I
haven’t waited for any weekend as eagerly as I have for the coming long
weekend! Well, it is an understatement
to say “hectic’, but this week has been crazy both at work and on the personal
front. Now before I can heave a sigh of relief as the week draws to a close two
days early, thanks to Id-ul-Fitr and a second Saturday, it turns out that it
may be a working looooong weekend, after all as I have to trudge through a few legal documents while
vacationing in my father’s farm house!:-( Anyway, another reason I felt
over-worked this week is because of my mother-in-laws’ absence at home, making
me in charge of the household (read kitchen) responsibilities! This got me
thinking about the importance of an all-encompassing domestic support for a
working woman today in order to maintain sanity, and this is apart from the housemaid
or the help who comes in for a couple of hours for household cleaning and
allied chores. With today’s working
woman out of the house for most part of the day, either because of extended
working hours or long commute, it’s no secret that we need help for not only child-care,
but also cooking and cleaning up thereafter because if I have to fix “Abhay’s
favorite panner subzi” for dinner after a long grueling day at court followed by client
meetings, it will be like jumping from frying pan to fire! J So we
look to support or rather outsource the domestic responsibilities to our
parents, in-laws or a full-time hired help. Well, I am grateful to my
mother-in-law without whose support my life would have been a mad rush like it
has been the whole of this week! Of course, with husbands helping around, it is
no longer the “woman’s” sole responsibility, but it is still not the woman who asks
“what’s for dinner”, right?:-)
In my
hubby’s defense, however, I must say that as I write this post just before leaving
to “Shristi”, my father’s farmhouse at Dharmasthala for the long weekend….it is
my husband who is winding up the kitchen! J Anyway,
I guess as mothers of little boys, it is for us to see to it that gender
stereotypes are not perpetuated on the domestic front. Though Abhay has noticed
his father help out at the kitchen, its time he starts helping out too. I found
a nice little book titled “Piggybook” by Anthony Browne that probably will help
me on that count. This one just like other books by Anthony Browne, challenges commonly held beliefs with though-provoking yet comic illustrations.
The Piggot family comprising of the mother, father and two boys are a nice
little family who live in a nice house, with nice garden and a nice garage. Mrs Piggot does all the
household chores from cooking, cleaning, serving, laundry to ironing while
having a full-time job on hand. Mr Piggot and the Piggot boys simply order her
around and take her for granted. One fine day Mrs. Piggot who has had enough,
leaves a note that to her husband and sons that says saying “you are pigs” and
walks out. Mr Piggot and the Piggot boys return to an empty house and are
annoyed that they have cook and clean themselves. They find it hard to get by
without Mrs. Piggot and are seen turning as dirty as pigs for real! Mrs. Piggot
then returns, much to relief of the “pigs” but her return is subject to certain
conditions - that the boys make their own bed, dad learns to wash the dishes and
all of them helped with the cooking and all of them realized that they enjoyed it, after
all! So the other day, I asked Abhay to lay the table for dinner, which he no
doubt, set out to do willingly but sought to overdo it so much that I regretted
asking him!!:-) So if you think you are little ones may be growing into little “pigs”
at home……bring home the “Piggybook”!
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