Monday, July 10, 2017

Enslaving Mothers & Crushing Children's Independence

The internet came into my life at the age of 15 and in my drawing room when I was 19 and it set me free. 

Once online, I let it all hang out. I typed questions into google.com and found a whole lot of knowledge out there, some questions that I wouldn’t dare ask out loud to the family doctor were answered easily by google, then those questions which out of blue appeared on my mind and previously I had to think whom to ask are now answered by google, starting from home maintenance to recipes and much more, google had it all. I had no curfew and went where the feeling took me. I chatted up strangers with foreign names and forgot about them just as easily the next morning. The experiences I had online felt like an adventure not a community-wide scandal-in-the-making.

Outside roamed nosy neighbours, vigilant uncles and aunties. Outside, I was a demure superhero cursed with protecting, through sheer, visible blamelessness the never-sleeping beacon of the family name. On the internet, though, I could roam wild and free of scrutiny in a way that I had outgrown with pig tails and bloomers. I could be anonymous, independent, alone.

The internet was an infinite grassland of possibilities, limited only by my own limitations. I published my first set of poems by creating a geocities website and then poetry.com, then on an online journal, befriended editors of a print magazine through email. I was on my way to being heard, and to sharing my voice and it was then becoming my most powerful hobby.

Then, almost before I knew it, the smartphone was here, and the long form of communication had an alternative which was new and exciting. 

Unlikely relationships bloomed and ebbed in privacy and over once-insurmountable distances. Instant messaging changed boardroom into bedroom and flipped it the other way around too. Everyone was accessible and everything was within reach.

One decade of smart phone and one child later, everything is different, because my smartphone has been taken over in a way that makes me feel not so smart anymore.

Always on call

There’s such a thing as too much communication, conversations I can’t simply put a polite end to and leave. My WhatsApp, for instance, stays on silent, because my child's school chat groups registers up to 40 messages an hour at times. One could argue that the tool is only as sophisticated as the user. By that measure, my gripe ought to be redirected to that peculiar form of obsessive compulsive disorder that many mothers operate with. What are we doing, 30 women between the ages of 25 and 45, discussing how to paint a paper cup black? (Thirty-five messages, seven pictures exchanged.) Why aren’t our children – future fund managers, teachers, doctors, artists, and lawyers (or so we hope) – figuring it out for themselves? Why request a picture of today’s grammar assessment, after it’s already been administered? Why ask questions about what the portion for tomorrow’s test is, when at 1am, our kids are in bed, and we should, potentially, be thinking of other things?

Why has being a school mom turned into a relentless, 24/7 activity? The “mom chats” are the first set of messages I see in the morning. The last thing I see before I switch the phone off for the night. If this were a national security warning system, I’d say we were always on Red, perpetually on High Alert.

I know why. Or at least I can make a good guess, and like with all blame games, I’ll pin this on a conspiracy theory. It’s because schools have exceeded their boundaries, and think nothing of seeding hysteria in parents, on the grounds that constant, heightened vigilance improves the child’s performance at school. Schools are no longer places to park your children, for half a day, while you work at home or in an office.

Schools expect your participation, rather than your child’s. The logic is simple: you are far easier to discipline and far easier to shame or scare. What’s more, there has been such little protest from mothers, that schools have come to expect all our attention and all our time. Again, arguably, it has much to do with our inability to just say no. 

Right to privacy

How do schools maintain control over mothers? They use the internet to keep us permanently connected to the mainframe. School apps know how to put you in your place – after all, this is a partnership, as the school authorities keep reminding us. I sign in to an app, because, well, my seven-year-old don’t own smartphones (yet). And then the fun begins – I start monitoring and checking everything that’s up there, like a good mother must.

Passport photographs of the children in school uniform required, at an evening’s notice? No problem. Can do. Size two, four, eight, and fourteen paint brushes in both round and flat bristles? Sure, I can find them. Science assessment tomorrow? Got it. No need for the English prose notebook, but carry English grammar next Monday? All right, I’ll pack my child’s bag accordingly. Four lines about the monuments of India? Okay, done. Five potatoes with a black marker to be brought in? Sure. Hindi poem recitation tomorrow? On it.
We are on it. We are so on it that we put home-schoolers to shame. We give our children no real space in which to mature, no real sense of responsibility, no real shot at failing, and learning from failure – because, as mothers, we seem to have internalised that their business is our business. We are raising sons who are used to throwing up their hands, sons with moms who sort out every detail of their lives. We are raising daughters who learn a woman’s domestic role is being the scheduler of other people’s lives.

We put our lives on hold for theirs. Schools encourage this by shrugging off their responsibility, their part in the “partnership”.
Attend a parent-teacher meeting, and chances are, you will be told to go through and sign your child’s books every day, checking to see if the day’s work is complete. In my case, that is roughly seven books a day, every day, for two children each. If I have a query, there’s always a WhatsApp group with 30 mothers. They’re always on call, like me. Who wants to be a mom in a WhatsApp group of supermoms?

I dared, at the last PTM meet, to raise my hand and ask politely about my child’s right to privacy. Shouldn’t he have a right to manage his own affairs, and learn from his errors?
I confess I didn’t dare to ask about my own right to some space and time.

Have schools used technology to target mothers specifically? In principle, either parent can download the app, or check on the website. Yet, curiously, in a decade of parenting, I have yet to see a father post a query on the WhatsApp chat group.

The internet which once set me free is now a leash that keeps me eternally tethered to my duty as a child-raiser. There are days I look at my phone with such loathing that I think its monitor heats up in embarrassment. But then, I give in. After all, how can my daughter go to school tomorrow without carrying two pink foolscap sheets, which it was never her responsibility to remember? What else am I doing with my time that’s so important, anyway?

Being a mother was once my dream and pride but now what I am doing as a mother is just a relentless job and that's all just because I got to keep my child up with the moving fast pace world of the school. But excuse me!!! Really? Am I really keeping her up or just overprotecting my child and raising her to simply keep looking towards her parents for any of her needs? 

We all need to ask this questions to ourselves before we simply follow the trend and keep pushing ourselves and our kids towards it. Think again, you are an educated and self dependent person, think if you would have been raised in the same way by your parents.. would you still could have been so independent? 

Wednesday, July 5, 2017

Tears...

They burn as they trail down my cheeks. 
No one understands. 
No one cares to know why. 
These are my tears to shed alone. 
My tears to wipe away. 
They flow and know no end. 
They hurt and feel no relief. 
Every tear can tell you a story. 
Every sob has its owner. 
They burn from deep within. 
The scars they leave are very deep. 
They are my tears. 
I can use them as I please. 
They can burn me hurt me and destroy me but they are mine.

They burn me let me cry. 
Let me hurt. 
Leave me be. 
Your words can’t console. 
Your words bring no cheer. 
It’s my emptiness and loneliness, 
I don’t want to share. 
You feel nothing and know nothing of these tears. 
Let them flow, let them set this place on fire.

I can no longer hold them back. 
Leave me be with my tears. 
They are not yours to shed or yours to wipe. 
Does it pain you then look away. 
Turn away, walk away. 
I need to release and let them burn. 
Be free from all of this. 
Be free from all theses confines.

It’s the last of them now. 
My eyes can shed no more. 
The aching, the longing, the fear, 
the anger, the burning is gone. 
Maybe just hidden for now. 
They are my tears that I shed. 
They are my fears that won.

Goodbye for now, my tears. 
I know we will reunite..

I have cried a lot and actually really want to cry a lot more but now I am numb, I just don't feel anything. I don't even remember when did I last cried my heart out. As a child I use to dump my face in my pillow and cry out loud, for my voice to not go out of that pillow or room for hours. Most of the nights I slept crying, half of my pillow use to remain wet till almost morning and then my tears knew to not be noticed by any tress passers, so they would dry out before the sunrise. This was one of my favorite habits to let my deep hurts flow in the salty water from the eyes. From early teens till my 30s I kept this habit as my best friend, stress reliever and the soul keeper. But now I cannot cry anymore..

Even when I am upset, I distance myself from everyone or hide up in the comfort corner of my house where no one would bother to find me. I don't know if shedding tears was really relieving my stress or not but today when I want to cry and still I cannot cry, I feel more weak inside, I feel numb, I feel dead inside. 

Tears are nothing but the words that mouth can't say nor heart can bear. And now I miss them the most, my heart is heavy and I have no words to say but still why my tears aren't flowing?? Why???