Tag Archives: Parenting

When Mama Needs That Hug

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Pic Credit: Pixabay

She may be 16, but this morning, all I wanted to do was make her sit on my lap and hug her.

She made a face that said, ‘What now?’, but she obliged.

It was me – I was the one who needed that hug & cuddle…. so I gave her one instead.

One of those days….

It was the most comfortable position I had sat in all week! With an almost 5’8 athletic teenage girl wrapped in my arms.

I needed it…

By evening, the littlest one was surprised to see me at home when he got back from school.

He tossed his school bag aside and covered my face with 12yo baby child kisses and said, ‘Mama, Can I give you a hug?’

I pushed back the laptop and gathered his soft cuddly body into my arms.

Then the 20yo called out for me…

To show me something on his laptop,

but I had to ‘wait for the right time’, he said, ‘Don’t look now!!’

For the video to start… and he wanted me to look at just the right start of the clip…

‘Mama, do you remember this??’

I peered into his laptop screen at some robot-like being sitting…

I couldn’t remember…so he reminded me with a sheepish / shy smile that reminded me of when he was 9 or 10…

‘It was that game you preordered for me in Dubai’, he said, ‘from Virgin Megastore… the other one you got from the US…’ he went on…

I couldn’t remember… but I smiled..

Edit: I later called him & asked him to give me a hug…

He smiled and said, ‘What’s wrong with you??!’

And enveloped me in his arms..

Not a small boy anymore…

A tall, muscular, broad-backed handsome child of mine…

Felt good…

The memories of their childhood… that I was a part of…

The memories of my motherhood…. that they are all a part of.

My heart is melting …

One of those days…

No, I am not PMS-ing (in the real sense) hahah… must be an anti-climax hormone flush…

First published on my Facebook on 10th February 2023

Processing Parenthood

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Parenting is hard work. It isn’t only about putting food on the table & giving them an education. It is about caring and nurturing the children, what’s going on in their lives, mind, emotions as well as our own.

Almost all engaged parents struggle with the chaos of their teens and young adults. Physical & physiological wellness aside, any discussion about their mental health, at least in our country & society, is scarce and stilted.

But even when they are had and help is sought, I want to shine light on the lack of support that parents are offered while their child receives treatment, therapy, and counselling. Over the past year I have had the heartbreaking experience of speaking with parents who have no space or avenue to process their emotions around their child’s diagnosis – be it around mental health issues, neurodiversity, or even the grief of losing a child.

What happens to a child very closely affects parents too. I say this, from my privilege of having a close relationship with my children. (For lack of professional qualifications to do so, I do not speak on behalf of / in terms of toxic parenting.)

It is not a case for making it ‘about the parents’ – but an overall comprehensive treatment plan that involves all stakeholders. A parent whose life is suddenly shifted to focusing (and it is a priority) on their child’s wellbeing has a myriad of emotions and fears that need to be addressed in a safe space. Failure to do this, may result in chronic and sticky misplaced anger, guilt, shame, fear, anguish, or worse may lead to a further breakdown in the family dynamics. The overall goal of the therapy would fall apart.

Parents need to know that while they support their children’s wellness, processing their own pain is also their own work & responsibility – and that it is ok & quite necessary, to do that. Parents need a support system, a support group, group therapy or whatever mechanism, to understand and process their own feelings about what is happening with their child without being assigned with the guilt of the diagnosis.

It is hard work, being a parent… and apart from some life hacks, parenthood doesn’t come with a manual. Not even the ‘For Dummies’ version.

I share this here today with my most loving thoughts for some dear friends whose children who are struggling with mental health concerns and other loved ones who are still grieving the loss of their babies. The pain is real and I share this only to acknowledge all of us, what we do and how we show up every single day to be the best version of ourselves that we can be today.

#Parenting #MentalHealth #SupportSystem

The Intergenerational Sandwich

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From Adam Grant’s Twitter

As I understand, this inter-generational concept is making some waves in the present Indian societal context where people are constantly sandwiched between generational expectations. We are often made to live with an ingrained expectation to appease our ancestors – sometimes it may be passed on as a debt we can never repay, quite literally so, too. What a weight to press down on our children!

I have thought about this often – thinking if I would ever measure up to repaying all the sacrifices that my parents made for me – I realize I cannot. I used to wonder if I make my parents proud – I somehow believe I do. I also realise that essentially speaking, there is no debt, but a passing of understanding to live ethically & somewhere in that is the responsibility to do what is required – not as an injunction or expectation but as an act of civility perhaps?

As a self-sustaining adult, my hope is to build enough of resources & structural support to not be a liability on my children. As a parent, my hope is to provide them with the security of basic needs and sound education alongside a set of values that will give them the foundation to support themselves. My responsibility is to leave behind decent children who can be people of value to this world they live in.

So what do I, then, have to offer to the next generation? Perhaps I just want to live the example. I do not want them to repeat my mistakes, maybe learn from them and not repeat them? I may not even want to be an example, but I could attempt to live as closely to the words I preach – to live authentically and as REAL as I possibly can. And when I fumble, falter, fall flat on my face or even fail, maybe I can own up to that and course correct.

Where is the need to live up to meet possibly impossible expectations of a bygone past when there is every need and necessity to do good for the future of our planet and the generations to come? After the way our predecessors (and we) have pilfered this planet and her resources, the least we can do is leave a better place for our children – and our children’s children!

I also am aware from this post that there are those of us who are childless or choose to not have children & may feel excluded by the words used in the original tweet. I do not make excuses for the author – I speak as a parent – a woman who chose to have children. In that space, I may choose to metaphorically include all descendants as offspring / the next generation to whom we shall remain ancestors and predecessors. I do not speak for those who feel excluded but I hold space for your feelings with all due respect – many of you are my dear friends & I wholly believe you are doing your bit for the future.

May that be the debt we owe to the future!

May that be the ultimate repayment of debt to our ancestors to safeguard the future of those who come to blaze the trail in our wake – if we leave it for them, that is.

As always, open to thoughts… and freely sharing mine..

Special credit also goes to someone who teased some of these thoughts out of me a few days back in casual conversation.

Much love,

L

Life Comes Full Circle…

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Image by Public Co from Pixabay

I’m not really at a loss of words toda as much as I am at a fullness of feeling. In April of this year, Ash received 2 scholarships & an offer to join Hult International Business School. Today is Ash’s first day at Univeristy – ok, he says it is ‘Orientation Week’… but it still is Uni….. and I’m looking back at 19 years and a full term pregnancy journey raising this child.

So, yes, my heart is full…. because seeing Ash persevere with his quiet resilience has both torn my heart and at the same time borne witness to how he has quiety guarded his vulnerability and still surely and slowly stepped into this space of strength. His resilience astounds me (although his teenage boorishness annoys the hell out of me)!

I’ve spent this morning reminiscing… walk with me, if you please…

A difficult, lonely pregnancy that carried all the symptoms of a traumatic relationship, visiting the Consulate with a 15 day newborn & a fresh C-Section scar to get his passport because his other non post-partum refused to process it; being each other’s full time companions for 13 months, endless pram rides to Sahara Center, nursing his viral fever while my own fever was a raging nightmare – eventually both of us admitted in the same room. Winning the Baby Crawling Olympics and participating in the largest mural of baby pics. Me attending interviews with baby in tow – getting my life changing placement in Dubai with BP Middle East! My heart breaking when he cried out, “Mama!!” on my first day back at work & me taking public transport for the first time in my life after work because his grandmother thought that her daughter in law shouldn’t work and so his father refused to figure out the logistics and child care involved. I earned my license soon after.

First day at school, neat uniform even when returning from school (how can that ever happen?!), nursing his viral fever while having a raging fever myself, fractures (don’t ask how many!), being the first face he wanted to see after his surgeries, ruthless punishments (yes, I was very nasty too – so ashamed of it today, but that was true), Gold in UAE Gymnastics, having an auditorium roar with appaluse at his Street Jazz performance…. and an ealier community arts event where he tried his hand at Community Drumming and asked an elderly woman from the audience to please dance the Salsa with him!

Early morning drives to his swimming, soccer & basket ball practices (straight after my 12 hours night shifts), handwriting classes (yes, he went to an Indian school that guilted me into this.!), birthday parties, pre-ordering PS3 games, standing in line with me for my pre-ordered Harry Potter books, and his love of specific brands of shoes – make that very expensive shoes! Oh & movies! Endless movies – because he was my BEST movie partner – I think we’ve visited every movie hall in the Dubai & Sharjah!

Fighting with teachers on his behalf and, just as well, watch him write an apology letter to some others too, witnessing him read out a letter to his classmates about how bullying felt and how everyone can do better – this, when he was in grade 6! Soccer training, walking the BFC players with his siblings, training for the I-League and daily 50km drives to his soccer ground during his Grade 10 year – because… it might be his last time to experience soccer at that level while at school! We took the risk. Oh and that joy of seeing him walk up to receive his sash & badge to the Prefecture not once, but for two of his Senior years!

And then there were the talks on drugs and sex and girls and respect and sexuality, abuse, harassment, politics, the left versus the right, privilege, how the system has failed us, failed me…. and yet how aware we are of our privilege. The pride I felt when his classmates parents would call me to say that they would send their daughters to parties if Ash would be there.

Him being a very, very annoying older brother, but a very, very, very protective older brother too. The unquestioned months he helped me care for his younger sister after her surgery, how he helped me look after his younger brother after his injuries… and even how he cared for me after my surgeries. He cared. He cares.

So, this post is for something else too. This is for the sake of my Facebook Memories to remind me about myself. This is as much a self acknoweldgement post as it is about motherhood, resilience, strength and the child who nudged me to be all of that because nothing, absolutely nothing would keep me away from protecting the one baby because of whom I am alive today.

The past months have been stressful af. Some days, I had no idea – zero clue – about what the next day would bring me. I had the ‘pleasure’ of having doors shut on my face as well as the ‘joy’ of seeing true colors…. and throw in a fistful of hurdles that is the purpose of existence of a privileged and narcissistic few…
but… BUT….

Here I am, looking back at myself when I had no answers and only conviction to today, when I still have no answers but the questions just resolved themselves…. of course with the support and shoulders of a few who held me up when my mind drew blanks and reminded me to just breathe.

And I did.

My 19year old is in University!!Single parenting is a killer – humbling, yet strengthening – even after being dragged through the mud, face down… bent but not broken… and still standing!Even the darkest moments when everything seems like a lonely fight, all it takes in one person to turn things around.My son is in University and I’ve put him through it teaching yoga. Yup, not great flashy yoga, no big marketing strategies – simple, true, humble teachings. But these small, powerful teachings, are putting my son through University.Grace exists.I always, ALWAYS have awesome people who have come forward to help support me support others. Friends, students, teachers, domestic staff, meal providers, laptop technicians, doctors, gardeners., Swiggy & Zomato even… they are my community who have silently supported me. And here’s something a stranger told me yesterday, “Luvena, you only receive what you have given. It’s Karma!” I don’t want to bother digging deep into his words – but I can tell you this much, those words were kind and soothing – and nursed my heart with a caring & comforting salve.

It is what it is…

In my eyes, with my first born, in one sense, my life has come full circle. I gave birth to him and raised him well enough to be ready today to step into the next phase. I’ve done well.. He’s the testament.

Watch this space for when the younger come up to share their unique gifts with the world.

Validation – From My Daughter

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A few weeks ago, he challenged me – more than challenged, he threatened me via email that in some years, my child – his child, too – would turn into an ‘alcoholic and a drug addict’.

That was a defining moment for me.

I wasn’t as shaken as I was angry – angry because this was a ‘man‘ who was using his own children as a means to harass and hurt me. I took a few days to digest this fresh awareness of another impossible low in a relationship I cannot believe I spent so many years in, then something else happened. I began to wonder what this daily battle was going to look like – what this steep uphill trek of single motherhood, single parenting would open up for me.

The past three months have been hard – very hard. You see, there are moments that are ‘hard’ and then there are moments that go like, ‘She’s-still-standing-&-smiling-&-laughing,-unshaken,-so-let-me-up-the-heat-&-start-burning-her’ hard.

I’ll be honest, I worried.

I worry. Present tense.

I worry how I’m going to make ends meet, how I’ll give my children an education, how I’ll feed, clothe, shelter them… and honestly, how I would do all this single handedly…. I worry about the unwarranted stress the children are very likely going through at the hands of an absent father who wasn’t even paying for their food & education. I worry that this turmoil, at such turning points in the children’s lives could put them on precarious cross roads & I wondered if I was instilling strong enough values in them to help them get through life.

In other words, even though I worry about how I would get all these things done and somehow I still get them done, I had bought in to his horrid threat and allowed it to grip and freeze my heart.

Then, yesterday happened.

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I got home after a long Wednesday of meetings and classes to find my youngest sprawled asleep on the couch and my daughter bounding up to me excited to share some of her Halloween candy with me. I was starving and didn’t have an opportunity to have dinner so she got a mooli paratha* (spiced radish flat bread) and shoved it in my mouth while I was grumbling about the mess the dogs had created somewhere in the house… and how I’d have to clean up soon after getting home after such a long day…. at the same time, coordinating with my oldest to book him a cab home from the Halloween party he had attended with his friends.

I looked up to see her sitting in front of me with an excited expression on her face.

‘Ma, I want to tell you something, but I don’t know how you’ll react..”

Now this could go in two directions – either she got her period or it was one of those moments when she forgets that her Insta account is on my phone & I don’t believe in anything called online privacy for a 12-yr-old daughter… Either way, I kinda sensed where it was going… but… it was her moment, not mine…

So as I chewed my paratha, I said, “Well, you’ll never know how I’ll react until you tell me and see my reaction…”

With that goofy smile still plastered on her face she told me, “XYZ asked me out…”

Omg!!! I thought that was the cutest and nicest thing to ever happen – and as she continued to narrate the when and the how and how she played a bit hard-to-get (wtg!! That’s my girl!) and how she didn’t want to really bunk school tomorrow anymore (hello??), I continued to giggle with her and really re-live and re-witness those very feelings of first crushes and infatuation – a throwback to similar moments of my own….

And she laughed as she said, “You’re not reacting the way I thought you would!! I thought you’d be all…” and she made one of those crazy, rabid dog-cross-Tasmanian-devil imitation faces…. “but you’re like this!”

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We immediately went on to video call my sister so Rhea could share her moment with her favourite aunt and in that half hour, we three Rangel women spoke and giggled and laughed ourselves silly… and felt like life wasn’t so hard after all!

As we spoke, I checked in with myself… to just come to terms with what really was happening on the inside .. and very, very honestly, all I could feel was lightness, happiness and innocent joy. I wasn’t over thinking, I wasn’t over reacting, there was no panic…. all there was, was this settled knowing that my daughter came to me.

She opened up to me with this very precious, very important moment of her life. She trusted me.

Over the years, as the mother of a daughter, who, for what it’s worth, was very fond of being her father’s princess, I worried if I had built enough bridges that would stand the test of stormy times. I worried if my daughter would succumb to pressure or so much of the crap that children these days are exposed to. I wondered if I was too tough as a parent and had lost their trust to open up to me about important matters.

Yesterday, Rhea redeemed me of that worry.

Two weeks ago, my oldest had a heart-to-heart chat with me about drugs and weed and I’ll confess, I kept a straight face, but my head going, “omg… wtf.. WTF!!” on manic loop… and he went on to say, “Listen, Mama, don’t worry… I’m telling you this, aren’t I? I tell you everything, you know that…” and I do…

But for that scary nail-biting thing called self-doubt

For the most part, the six of us (me + three human children + two canine babies) are like a boisterous lot of roomies. I lose it at times (read: many times) in the face of having to lose sleep, send them off to school, work & overwork, manage school activities, get groceries, be available physically and emotionally, clean up after the dogs – poop, pee, puke (theirs, not mine!) – so yes, I lose it often. I scream, I shout, I yell – to wake them up in the mornings and to keep them off from annoying each other… and to just get them into bed on time, so I can catch some zzzs…

I paused & thought about what exactly I did right, after all?! At first all I could think of were the numerous ‘stereotyped parenting no-nos‘ that I had committed – I screamed, I shouted, I was demanding, sometimes it was because-I-said-so, other times it was ‘go make yourself a sandwich’, they’ve heard me at my eloquent best and well, they’ve also heard me punctuate every sentence with profanities at times when a clean, quiet sentence would just not do justice to the frustration and angst within. So, I bashed myself up and was ready to put myself down yet again, until another voice said, “Well, you also showed up real & true wherever you were.”

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Not saying that being authentic meant cussing every time things went out of hand, but well, I guess, when I did, I showed up with all my flaws in front of my kids. I wasn’t perfect, I was flawed, but here I was. I was fiercely protective about my kids, stood up for them at every step of the way, filled in eyes & a smiley on their zeroes and boxed their ears when they deserved it. I embarrassed them by dancing in public and had straight-faced, honest conversations with them about life choices, men, women, sex, romance, body parts, responsibilities, drugs, pregnancies, growing up, growing old, fashion, relationships, everything (in varying age-appropriate levels)…. and yet, remained a mom when mom needed to step in.

I guess somewhere in those ‘being real’ moments, I had broken down barriers and walls and paved the way for open access for my children to their mother. Someone they could reach out to. I reckon they’ve figured out when they can mess around and when they can ‘summon’ the dragon-slaying, steadfast ‘mom’.

So back to that threat that their father threw at me about how my children would turn out.

I realized how strongly rooted I was in the values that my parents and family had instilled in me… through living those principles and not shoving it down our throats. As an individual, my own choices helped to serve as a navigator to other values, yet the central axis remained steady. And now, I see that in showing up, flaws and all, my children are learning lessons that are far more profound and grounding…. and there’s a gradual osmosis of values.

In that awareness, there is validation…. of a job well done… of children turning up just fine. And it isn’t that validation is always required, just that sometimes, in those dark and doubtful moments, when everything looks bleak and impossible, it helps beautifully to be reminded that despite the stumbles and falls, the path is unfolding… and it is the right path you are trekking on.

So, yes, we’ll still have our struggles until this cycle of struggling comes to an end as it would eventually.

But until then….

I can see clearly now and trust that the Universe indeed has my back.

Doing a good job there, Mama! Hang in there!

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I am a Single Mom

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My oldest had his high school graduation yesterday. It was a week that saw me in a frenzy running all over Bangalore getting his clothes organized, yes with him in tow – finding places that rent tuxedos, getting into a teen-boy’s mind to match what his version of panache is v/s my ‘ancient‘ idea of what worked and what didn’t. It was a week of juggling work, mothering, more work and then even some more. Bottom line – I did it alone… because, for the most part, that’s how single moms function.

I sense this share is going to be intimate (I think) –  but I still don’t know exactly what will come through in the words that follow. What I do know is that many of you follow my posts on Facebook and many more of you are my friends and relatives. Some of you may have wondered why my pictures had a missing ‘male member’ and still others might have connected the dots from my blogs that are usually bursting with subtle undercurrents of ‘make-the-connection’.

So let me make this clear, this is not a post to satisfy anyone’s curiosity – though that may happen, it is not the primary intention. This is also not the clothes line where my dirty linen is out washed and drying, I have a huge pile of dirty clothes and washing it clean is going to take a while.

What this post is about is me breathing in and telling myself, “Luvena, you did good.”

This post is also about me coming out of the closet and accepting myself and everything in it for what it is. Coming out of the closet to bust the ambiguity surrounding complicated relationships and the chaos – mental as well as physical – that comes from being in difficult and trying circumstances and attempting to navigate crippling situations.

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I am raising three young children single-handedly and have been doing this for the past many, many years. Being a single mom is not an identity that a document or legal issue declares. It is the effort that goes into waking up every morning to nudge, nurture, educate, teach, build values, argue, bully, wipe tears, cry with, hug, hold, feed, explain, share, listen, clothe, walk with, tickle, fix boo-boos, clean puke, soothe fevers, hospital rooms, diary notes, school meetings, test papers, messy hair, pizza parties, hormones, holidays, birthdays, deaths… and life… and being the mother and the father – because that is how it is..

And doing all this… and more… alone… because the other party is unavailable – physically, emotionally, financially, spiritually (huh!)… unavailable… end of story.

It is waking up daily and wondering about the choices that I made that were obviously wrong – love that was offered at the wrong place, to the wrong person – and yet teaching that love is still possible for every single one of them… us… them… and hope they sense the honesty in it.

I don’t need to be divorced or widowed to be a single mom – all I need is the circumstance that dictates the situations that would follow – all I need is the knowledge & awareness that I’m out there on my own to make or break. That’s the recipe.

Making choices for three children as, by far, the only parent who actually gives a damn about them is hard. It cracks open the door to scary feelings of guilt and doubt – Am I doing the right thing? Is this good enough? Should I just have sucked it up and put up with it all after all?

And then SNAP! Crystal clear as ever, I would know that there was never any going back to the abuse, disregard and abandon. Never.

I could never respect a man who threatened day in and day out to throw his wife and children on the road. I would never give a second glance to a man who would use money and food as a means to control. And I would never lift an inch of my attention on someone who would get back at children with tit-for-tat, refusing to wish them on their birthdays and worse, making snide remarks over milestone occasions like high school graduation.

<Deep breath>

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I am a single mom because for the past 16 years I have parented my children by myself. I have paid for my boarding and have earned for myself – big money, small money all included. I am a single mom  because although some expenses were taken care of, those expenses were always calculated as an offer – not because parents do these things. Those expenses were and are, even now, used as accounting to how much was spent. I am a single mom, because after those fees were spent by someone else, everything else I did myself. I am a single mom for creating a life and a world for my children – helping them swim safely to shore in a ocean that is only filled with sharks and piranhas.

Relationships are complicated and their dynamics are even worse to get your head around. Our choices around relationships are also not that easy to figure out – especially when there are a zillions thoughts and questions rattling in one’s head before taking even one step ahead.

Not easy – but very possible…. especially if you have at least one private room to have your panic and anxiety attacks peacefully every night. Still, possible…

Why? Because being a single mom teaches you faith, trust, perseverance and grit. It teaches you focus to walk the talk and take those single steps that make up the path. It teaches you to go beyond what you think is expected of you and step out into what is right in front of you. It teaches you that no one else knows your reality but yourself – and no one knows the reality of your own fears, doubts and terrors – and that you still do whatever needs doing. It teaches you that no one can take away your power unless you give it away, knowingly or unknowingly – and even after you have given it away, you can still take it back, because you are entitled to your own power. It teaches you that showcasing the burns and scars of the journey is nothing but proof of the path of fire you walked, or are still fumbling through – and those are war-stories that not only toughen your outside but tempers your heart too. It teaches you that downplaying or shadowing your single-motherhood to patronizing patriarchs who think that a woman needs a ‘husband’ or a ‘man’ to balance her family and commitment to her work is utter rubbish… and that in turn teaches you that the muscles of the middle finger can be trained to be strong enough to flick at anyone who thinks they know better.

I know all of this to be true because being a single mom taught all this to me – and much more – and still continues to teach… or, at the very least, it is my truth.

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But above all of this, being a single mom brought me closer to knowing those who are there for me – family that are so supportive, it would be devastating to go through all this without them – the lineage of strong women I come from – grandmothers widowed young and single moms themselves, parents who taught me resilience and how to smile through tough times because these too shall pass, my mother who reminds me that she is there for me every single day, my sister who fights with me even now but knows I have her back and I know she has mine, my brother who constantly reminds me that there are real, good men, friends who laugh with me over the fun times and cuss their hearts out with me during the not-so-good times even when they are oceans and time-zones apart….

And most importantly, single motherhood has given me the opportunity to see my children evolve in the midst of all this chaos and put my doubts to rest. The intimacy and trust that comes from showing up as that one person they can fall back on, knowing that you won’t fail them (even if sometimes you come pretty close to breaking) is precious. Those precious hugs, bright smiles and kisses that work to mend the deepest bruises that your heart hides make the struggle SO WORTH the tears.

I see them growing up smart, happy, considerate and good people in the making – and I think to myself, “Not bad, Luvena, you’re leaving behind some pretty fab human beings.”

And I’m proud of that. I’m proud of them – of who they chose to be in the face of all the shit that no child should be allowed to experience, but unfortunately, they did. And they came out just fine.

A friend of mine commented on my son’s graduation picture today – a momentary picture where I asked him to look at his cuff links:

“He, in that moment you captured when you said,”Look at your cuff links!” You captured him ‘in-the-moment’ for that second. Our minds race so fast and a lot of energy/thoughts can be in that second. Your son is calm with it but his feet are beginning to ‘grab’ the earth. You taught him that my love”

Mission Accomplished.

Signing off,

A Single Mom

May I touch you?

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May I touch you?

A few days ago I was chatting with a neighbour and her little girl in our apartment complex. Acquaintances, we get along well with each other as we speak in passing, and the little girl has slowly grown comfortably out of her shyness and speaks with me freely when we meet. As the conversation progressed, I reached out to her and jiggled her chin – a gesture we Indian moms are so unconsciously familiar with.

Maintaining a smile (was it slightly faltering?) and leaning away from me every so slightly, the little girl said…

I don’t like being touched.

So, when this little girl told me that she didn’t like being touched, that instant was like a major breakthrough moment for me – because in that instant I learnt the one thing that I have been posting and sharing about over the past many months…

Consent

As I’m thinking back to the moment, I am aware of at least 2 clues that I overlooked in that interaction – the faltering small as I reached out to her chin and breached a boundary of her personal space and the natural shrinking away from personal touch. Thankfully, for both of us, her mother was right there with us during this interaction – and I am even more grateful to have experienced a moment of authenticity – because I recognized that I violated a boundary and this little child had taught me what she had learnt about speaking up and speaking out – clearly.

How did I self-manage? There was no need to self-manage. Why would I need to sound defensive? We were three mums standing around each other in that conversation and this instant was between myself and that child. I didn’t need to self-manage (I had no right to!) – instead, I did what I was supposed to do – I apologised.

I apologised because in my lack of awareness I had, unintentionally of course, violated someone’s personal boundary. I kept it succint, to the point and then – moved on to validate what I guessed her parent had taught her – that I should have asked if I could touch her at all! (our cultural givens and all that considered)

What struck me most potent – and it is a fact that one simply shouldn’t ignore – was this little child, at the age of three and learning to perfect diction and speech, whose body clues I had missed, took the step to give me a clear message – her voice was small but her words were crystal-clear and loud enough to ever be missed or misunderstood.

The message was conveyed.

She had spoken up.

The ball was firmly in my court.

I had to listen.

I had to respect that boundary.

As a culture, we were never taught to speak up. As a culture, we were taught to normalise physical touch, hugs, cuddles and other such gestures of body contact. And I get that. For the most part, we aren’t coming from a place of causing discomfort to anyone. I also get that we are, in current times, faced with a plethora of distasteful and downright scary news of unspeakably heinous acts against our children.

I also understand that it is our responsibility to fortify our children and teach them to be aware and express their consent.

Yes, I’ll be the first to say that years ago I had my doubts about this over-education of good touch, bad touch in schools and institutions. There are moments when I see worried parents and grandparents jumping the bandwagon and making added mysteries of biology and pushing the responsbility of educating their children about staying safe on the teachers – just to avoid the discomfort of speaking to their children on touchy topics.

While, another side of me worried that we were raising a generation of children who were being taught that the world is unsafe (maybe so) and would grow up into adults who lacked one basic element of human relationships – trust.

I recognise the need of the hour and am willing to put my trust in a state of natural order where our children will learn better balance from parents who are keen to help them in the process. But more importantly, I also recognise that in addition to teaching  our children about keeping themselves safe and speaking up – we need to teach our adults – all adults, men and women alike – to listen. Women are not exempt from this – we aren’t exempt from learning to respect boundaries – being a mother did not give me the right to violate any personal space or boundary.

Image result for boundaries

When someone says, ‘No’, it means just that. It doesn’t mean that because she smiles at me uncomfortably as she says it, she must be meaning a ‘yes, maybe‘. We must unlearn our pompous assumptions of our self and recognise that even WE have the responsibility to keep others safe – physically and emotionally.

In my apartment complex, a gated community, I am a well known mom – my children are mid-teens, pre-teens and under-10s, and their friends are in those age groups too. I’m known to be one of those fun moms – candid and open with the children enough to let them know that there is a trusted adult they can speak with. And herein lies a larger responsibility – I was in a position to live my authenticity and, on a deeper level, validate and reassure them that this trust did not give me an open ticket to get away with breaching boundaries.

Them liking me did not mean I could cross a line or interpret their consent in a way that suited me. And this is a big, BIG lesson for many of us. The number of instances of molestation and assault that occurs within known circles with the perpetrators being trusted adults is shocking – and it is our responsibility to do what we can – in our micro-circles of influence to address that and begin with ourselves.

As it turned out, the interaction brought to the fore, addressed and beautifully restored a balance to my relationship with that little girl, her mother and the other mum present. It restored her trust in her instinct, it validated her response, validated her right to speak up and be heard and in a nice way, I hope, it reassured her in the goodness of people around her and her faith in the goodwill of many adults who surround her.

And so… it all began with this beautiful lesson I was taught by a little girl, born about four decades after me – that it is important and crucial, for us to live our truth and be mindful of the unconscious acts that may sometimes ask me take a step back.

And that that’s Ok too.

Here’s to speaking up! Here’s to taking action! And here’s to taking responsibility and learning to listen.

 

 

The Learning Gap

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The Learning Gap

 

Teenage girl (12-14) resting head against math equation on chalkboard

Teenage girl (12-14) resting head against math equation on chalkboard

There was a forum discussion a few weeks ago between a few mothers who were struggling with the upcoming exams for their children. The mums were sharing stories of frustration  about the children’s aptitude, skills, learning abilities or challenges, etc… and in other words, completely offloading their stresses of managing the competitive education system that their offspring are now navigating.

The examinees in question, were not University level, but primary and middle school students. I was one of the mums expressing frustration and the expectations these days and the heavy load on the shoulders of school going children v/s them enjoying their childhood and actually learning. Somewhere along the line, our children and our parents have bought in to the belief that a preconceived education seems to be more important that arousing the natural curiosity and learning inquisitiveness of our children.

Before we go further, we’re talking about the Indian Education System….

OK… so.. my oldest is 13 and is a natural smartie. He computes mathematical word problems in his head. His logic is sharp.. like his wit and dry humour. He solves speed cubes.. all the time! He plays soccer, basketball, table tennis and is an athlete and swims. He is an ace gamer (PS4)… but …he hates to write. His letter-writing and essays are blunt and succinct, just the way he speaks and, well,  he hates it.

So guess what happens when we move to India and enrol him into an ICSE curriculum, Grade 7?

He struggled… horribly…

His teachers couldn’t understand WHY someone with so much ‘potential’ and ‘brilliance’ would do so badly in his semester exams. Why would someone NOT want to write when their grades depended on it?

By now, being an Indian mom, who’s alternative enough to want her child to succeed, but Indian enough to worry about graded progress, I was stressed… and   I took it out on my son.

Badly.

I thought I had a problem with my son and that he was simply demonstrating apathy. He couldn’t care less. So I thought it best to seek counselling before I lost it, or my son suffered. Turned out, there was nothing wrong with my son for being a very gifted child…. Apparently, the school that he was in, although a very good school, was not equipped to cater to his requirements. He was a square block in a triangle slot! Wrong fit!

As parents, we were made to interview a new set of schools that had the facility and training to provide the stimulation &  add to the progress of such children and we finally settled him into an IB curriculum, which is more challenging, yet, brilliantly suited for the modern age!

The year has unfolded so beautifully, that after the initial months of confusion and getting to understand the new requirements, he has ended the year with a brilliant project on  product development and a financial literacy piece on starting his own business.

Meanwhile, ICSE is still battling to complete the ‘portions’ from the text book regardless.

Why the story? The story… because our children today are being rigorously drilled to shed their individuality and succumb to being moulded by a system that can end up demoralizing an entire generation of children if they do not step up to meet or beat the competition.

If we look at the age-old curricula that some parents seem to be strong proponents of, we see a system that has changed very little in the past 50 years. Text book covers may have changed, but the content is fairly consistent. Questions asked are still the same and the worst bit, teaching styles have not budged.

As a country, we have shed our traditional method of learning by inquiry & self-inquiry to  a more dogmatic  system of learning by rote or following the learning that someone, somewhere decides that a child that age ‘needs’ to learn. The emphasis sitting on being ‘educated’ that the application of one’s learning & life-skills.

Teachers are being trained & groomed to meet the needs.. but more often than not, the training is to justify the teachers being kept abreast as opposed to the actual application of the training in the classroom.

My point, as a mother and a teacher, I fail to see how the traditional system is arming our children to face the requirements of tomorrow. One mother (in that forum), was adamant on insisting that the system worked perfectly – hadn’t it been in place of so many decades??

*ziploc-my-mouth*

Hello!!? Decades ago, we had a set of foundling technology. It worked perfectly well for those times… just like how the dial-up net connection worked perfectly well till about 15 years ago… But all of us, including pro-tradition-mum, are now aiming for 4G on our phones!!

But, when it comes to modern kids,  no!! Because it worked for US, our children will HAVE to make it… after all, as their parents, we know best!!… Or do we?

I had my major lesson in humility when I was made to understand that people (not children) have different learning styles that went  beyond the basic visual, auditory, kinesthetic. And after all the years of research into  how our brains and wired, how our interests are diverse, etc, we still refuse to budge from the notion that academic excellence is the way to forge ahead in life – regardless of the countless examples of  people who have spent years studying towards a medical or engineering degree, to dispassionately groan and mumble through their ‘career’ to eventually foray into a more fulfilling aspiration – and eventually being of service to the society.

Bottom line is our parents are inundated with an alternative way of thinking and thrown into quandary when faced with a traditional, straight-faced system. This state of limbo creates a new generation of uninterested, clones – a breed of children with knowledge but no wisdom, words but no texture, text but no skills. What are we creating for them?

And heaven forbid if they ‘Fail’! The immense load of shame not to mention the family-face that has been shattered because of the F grade. No no… let’s not even go down that path! Too painful to even think!

Here enters the new stream of alternative schooling – home-schooling even. I had first heard of it some years ago before I became a mom, and much before all these stressors were a daily part of my existence. I am an alternative thinker, yes, but I also am practical enough to know that home-schooling is not something I, as a parent, would be good at helping with. And my children do like the socialization of schooling… but back to the point, this whole new system is now creating options and ripples of discord in the parent & education circles.

While some parents and children, experience hope &  a fresh opportunity to bring a new platter of choices for their children, others are quick to wrinkle their noses and frown upon it. I was quite disappointed at one mother’s immediately derogatory remark that said, “The system works perfectly fine.. if your children cannot handle it, homeschool them, or put them in an alternative school!”

Her judgment was harsh and the insinuation pretty obvious – homeschooled students are lesser citizens, lower qualified, or worse, ‘slower’… When growing experiential feedback (and current research) has shown that alternative schooling is producing a stronger skill set, enhanced learning, and improved EQ (Emotional Quotient) as well as IQ as compared to only IQ (or even reduced IQ otherwise).

So, where do I stand?  I stand to truly appreciate the value of an alternative perspective. Seeing our children as benefactors of the world tomorrow. I am edging towards losing my faith in the current traditional education system, but I am also hoping that by keeping my children in it AND providing them with ample opportunities for holistic growth through alternative activities, I may do my part of raising 3 children who will be of adequate service to the planet tomorrow…. and my hope is that they may encourage a change by being it themselves.

Image Credits: http://kindercarepediatrics.ca/