly. In fact she absolutely refused to believe that a 6 yr old girl could be completely responsible for a puppy, despite what Enid Blyton had to say on the subject. So I just had to work around that, didn't I? I did, by collecting head lice in a little plastic bowl. My great plan was to breed them, and thus prove to Amma that I can definitely take care of pets, several of them, in fact. So I sat down one afternoon and combed a whole lot of lice (oh I had plenty to spare) into a round plastic jar.... and promptly forgot all about them. Some time later Amma walked in to find lice crawling all over the dressing table. Fireworks exploded all around, and I walked around with a sore bum for a week.

Circa 1993:  Still working on convincing Amma to get that puppy. By now we had moved to a house on the banks of a river, which opened up a whole new world of possibilities. This time I talked some fishermen into giving me a handful of mussels. Pets, you see. I had the bright idea of hiding them in the wardrobe. And then I went off to have lunch, and forgot all about them. A week later Amma followed the stench to the wardrobe and found a pile of green, stinky, worm infested mussels among her silk saris. I was done for.

Circa 2008 : I was working in Bangalore at the time. Amma called up one afternoon, panicking over the bomb blasts that were ripping the city. "I can't talk now! Apparently a bomb went off near my bus stand, I'm going off to explore! Oh and my phone will die any minute. Don't worry ma, I'll call from a booth. Sometime".

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Over the years I have attempted to run away with beggars, caught trains headed in the wrong direction, made a long list of dubious friendships, earned a reputation for being chronically accident prone, and generally tried my very best to get my Amma to strangle me. She never did.

Now she's sitting back and waiting to for the show to start.

"He's going to be just like you", she smiles.

Proof of Identity

When I was in the 7th STD, I turned in (what I thought was a brilliant) essay on my ambition. I wanted to be a housewife. With three children and two dogs, reigning serenely over a house that was drenched in sunlight and stuffed with books. Oh and I also wanted to write.

My essay was not received the way the others were. Even as I type this, I'm still seething at the way our English teacher took my composition book to other classrooms to laugh at my expense.

But I'm wandering off the point of this post.

My point is, I've always wanted the life I have now. No more worrying about deadlines, a husband who is more than everything I dared dream of, and a wonderful baby boy. I finally did it. I should be thrilled.

So why am I feeling all blurry around the edges?

Maybe it has to do with the way I cannot recognize this new woman who gapes back at me from the mirror. Who has gone in the space of one year from seemingly-anorexic to definitely-wannabe- fertility goddess.

Perhaps it has to do with the stage whisper that I overheard. The one about how I pissed away my education "for nothing, to be nothing".

Or the way my heart crashes near my swollen ankles every time my husband reassures me that he really doesn't care what I look like. When did that go from being comforting to downright scary?

But what brought it home was the way the pen pusher at the local village office laughed at my attempts to change my maiden name today. Apparently they don't let you do that because husbands can and do change, while you can only have one set of parents all your life. So my husband and son have the same surname, I don't. What the hell!

I spent over an hour convincing said pen pusher that I have every right to take on my husband's name. I even waved a page from Femina that gave details on just how to go about it. No go. I'm allowed one name, one identity all my life. I'm always somebody's daughter, they couldn't care less that I'm also a wife and mother.

After a whole morning spent running from one government office to another clutching a file full of 'identity proofs', I staggered home sweaty and exhausted. And screeching at me through the window was my 8 month old son. This was the first time I had spent hours away from him, and his tiny heart was broken. He squealed till I walked into the living room and then he flew out of his grandmother's arms straight into mine, puking in delight down my neck. And after I was done apologizing profusely for sneaking out, we were back to our favorite game - trying to teach him to say Amma. As always, he stared at me as I said "Ammmmmmaaaa" and then dissolved in helpless laughter as if it was the funniest thing he's heard all week. And it probably was.

There we were, rolling on the toy-strewn bed, laughing, squealing, cuddling. Was I really feeling low only a few minutes ago?

I'm his Amma, the best he's ever known. And I intend to do my darned best to stay that way.