Showing posts with label relationship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label relationship. Show all posts

Friday, April 25, 2014

LDR and All That Saga



There shall be an everlasting debate on whether long distance relationships work or are they the recipe for disaster. Some may say that they have survived the distance and come across as a strong, loving couple, while others may argue that romance and geographical distance do not go hand in hand. 

Without a second thought, we can come to the basic agreement that maintaining a long distance relation (LDR) is definitely not a cake walk. Whether it is a success or not, largely depends upon the actors in the relation. You can't go out for dinner dates or coffee breaks, you cannot snuggle together on the couch and watch F.R.I.E.N.D.S, you cannot hug, kiss or caress if you want to. You cannot rush to your loved one in times on distress or joy. You cannot spend lazy afternoons doing just nothing, yet feeling comfortable with the person's presence around you. It becomes a relationship sans any kind of physical intimacy. 

"Distance makes the heart grow fonder" - Simone ElkelesPerfect Chemistry
"Distance makes the mind go cranky" - Apala Sengupta

The entire relationship revolves around how well you can communicate. That's the only pillar of survival for LDRs. Text messages, emails, phone calls, video calls...technology has provided us with all the possible modes to keep the lamp of love burning. How well we use it is the real challenge here. Emoticons are man's second best invention after the wheel! Loving, feeling loved, shy, angry, hungry, wicked, constipated you name it, it's there. And one click, it's there on your lover's notifications. You feel like hugging your partner, send an open armed emoticon. You want to kiss your lover, send the pout-lipped emoticon. And voila! you virtually get physically connected!

Jokes apart, LDRs are not something repulsive. All you need is the correct amalgamation of patience, trust, communication skills, respect and faith. LDRs are an experience in themselves and they are great teachers too. 

I have been in a long distance relationship with my seven-year-old boyfriend for the last four years. There have been sunny and rainy days. If I plot a graph of our journey so far, it will look quite like a sine curve - with its occasional highs and lows. We fight, we retract into our respective shells for some time (ranging from few hours to few days), we get back together again. It is all because of a promise that we had made to ourselves four years back, that whatever it takes, we shall make this relationship work out, in spite of the distance. 

I have friends around me who have had bitter experiences with LDRs. I have a handful of advice for them and those who would like to take!

How to make a Long Distance Relation work

1. Be verbal and expressive - Communication is the backbone of your relationship. Always share what's going on in your mind, how ever trivial the matter may be. Sometimes your partner may not be able to render you help because of the distance, but you shall be assured that there is that one person to encourage and support you emotionally in whatever you do.

2. Video chat at least once in a week - Take out a slice of your time from your busy schedule and connect through a video chat. It virtually makes you feel physically connected. Texts and chats are never enough to convey emotions. Being able to see each other while talking makes things slightly simpler. 

3. Send occasional letters and gifts - Letters may be old fashioned, but each one of us still love receiving them. Once in a while surprise your partner buy mailing them surprises like hand written letters or small hand made gifts, or any other thing that you think he/she may like. This small gesture shows your love and care and the connection that is shared between the partners.

4. Trust, Trust, Trust - Being in two different places will always lead to having your own group of friends. Do not soldier around each other when plans are made to hang out with friends. But also make sure your partner knows whom you are going out with, so that you do not leave behind any chance of misunderstanding. 

Four simple steps to keep the relationship alive. It is an investment with a high incentive - the immense joy when you get to see each other after days of separation! 

Do you still feel LDR is a bad monster that cannot be tackled?

Sunday, August 5, 2012

The Tale of an Indian Mother

This post has been published by me as a part of the Blog-a-Ton 30; the thirtieth edition of the online marathon of Bloggers; where we decide and we write. To be part of the next edition, visit and start following Blog-a-Ton.




Today

The strong brakish wind made her open hair slap across her cheek. Meera was sitting on the sand, with her chin resting on her folded knees. The sea was one of the very few things in America that Meera loved.

She recollected the days when she and cousin Sarala would spend hours in their North Calcutta home, listening to the sea by placing conch shells to their ears, that their neighbour Aunt Gauri had brought back from her visit to a beach. For a very long time, the two young girls believed that the shell could connect you to the sea. Meera had never seen the sea until until she got married to Bikash and moved to America with him.

The beach was crowded, today being a Saturday. It was bustling with people and their activities. But Meera seemed to be oblivious of her surrounding. Sitting at a distance from the sea, she stared blankly across the vastness, as two tears descended slowly down her flushed cheeks, to wet the red dupatta that was placed across her knees.

******

Yesterday

The amniocentesis report was due today. A pale-faced Meera was jittery since morning. Her swelled up feet looked even more bloated up. She was sitting up on the bed with pillows under her feet, embroidering tiny yellow roses on a white baby dress, when Bikash came into the room. He was getting ready for work.

"Will you be as happy if it is a girl", Meera's voice was smooth as she directed her question to her husband, not looking up from her work.

Bikash came up to her, cupped her face with both his hands and planted a soft kiss on her forehead. 

"Is that why you are so worried? Of course I will love our child, be it a boy or a girl".

Meera felt slightly better. "And what about Ma and Baba?". She meant her in-laws.

"I'm sure they will be as happy too, Meera", Bikash replied, while tucking in his wallet and handkerchief into his pocket. "That is why Ma wants to come and stay with us during the delivery. To help you once the baby comes."

Meera suddenly felt better. Her in-laws were orthodox Brahmins and she always had an inkling that it was their desire that Bikash, being the eldest son of the family, gifted them with a grandson. But Bikash's words turned her fears volatile. 

"I'll pick up the reports on my way back. Take care of yourself Meera, and reach me if anything is urgent", Bikash kissed her again and left for the state university, where he worked as the librarian.

******

Flashback - Life in Calcutta

Afternoons were lonely for Meera and she would often re-wind her days back to when she was in Calcutta. She came from old North Calcutta house, which had a big black iron gate with a durwan, a small garden that maali kaka used to attend to once in a month, a long verandah with red flooring and a thick black border, which would be bathed daily by the slanting rays of the evening sun. Meera and Sarala could be found in this verandah every afternoon, playing or reading books borrowed from the local library. As the sun would go down, Anju Pishi would sit with them, comb their waist long hair, oil them well and tie them into tight pig tails. Anju Pishi  was their father's widowed sister who stayed with them and took care of the two girls like the daughters she never had. 

Soon after Meera finished her college, her match was fixed with Bikash. Sarala and Meera giggled over the black and white photograph that Bikash's family had sent. The groom was working in America, and would come down only to get married. Bikash's family was among the well known Brahmin families in Burdwan, with their own three-storeyed house and a first hand Ambassador car. 

"Meera has a golden luck to get such a groom," neighbours and relatives claimed.

In less than six months after the match was fixed, Meera found herself married, and bidding farewell to her family, to her country, to fly to an unknown land with an unknown man.

******

Flashback - Early days in America

Bikash's apartment was a disappointment when Meera had first walked in. Bachelorhood spelled all over.It took Meera a few weeks to settle down and convert the house to a home. Bikash seemed to be a nice man. He was happy the way Meera had decorated the house. He taught Meera how to go about the streets of America, explained how to use the microwave and the washing machine. He took her to the Indian grocery store and bought her all the spices and condiments that she wanted to have. 

Bikash took good care of her. Sometimes bought her Chinese from her favourite restaurant, bought her books to read, did not shout at her if she over talked by a couple of minutes when she called her Mother or Sarala or Anju Pishi. But she liked it the best when Bikash took her to the beach. 

Initially she would come to the beach with Bikash on the weekends. They would walk by the water, letting the cool water kiss their feet, she would collect shells and put them in silver box she had got as a wedding present. She would sometimes send some of the beautiful shells to Sarala, who still had not seen the sea. They would see the kids playing in the water, splashing and plunging in and out of the sea, which was now a vast unending bed of gold, with the sun getting engulfed by the horizon. 

When Meera gradually got acquainted with the city, she would visit the beach each time she felt sad or lonely. The untiring, enending sea would always lift up her mood.

******

Yesterday, once again

It was almost evening when Meera woke up from her afternoon slumber. She had overslept by an hour. She folded the washed clothes neatly, lit the incense in front of the framed picture of Goddess Durga and told her evening prayers. She combed her hair neatly, retouched the vermillion in the parting of her hair and waited for Bikash to arrive with the reports. In the silence of the room, she could almost hear her own heart racing.

She picked up her sewing and got so engrossed that she didn't realise it was past the time Bikash was expected. When she realised, it was almost nine in the black and gold clock on the grey wall. Meera was worried. Bikash should have been here by now.

"Is it the reports?", she wondered. "Is my baby not healthy? Is Bikash scared to break the truth to me?"

Meera turned restless. She splashed some cold water on her face and as she was about to go and stand in the balcony from where she could see the gate, Bikash entered, unlocking the door with his set of keys.

"Very unlike of Bikash," thought Meera.

She did not like the look on Bikash's face. She knew things had gone horribly wrong. Meera could smell the sea. Bikash had been to the beach. She knew what that meant. Bikash was upset about something.

"What is it, Bikash?" she asked, her voice trembled slightly. "What do the reports say? Is the baby fine?"

"Yes Meera, the baby is healthy and fine."

Meera heaved a sigh of relief. She turned back to go to the kitchen to heat the dinner, when Bikash spoke again.

"It's a girl, Meera."

Meera swirled back, with a beaming smile. She touched her bulging belly with passion. She hugged Bikash, but his cold attitude surprised her.

"What is it? Are you not happy? We talked about this so many times and you were always fine with it. What is it now?" Meera threw all her questions almost in one breath.

"I am fine Meera. Just that Ma is unhappy. She wants you to go for an abortion and try again."

Suddenly the world around Meera turned bleak. She could feel getting swallowed by nothingness. Bikash's voice seem to come from somewhere far.

"Ma has refused to come here. Think about it Meera, we can try again for a son."

Meera didn't know what Bikash had for dinner that night, she had bolted the door behind her and cried to sleep.

******

Today

As she sat on the sea shore, with uncontrollable tears, a small girl came and hugged her from behind.

"Ma... see, what I got." She had some sandy shells cupped between her tiny palms.

Surprised, Meera looked at the kid.

"She cant't be more than two," Meera thought. 

Deep black eyes, with black soft silky curls, Meera felt she was looking into the face of a cherub. She had mistaken Meera to be her mother. She ran away, the moment she realised her mistake. Meera smiled. The sound of  "Ma" kept ringing in her ears, even after the girl was out of her sight.

She would tell Bikash she wanted to keep her daughter. She didn't care what her in-laws wanted. She didn't even care what Bikash wanted. She was no more a wife or a daughter or a daughter in law. She was a Mother.

The evening had almost set in. The golden-orange hue had become a tint darker. The sea and sky was gradually dissolving with each other at the horizon.

"Sayantani - that's what I shall call her," decided Meera. Sayantani means twilight, someone that belongs to the evening.

She got up from the sand, dusted her salwar kameez and started walking back to her apartment.
She had to comeplete embroidering the yellow roses for her daughter.


The fellow Blog-a-Tonics who took part in this Blog-a-Ton and links to their respective posts can be checked here. To be part of the next edition, visit and start following Blog-a-Ton.

Credits
Image - Shades of Orange by Harsha Chittar
Courtesy - Curious Dino Photography via www.blogaton.in

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Blank Pages


This post has been published by me as a part of the Blog-a-Ton 28; the 28th Edition of the online marathon of Bloggers; where we decide and we write. To be part of the next edition, visit and start following Blog-a-Ton. The topic for this month is 'BLANK PAGES'.





She sat in the corridor outside the labour room. He walked up and down the long corridor bustling with people. She could she the lines of worry on His forehead. She could sense His restlessness, His bottled-up excitement. He will soon be a father. A father for the first time.

******

The wait took her to a day thirty years back when she was in the labour room, waiting for Him to come out to this world. The sultry afternoon had soothed down after the season's first shower. It had been a long and painful labour for her. Complicated too. Yet every muscle of her tired body calmed down the moment she held Him in her arms. She brought His tiny white face to her lips. A wave of ecstasy passed through her. She recollected how Amit had abandoned her when he discovered about her pregnancy. She held back her emotions. She has to live for Him, her son.

"You are my blank page, my son, and from today I start writing on it," she whispered into his ears, holding him closer.

******

She had done a commendable job in filling up the blank pages of His life. She wrote down the first words He spoke, noted down how to take His first steps. She wrote about days and nights, about summer, spring and winter, about black, grey and white. She filled up the pages with alphabets, and numbers. He started to speak words, then sentences. He learnt to read and then write.

Writing on the blank pages of his life had become her addiction. She enjoyed every moment of her son's growing up. The first decade of His life she was busy writing. Moral values and principles, courage to face failure's and disappointments in life. She wrote how to appreciate beauty and take pride in a job well done. She mentioned relationships and their importance. How to love and be loved.

Over the years she kept on writing on those blank pages and He kept on learning.

Today, thirty years later, she looks and Him and sees a reflection of all the words she had written. And she takes pride in it. After all, she tells herself, being an unmarried single mother was never easy in this society.

******

"Ma... Ma ... Ma... it's a baby boy!!!"

She comes out of her thoughts in an instance. He hugs her hard. He picks her up and twirls her around! She could feel her son's bottled up emotions bursting out. She too is ecstatic. Promoted to the role of a GrandMom! She hugs Him real tight. With her eyes turning moist, she whispers into His ears, "Now it's your turn to fill up the blank pages."




The fellow Blog-a-Tonics who took part in this Blog-a-Ton and links to their respective posts can be checked here. To be part of the next edition, visit and start following Blog-a-Ton.

Monday, May 16, 2011

All over a cup of coffee



They say 'A lot can happen over coffee'. I agree. A lot indeed can happen over coffee. No, its not what you think... I am talking about a discussion that I had with one of my friends over 2 cups of steaming hot coffee. A discussion which compelled me to pen down this post. We started talking about the weather, and the office and the election results and finally relationships. The friend in context is of the male species. And as expected, the definition of relationship was different for both of us.


While talking to him, I realized the fact that guys consciously or sub-consciously starts taking his girl for granted after the initial "lovey-dovey" days are over. When you are new in love, you feel everything around you is bliss. It seems every love song has been written for you, every happy ending movie is the story of your life and you suddenly discover the hidden poet in you. But then suddenly one day you realize love songs don't attract you that much, love stories seem to be different from your life... and biggest of all.... you cant write poems anymore!! Oh gosh, whats wrong? Does that mean you are falling out of love? Don't panic, the answer is NO. It's just that you get used to your partner's love. That's precisely the juncture from which a guy starts taking his girl for granted. Maybe in a conscious state, or sub-conscious or maybe even unconscious!


This is where my male friend, taking a long sip of the hot coffee, made an important statement. He said that men start comparing their girl to his mother. He expects her to be as understanding, as loving and as caring as his mother. And if he is a lucky chap, his girl has excellent culinary skills which can be matched up to that of his mother's (that's a bonus though)....!!! Let me tell you, this friend of mine does not flaunt a 'single' relationship status. He argued that if a guy is actually comparing his girlfriend to his mother, it means he trusts her nearly as much. And according to him, the girl should feel privileged about her position!


Things started to get interesting...!! I was leaning back in the sofa and sipping my mocha, but his comment made me sit up... I just could not agree to the fact that a girl should feel privileged about her position when compared to her boyfriend's mom!! In fact, why on first place should such a comparison arise? I started my argument in defense of the female species..!! A girl enters your life when you are a matured individual. She starts knowing you when you have already decided upon your likes, dislikes, actions and reactions. And your Mom, she knows you from the minute you see the light of this world (practically, even before that). She guides you through your likes, dislikes, actions and reactions. A mother has the biggest heart for her child. How much you fight with her, accuse her, abuse her, she is the ever-forgiving lady. Every guy has experienced this. And this has made him believe his girl will digest his tantrums and mood swings like his mother does. This is where every guy goes wrong and this is practically where every problem starts.


I was surprised to hear this confession from my friend that he has his own check list against which he rates his girl. Rating here depends on how close she is in being like his mom!!! I called up a few of my other guy friends to take their opinion on this matter. I asked them if at any point in their relationship they have drawn a comparison between their mother and their girlfriend. And trust me, everyone of them gave me a positive answer!! They all wish to have a girl who will be like their model lady... Surprising, indeed..!!


Our coffees had finished by then, and so had our hour long discussion on this topic. It left me intrigued and set my mind into thinking. A time will arise when I will be a victim of the same situation. When I will be rated against a check-list. That angered me. This psychology of men may never change, but it keeps me wondering why can't they accept their girl the way she is? Why does she need to be reflection of someone else? Individuality has indeed lost its importance....