With New Year comes promise of
good times. The turn of calendar is so remarkable in our collective imagination
that just this one change, shifts our perspective and view of the world, more
specifically the future.
Astrology peaks, people make
financial plans and personal goals. Businesses boom anticipating world and
local policy changes. And the preceding festive period and rest brings in good
spirits. The world starts looking physically better as well. Lit up homes, some
celebratory tunes and just people out and about is quite a positive feeling.
Unfortunately, in some aspects
even 2021 hasn’t yet brought about any hope or promise thereof.
It’s still as difficult as it
ALWAYS was for a young, unmarried woman (who also has a social life) to get a
house in a respectable and non-judgmental society. The prejudices against this
stereotype are plenty.
A young woman is susceptible to
bring a boy home, without marrying him. They will obviously have sex (because
he can’t just be a platonic friend or colleague, right?) and pre-marital sex is
obviously immoral (maybe, even unnatural). Worse, she’ll bring many boys home.
Different ones. But really the worst is that she’ll have both boys and girls
over to party.
In aunty voice:
“Obviously parties are not good.
They drink and do all kinds of shit. Even if the girl is good, she could be
mishandled in her intoxicated state. And obviously all parties blare music at 3
am. Obviously all parties are loud and decadent.”
Next comes the scrutiny of age.
She’s 32. Why she is not married yet? Is her character okay? Does she lack
something? There must be something wrong in her to still have been single.
In aunty voice:
“Obviously girls should study and
get a job. And after that they should marry a good man and get ‘settled’.
Family is very important. And also the biological clock ticks away faster than
one imagines. It’s all the junk food and pollution, these days.”
In my head, it’s quite clear that
marriage is a choice irrespective of your character and there’s hardly a
correlation between the two. I could be a nice, respectful single woman
in her 30s who has decided to live independently of her family and without a
husband. I could be a woman who despite being single understands and respects ‘family’.
I could be a single woman who is conscious of not creating nuisance for neighbors.
I could be a single woman who likes to keep her house clean and does not pile
up junk.
Right? I could be, no? There’s at
least a statistical probability?
I want to tell you why I’m
ranting about all of this today. I’d basically finalized a place in Worli
(after looking at least 40 odd houses with 10 different brokers of almost
the entire stretch from Khar to Colaba). Then this house’s society committee
decided to interview me on zoom. It was all okay until then. Funnily, they
wanted to interview my parents too!
Grossly shocked and saddened that
a bunch of old men who were suffering from less excitement in their lives
decided to turn this into a primary school interview by asking my parents to
join the Zoom call.
I checked with my prospective
owner on the side and he confessed that he’d told the committee that I was
going to live with my parents after Covid chilled down a bit. Once again, I was
shocked and hurt. I didn’t want to lie. I was paying a bomb. And brokerage. And
I was being interviewed like a powerless 12 year old.
Then they shared their laundry
list of restrictions, which is as follows:
1. Before
entering the building premises, I’ll get my covid test report of up to 48 hours
prior. Only if I test negative, I’ll be allowed to move. “Okay, fair. No problem”
2. Any
cook or house-help I keep, would also need to get her covid test done. “Umm,
weird because they’re asking for it just during greh pravesh not every week or
every month. It didn’t make too much sense but I wasn’t going to argue here. So
okay, whatever”
3. I
could have visitors only 1 day in a week. This pissed me off “It didn’t make much
sense and it wasn’t a standard protocol anywhere”
4. I
could have a maximum of 4 visitors at a time.
“Yeah I don’t have huge gatherings in
general but what if sometime there are 5 or 6?”
My primary concern was #3. It was
totally unacceptable. It made me feel really suspicious that I could be the
only single person staying in a building dominated by Marwari households. I
spoke to my owner and he said he’ll handle the guards. He’ll pay them off or
something so visitors to my flat wouldn’t be recorded in his register. “Creepy,
no?”
Anyway, the committee approved me
after speaking to us and knowing a bit about our reasons to move and background
etc. I sat with a sunken heart and feeling a strange feeling about moving in
there. Mom and friends also counselled to let it go and find something else.
They were right. I had to drop out of this plan. I was back to square 1. I was
pushed back by 2 weeks.
When I confronted my owner with the
concerns, he said stuff like “hum dekh lenge”, “hum hai na”, “koi check nahi
karta”, “kiske paas time hai itna”, “humare bhi to log aate rehte hain, no one
says anything”.
I was like “Uncle listen up, I am sure they don’t
bother you but at the same time I am also very certain that for atleast the
first 3-4 months, I’ll be in strict scrutiny about my conduct, lifestyle and
schedule. Plus you’ve lied to the committee and by complying with you, I’ve
become a liar myself. This is too uncomfortable for me to build a life around.
I wouldn’t live in peace”
Then, uncle says this “If
you are not comfortable, you can vacate after 3-4 months.”
I wondered how he dare say this
so casually. “I am paying a month’s rent as brokerage. I am taking the trouble to
shift and re-establish my life. How can he be so nonchalant about the process?”
A friend rightly said, “Bemaan
aadmi ka koi moral high ground nahi hota”
Anyway, I’ve found something else
now. In a new-ish tower which will not care about my identity. Which will let me live a non-characteristic life in the eco-system of the building. So I guess
the matter is shut.
But really, I wish we see
societies and culture in this beautiful city of Mumbai open up to youngsters
who leave their homes and build their dreams here. I also wish that all
migrants like me honor and respect the narrow common spaces that we share with such
a diversity of people.
This needs to go down in the
task-list for sure.
2021, hope you’ve taken note.
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Marine Drive, Opp NCPA, the setting sun of 2020. 31st Dec - 6:30 pm |