Friday, January 14, 2011

Maid in Mumbai

Ya devi sarvabhuteshu shaktiroopen samasthita
namstasyai, namstasyai, namstasyai namo namah


(To the Divine Goddess who resides in all existence in the form of ‘shakti’
We bow to her, we bow to her, continually we bow to her)



"Ya devi sarvabhuteshu, shaktiroopen samasthita... namastasyayi namo namah...."


Well, this post is about the most important person in my life – yes, you guessed it right the first time - it’s my household help.

(Touches a chord, doesn’t it...?)

I start this with a homage to goddess Shakti – who seems to have decided to wreak havoc on us mere middle-class mortals. In the form of the ubiquitous maid – or, to be more politically correct, the household help.

The lengths we all go to, to appease them, is an indicator of the criticality of this person in our lives. Listing just a couple of the most atrocious things we, personally, have done... We drove one of them around to Reliance Digital and some other hip shops to shop for a new TV, because her husband had bought a new set for his ‘other’ wife, but not for her. Naturally, she had to have one too - at once. And naturally, the money had to come from us - at once.... And there was this other occasion, a long time back - when a long-time maid quit after an argument. Exactly 10 minutes after she walked off, I developed cold feet – and sent Sudarshan chasing after her... he pleaded with her and brought her back – in style, pillion riding on his bike.....!!

(Do share your ‘The ridiculous lengths I have gone to for a household help’ stories here too!)

But let me start at the beginning… Nowadays, all nuclear families in India are at grave risk of being hit by a ‘nuclear disaster’ – that is, being in an ‘utterly maid-less’ state. Last year, we were hit by one of epic proportions, when our household help - our woman-Friday, suddenly ditched us to turn entrepreneur. She was a good soul – though prone to making rather rash comments like “Bhabhiji, aaj bhaiya ko hots de doon kya?”... No, no, she was not being improper – it took me some time to figure out she only wanted to know whether or not Sudarshan wanted oats for breakfast... :)

Anyway, she left, and all hell broke loose almost immediately – the laundry cupboard door would not shut, it was so full, and the neighbourhood Reliance Fresh ran out of ready to eat parathas...

Desperate, I lurked behind trees and walls to waylay any passing household helps in the neighbourhood and try to lure them into my house. It didn’t work – maybe I was trying to too hard...

I even started calling on unsuspecting friends and neighbours - purportedly for a friendly chat, and then cornering their unsuspecting maids or cooks, with a shameless ‘Tumhare ghar mein maa behen nahi hai kya?’ Understandably, most of our friends stopped answering my calls!

The ‘maa-behen’ line almost worked, though – a few ‘maa’s and ‘behen’s did turn up for walk-in interviews. But none of them finally amounted to anything. We waited for one such promising ‘behen’ for one whole day – but she had simply gone missing. We feared she had eloped on the pretext of coming to our place. Finally, late in the evening, the missing ‘behen’ was located – she had been pinched by the alert Mumbai cops, travelling ticketless (and moneyless) on a local, and had spent the day cooling her heels at the station.


That marked the end of the 'maa- behen' approach...

We even gave up our long standing aversion for a ‘live-in’ arrangement. Having a live-in household help, I mean.

The first of the lot we tried was a Bengali mashima. Mashima, obviously on the wrong side of the fifties, claimed she was under forty. She claimed she woke early everyday, and would have no problem getting up at 6.30 AM to help make breakfast and pack Ananya off to school. The next day, we almost had to break the door of her room down at 8.30 AM to wake her....

She said she did not know how to cook our kind of meals, but would soon learn. She claimed she ate very little. For 3 days, I had to make 6 rotis for her at every meal...

Exit Mashima.

The next maid-on-trial came with a baggage – a one year old son. The lady spent 24 hours at our place. During this time, the boy consumed what seemed to me like 144 packets of biscuits at breakneck speed, and peed in every room of our house - as if on a mission to find the most suitable spot to construct a toilet in our house. The lady spent roughly 50% of her time cleaning up after the kid... and 40% trying to understand what we said (she did not speak Hindi) – which left her hardly any time for actual work...

Exit Maid-with-Kid.

We even talked to a placement agency which boasted of sending Bengali household helps - customised to a client’s needs, to any place in the world... but the price they quoted left me wondering whether I had unwittingly asked for an executive assistant rather than a household help.

Exit Household-help Export House.

Then finally, one day She just walked in. A Household Help who was clean and respectable in appearance, could cook and clean, and most importantly, was in dire need of a job.... The catch...? (tchh...there always is one, isn’t there?)... She had no papers, no identification, no recommendation.. Nothing. She had just landed up in Mumbai with her husband, from Bihar, and did not know a single soul in Mumbai.

Everybody, without exception, told me not to employ her. I employed her the very next day she applied. I really had no choice.

That was almost a year ago now. And a lot has passed since then – she has managed to captivate us with her culinary skills, we have nursed her and her family through several illnesses, Ananya is on back-slappping terms with her.... and we still have not been murdered in our beds...

As PG Wodehouse would have said, birds are singing in the sky and all is well with the world...  At least for now!

Now if you excuse me, I have to go discuss that salary hike which she has been demanding.....

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Assembly Line

Ok... this is something a lot of people might identify with..


The last 3 days, I have been trying to teach my daughter Ananya some stuff she has been learning at school – about ‘Assembly Lines’. Yes, you heard right – not Fractions, not Tenses, not even States of India – things we feel are reasonable for a 4th grader to be learning in school... but all about Assembly lines... principles of Assembly Lines, advantages of Assembly Lines, types of Assembly lines – the whole hog...

This is definitely a far cry from the times when the only kind of ‘assembly lines’ a 4th grader was expected to know about were the serpentine queues of students at the morning prayers. But obviously, some educationists think differently... clearly, they think the ripe old age of 9 or 10 years is the appropriate time for 'Business Studies' - the right time to learn all about Principles of Trade and Production, Primary, Secondary & Tertiary business sectors etc. .. and also about the Indus Valley Civilization, the Vedic Culture and such things in Humanities...

In her last Business Studies exam, Ananya was asked to ‘Write the functions of money’. Drawing directly from her personal experience, she wrote, “Money is for giving, getting and keeping safely.” Quite a gem, I thought. No prizes for guessing that it was marked wrong by the teacher, and awarded a zero. Who cares about appreciating original thinking...!

Last year, we had made what we thought was an educated choice, to put Ananya in a school offering the CIE (Cambridge) curriculum. We thought this curriculum would be easier, more practically oriented and less rote based. Obviously, we underestimated the capacity of our system to make a rote based system out of everything. Their Science book has  a good design to encourage the spirit of scientific enquiry - all kinds of interesting experiments to try out, provision to formulate and write down their hypotheses, then verify with the results of the actual experiment etc. It has all of this - but all they actually do is to copy some sample readings from the textbook to a work book... so much for Science learning...

And if I speak any more about their woes in Humanities and Business Studies, I will not be able to stop myself from pulling out my hair or breaking something...

Well... what can we do now – it was our choice, after all... so we woefully debate alternatives for her future... and get whatever fringe benefits we can in the meantime... Like the wonderful Lucille Ball video I found on Youtube while trying to show Ananya videos related to what an ‘Assembly Line’ looked like... She found it hilarious and showed it to her friends in school – and a new generation discovered the comic genius of Lucy (whose shows I grew up on – DD used to air them in the 70’s...) :)
(here's the link for those who love Lucy: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4wp3m1vg06Q)

So, we will continue to suffer silently – Ananya trying to mug up the Principles of an Assembly Line and spellings like 'Conveyor Belt' – and we trying to help her make some sense of what she is mugging up...

Meanwhile, here is my take on a good example of an Assembly Line... Ananya's school....

     SCHOOL