Monday, 9 February 2015

New Mommies in the Spotlight


Give the baby to us. You are too naïve to take care of the newborn.

You don’t even know how to swaddle a baby!?

Her marriage is falling apart because of the baby. I think her husband is cheating on her.

She is so weird; doesn’t socialize at all and the way she holds her baby girl… as if somebody is going to hijack her!

The other day, she was breastfeeding her son in a restaurant. How very inappropriate!?

Do as I say. I have raised five children including your husband.

Such whispers, interference, highlights and limelight are endless in the life of a newbie mommie. The audiences include parents, in-laws, friends, relatives and strangers and they are, all together, the die-hard fans (critics) of your motherhood. Your baby takes the center stage indeed but the spotlight is on you. They review you based on your performance and sometimes, they act like those hyperactive judges of any popular reality show. They want to know the breaking news, such as “how you reduced so much so soon, if your sex life is back on track after a vaginal delivery, you should quit your job, you are not doing enough, you should not breastfeed so often and in the worst case scenario, they put you under scrutiny about who the real father of your baby is!” You cannot shun them literally nor can you shut yourself.

I am a new kid in the block; mother of a six-month old baby girl. I wanted to write this article for a long time but I was taken hostage by the ever melodramatic postpartum depression. Now that I am back in the game with the same passion and imagination, it is important that I share certain experiences of mine and some of my friends with the amazing new moms.

I always prefer the door closed when I breastfeed my baby and I was doing so one evening when my own aunt barged into the room without knocking. She was excited to see my baby nicely latched onto my left breast. However, she had to show her old wives’ wisdom. She took my right hand, placed and pressed it on my breast saying, "Hold it this way like a cigarette for a good flow of milk.” I got infuriated; isn’t breastfeeding a very private affair? Besides, she could have said that plainly without physically maneuvering me. I had to calm myself down for the baby. All I did was firmly tell my aunt that ‘cigarette hold’ was a wrong practice, which reasonably unaware mothers have been displaying for centuries. http://www.parenting.com/article/breastfeeding-problems-and-solutions

The even more histrionic comments came from none other than my two maid servants, one of whom came to me and said, “didi, apne aadmi ke samne bacchi ko doodh mat pilao. doodh aana bandh ho jayega”. (Sister, do not breastfeed the baby in front of your husband. The milk flow will stop). Another maid declared in a daunting tone, “didi, bacchi ka mundan karna nahin toh shadi ke time baal mein sona baandhke dena padega” (Sister, follow the traditional Hindu custom and cut your baby girl’s hair or you will have to tie gold pieces on her hair at the time of her marriage). In ancient times, the woman was associated with moveable assets like gold, whether it was given for the dowry or acquired from the husband’s family. So, the maid’s remark was a far future indication of a glittering dowry when my six-month old girl becomes a woman. Since the day I have become a mother, I have been listening to unsolicited gyaan from all kinds of people across Indian communities. The core issue is they think they are authorized to do so.

Once, we (a group of couples with children and some singles) had a get-together at a resto-bar in Mumbai. We were arguing about the physical appearance of babies when a general statement was made by a well-educated liberal friend that the baby must resemble his/her father as a proof that he or she is a product of his own sperm. I was emotionally terrified by the comment; it reflected the disgusting mindset of Indian society at large. All I did was diplomatically distance myself from that friend and people like her.

And then there were a few acquaintances who I knew through my friends. One day, I got a very concerned phone call from one of them, “Your best friend’s husband is having an affair with a hot colleague. I think your friend is highly occupied with her little twins nowadays… that’s why maybe! By the way, your husband also knows that chick very well.” Well, that was a fishy phone call meant for me to keep an eye on my husband too. That call made me feel vulnerable for many days and nights. I tried hard to control my emotions and ultimately opened up my heart to my husband. That incident taught me to filter certain types of people and their back-fence talks from my life. And as an individual, I do not bother about maintaining good relations with everyone.

“Come on bhabhi, go for one more child. You should have at least two; you have crossed 35”, my best friend’s sister-in-law provokes her every day. “He is a boon from Lord Krishna to me. You were just a medium to carry him in your womb”, my morning walk friend’s mother-in-law claims over the phone from Delhi. “Do not breastfeed after 11 o’clock in the night. Do not cuddle your baby so often; she will become stubborn. Why did you give her a Muslim name (We have named our daughter Subira)? Invest in a child plan policy right now for her education and marriage. Eat chicken recipes everyday; it will help heal the uterus as well as secrete more milk. Better put a Copper-T deep down there or you will end up having babies. Your baby cries a lot because your milk is not sufficient. I hate your belly; your stretch marks give me nightmares.”

Unfortunately, my mommie-friends and I have been moaning under this intruding limelight since long. The questions arise in my mind: what can be the most effective method to ignore such people? How do we shut their crap in one stare or sentence? Why do they become so greedy and keep poking us? From which heaven do the myths of parenting and breastfeeding descend on Earth? The answer is to be firm and straight forward when it comes to your baby and your role as a mother. Look into the well wisher’s eyes and say, “I prefer to do it this way and I know what I am doing.”

Speak what you must. Face the reality that you are being watched. Do not be surprised to hear a thrilling version of your life (rather sex life) from a third party. Do not let even an iota of cunningness discourage you. At last, in the limelight, what you can do is learn the art of distinguishing genuine fans from the overexcited crowd. Enjoy your motherhood while they do their bit in your baby’s life, play their pivotal role as ‘the experienced ones’ and prove that they have been there and done that.


-         -  Tapasya

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