रविवार, 22 जनवरी 2012

Autobiography Of A Married Man


Autobiography Of A Married Man
 
On our 16th wedding anniversary, I dedicate this blog – an anniversary present -- to my wife Rita.

Sixteen years ago on this day, my life changed forever, and every passing year has seen our lives change forever. Sometime in 1995 I lost my heart to a wonderful girl, but on January 22, 1996, I lost a significant part of me, and in the process I have only become better and better as a person. 

The biggest context changing event in my life – my marriage – has led to many context changing events in our lives, the reason being, from a nice, normal guy next door at the time of our marriage I have got transformed into somebody who exhibits consistent crazy behaviours. Every passing year, my life has got more and more exciting, whereas my wife’s life has got more and more tumultuous. End of 1998 saw the arrival of our daughter Diksha, who too over the years has been mirroring my personality, which means it is double trouble for Rita, who has to not only manage our crazy behaviours, but also ensure she doesn’t go off balance.

Over the last 16 years, she has not just stood by me, but also developed herself into my most ardent critic. My male-cum-husband ego has often resisted attempts at receiving forthright feedback, but like every assertive and well meaning wife, she has ensured somewhere her words of improvement rankle in my mind and heart, more often than not leading to me making certain critical changes in my behavior. But when you meet her, you will wonder whether she is capable of being assertive, but trust me, all married women, irrespective of their pre-marriage personality, have an inherent capacity to become assertive with their husband at least after marriage! I suppose, men being men, have this nasty way of provoking their spouse to assert herself as a critical emotional and intellectual self defense mechanism.

One of the greatest lessons in the last 16 years has been just how critical it is to have an understanding life partner, who very often also has to pretend to understand, not because of her timidity, but because of how women are at their core – patient, always willing to question their own opinion, and quite adept at giving their husband multiple chances. The importance of having an understanding wife cannot be underestimated, as over the years I have seen many marriages struggle to keep the harmony alive, leading to a life where the struggle for keeping the relationship going consumes one’s energies. Even if a couple let go off each other and try to move on, the scars are too deep to heal in a lifetime. 

Since our marriage, I have changed five jobs (including a career switch and two attempts at entrepreneurship) and as a result forced my wife to live in three different cities -- Kolkata, Bengaluru and Kochi, with Delhi almost featuring in the list. This is too much to handle for a person who is very Mumbai-prone and likes to stay within her comfort zone. In the thirteen years of her life, my daughter is attending her fourth school and that too in a third city. Though she is much like me, she has threatened me with dire consequences if I dare pull her out of this school till she finishes her Std X.

Trust me, my wife would have not complained if I had just stuck to one company and one career, and would not have minded if I had stayed just the way I was when we got married. But she had not budgeted for what she was going to get into and definitely not for the paradigm shift my personality underwent over the years. Of course, as a result, she too has changed for the better, however, I had not told her what I was up to – but the truth is even I did not know what life had in store for us.


My wife does not write a blog, and so I do not know how she would describe this journey in words, but one thing is for sure, it has not been easy for her. She has also been very good at not always expressing the pain of my decisions and the change I have imposed upon her, thereby providing me with the space to move on relentlessly. As we enter the 17th year of our partnership, this is one consistent support I seek from her, for as things stand now, life promises to be more exciting and tumultuous than ever before.

Apart from managing our home, us and our lives, what my wife has done most brilliantly is accepted both her husband and daughter as they are – crazy, unpredictable and temperamental at times. While admittedly, we are difficult to handle, I suspect she also likes the energy we provide to her and others. 

Accepting me as I was one quality I desperately sought in my wife, and I am immensely lucky that I got one such person to marry me. I am extremely grateful to God and her for that. While I continuously change and experiment, she has just been much of what she was before marriage, watching me at times with awe, at times with concern and at times aghast. In a partnership context, change from all sides is not welcome, as that can upset the applecart of that relationship, and in that sense, Rita has been like an unshakable anchor, yet she has never failed to enrich herself and us. 

Women are known to make sacrifices – often their own happiness. My wife too has made some serious sacrifices so that I can fulfill my dreams. I can never give back the things she sacrificed, but one thing’s for sure, whatever I do is also because I want to ensure that the three of us can constantly enhance the quality of our lives and be useful to the world at every step of life.
I thank her for being in my life. Without her, my life would not have been incomplete, actually, there would have been no story to tell. 

Rita is my wife, and I am proud of that!

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