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rabi4
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Posted on 10-05-11 11:39
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www.parakhi.com/blogs
Growing up in Nepal
By Saani | Published October 6, 2011
“Growing up” in Nepal is different from how I had always imagined my breaking into adulthood would be. In high school, I was under the impression that getting out of college and having a “real job” meant I was an adult. I didn’t think so much about marriage or children having to do with adulthood.
But here I am, in my 20’s with a full time “real” job but the steps to being a grown up seem to have jumbled since I’m still living a home. The western world would probably scoff and tag me a “loser” for still living with my parents (although with the recession, it has become far more common) but in Nepal, it remains the norm.
And since most of us 20’s even into our 30’s are still under the roof of those who never let us forget they’ve raised us, I think it’s stunted our growth. Even though I contribute to the household expenses and do what I can around the house, I’m still living under “their rule”.
I thought that this meant things like informing my mom I’ll be missing dinner, letting them know when I’ll be late, calling when I’m on my way home, helping here and there around the house and so on. I did not realize that it also meant having to ask permission for everything.
Case in point: I decided it was time for a hair cut, and upon seeing my much shorter locks my mother says, “You don’t even need to ask me?” …. But why would I? I’m not sure how living at home has a say in my hair style. I understand my mom raising and eyebrow at outfits that might warrant unwanted attention (not that I would dress that way anyways), but something like a hair cut more than annoyed me. It seemed a tad bit controlling and lacking in letting me make my own decisions.
Just the other day, my friends and I made some plans to go hiking (for a day mind you, not even the Everest Base Camp trek) and again, she miffed me with a “It’s like to you, you don’t even have parents”. In my world where I’m growing up and responsible it’s my job to say, “Mom, I’m going here with my friends and I’ll be back around this time.” I’m not in middle school and I don’t have to ask permission to go out with friends.
This case of parents who are still controlling is no exclusive to me – it seems to happen to all kids still living with parents, regardless of age, marital status, job or even having kids. The problem with this? – parents will always see their kids are babies. They’ll want a say in everything, and as long as you’re under their house (usually rent free) you live by their rules.
What I’d like to do is move out. If young Nepalis were able to control their own living space without parents breathing down their necks, there’s a world of learning we’d be able to do without our parents telling us it’s time to eat daal-bhaat. We’d learn to pay our bills, buy and cook our food, make our money last, decorate our space, run our lives on our time and we’d be incredibly more independent.
If only our parents would let us.
Saani has no real goals and aspirations but she sees opportunity in everything and goes with the flow. This is probably because she loves exploring and discovering. She writes for fun but for the same reason she also cooks, reads, and spends a lot of time on random websites that offer a chance to learn all sorts of tid-bits on life.
www.parakhi.com/blogs
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rabi4
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Posted on 10-06-11 1:33
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Homeyji
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Posted on 10-06-11 1:36
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Dear Saani,
I have loved reading your pieces and have become a fan of your writing. Wish more Nepali girls wrote with the clarity that you write with.
What I hear in this particular piece is someone who has grown up to be an adult, has found their place in the adult work place, has achieved financial independence, but yet is struggling for emotional independence. I hear the voice of someone trying to find and define their own space.
In the course of growing up our parents define a certain relationship with them. It is through this relationship that we learn much about the world and how we should behave in it. Especially in our Nepali culture this relationship between parent and child seems to be defined in stone. It seems like it is not open to negotiation. It seems like we are bound to it for ever.
But are these really true assumptions?
It takes effort to define your own kind of relationship with your parents instead of just seeing yourself as a victim of their definition. At a certain point of being an adult, we each need to take responsibility to define our own individuality. And from that definition of our individuality we define our own relationships with people, places and ideas. I'm not saying that doing any of this is easy. What I am saying is that it is possible.
What I am seeing in this particular piece is your lack of willingness to take responsibility to define your own space and your own individuality. I feel that it is only after that you can redefine your relationship with your parents.
Do you feel that have you done the first part?
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Patan
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Posted on 10-06-11 1:39
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Saani I feel with you. Even for guys it's the same thing. There still isn't a custom of leaving parent's house to live by oneself. It's true for migrants from other cities or villages to kathmandu but for young people with families in kathmandu, they have to go through this all the time no matter how old they are.
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Homeyji
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Posted on 10-06-11 1:54
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Patan,
That must be frustrating to feel so powerless.
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Patan
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Posted on 10-06-11 1:56
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An exorbitant amount of respect is expected out of you in Nepal. You have to respect people according to their age, whether they are right or wrong. And you don't want to disappoint your parents in their old age too. So it is tough to try to have your own life.
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Homeyji
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Posted on 10-06-11 2:06
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Patan,
Yes it must be quite exasperating to feel like you have no choice but to respect social rules even when they are not fair to you. Sometimes you must wonder, "why am I sacrificing? For what? What am I so afraid of?"
Yes?
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pshrestha78
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Posted on 10-06-11 2:10
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I like the way you write . but more than that i like the way you can see things and observe details on the things that revolve around us in our daily lives and bring them into your writing, and your readers have no choice but to say yeaaaaaa that is rightt!...i am your fan.. i subcribed to your blog yesterday and liking all your writings so far.. please keep coming.. :)
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Homeyji
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Posted on 10-06-11 2:21
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I think the biggest fear that we face in Nepal in our society is fear of rejection. We fear being ostracised from our society. We fear being an outcaste. We fear being made an example of what not to be. We fear being the black-sheep of the family. We fear being the butt of jokes. We fear being laughed at in family gatherings and have people look at us with disdain. We fear people looking down on us for not meeting our duty and social expectations.
In many ways, for Nepali society to operate smoothly, everyone needs to do their duty. That is why they show the people who don't do their duty with such disdain. Not performing according to your social role is such a shameful act in Nepali society, isn't it so?
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Patan
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Posted on 10-06-11 3:30
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Homeyji I think that is why our society is backward.
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Homeyji
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Posted on 10-06-11 3:43
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mucho_fiesta
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Posted on 10-07-11 9:09
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Why do you think its backward? Define your forward ?
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Patan
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Posted on 10-07-11 10:17
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Do you seriously need a definition of backward and forward?
Backward - Having to be restricted by society pressure
Forward - Having freedom to do one's best
Backward - Having to agree with people senior to you even when they are wrong
Forward - Being able to put your points forward why you are right
If people were able to move forward then society would be able to move forward.
Since everything is 'restrictive' we still don't have electricity or water.
Having electricity and water would be sort of forward thing. Dont you think?
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Homeyji
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Posted on 10-07-11 2:36
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Patan,
I think the answer is in physics.
The pull of social gravity is very restrictive. Freedom to do one's best only comes once you have put a distance between yourself and this social gravity. But it takes a lot of energy to break out of this social gravity. But it is not impossible.
A rocket ship without enough propulsion moving forward, will go backward. A rocketship needs deliberate and constant power to break out of the gravitational forces on earth that trap it. Especially when it is locked in a static position within the earths gravity, the rocketship needs a lot of energy before it gains enough momentum.
If we are moving backward then that means that we as a society: you and I and everyone else....we are not putting enough energy in moving 'forward.' That is why we constantly find ourselves trapped in the earth's gravity. It is this social gravity that we cannot escape.
Sometimes the best way to love the people older than you is to show them that there is a better way. This takes courage and strength. You can't fake it.
Where are we going to get the power to break through this social gravity? I think that we need to be willing to build a 'social rocket ship.'
Any ideas how to build one? First we have to build a Nepali NASA .
What is a Nepali NASA?
It is a group of people who are serious and dedicated about wanting to break through the social gravity that traps us Nepalese as a society. First you need a body of serious people who are committed towards this effort: who see the urgency and importance of this mission.
So who wants to create a NASA?
NASA: Nepali Association of Social Action
Last edited: 07-Oct-11 03:00 PM
Last edited: 07-Oct-11 05:29 PM
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BABAL Khate
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Posted on 10-08-11 2:23
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Homeyji and Saani,
You know what your problem is? You guys are idealists. The problem with people like you is that you want the ideal of the world so badly that you are not ready to compromise when it contradicts reality. You need perfection in your life a lot more than you need ground reality based on facts.
Before your parents gave birth to you, they never agreed for you to be independent. When did you start declaring this as a right that you as a child should absolutely have?
It is you who have that need to be independent. Not them. Maybe they don't want you to be independent of them. Why blame them for a need not being fulfilled that you have? Do you feel that they should want you to be independent? Why? Because they love you? And why is being independent of them necessarily a more loving act than you being dependant on them?
Your parents never agreed to be godly or saintly or loving or worthy of your respect. You have a need for them to be that way. They never agreed to be the kind of person that you wanted to be loyal to. It was you who needed to see them that way. It was you who blamed them because they did not meet your ideal.
People like you need your ideal so badly that you don't care if the facts don't match reality. You blame the world. You blame your parents. You blame everyone because they don't match your ideals.
When will you gain the humility to see that maybe the problem is not with all those things. Maybe the problem is within you. What is it in you that makes you need these very high ideals that the world, your parents and everyone else needs to meet? Why are you stressing everyone else out for your own unfulfilled needs?
It is you who wanted to be convinced that the world was a loving place. It's not. The world is what it is. It is you who wanted to live the ideal ignoring the fact of the true nature of the world. It was your need for fantasy that did not get fulfilled. That is why you're dissappointed. The world never promised to be good. It never promised to be fair. It never promised to love and be worthy of love. You needed to believe all that in order for your life to be worthy of living. You needed to believe that. Don't blame the world for that.
Last edited: 08-Oct-11 03:03 PM
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Megalomaniac
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Posted on 10-08-11 6:38
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One fo my favorite scenes from the movie Rocky Balboa:
"I'd hold you up to say to your mother, 'this kid's gonna be the best kid in the world. This kid's gonna be somebody better than anybody I ever knew.' And you grew up good and wonderful. It was great just watching you, every day was like a privilige. Then the time come for you to be your own man and take on the world, and you did. But somewhere along the line, you changed. You stopped being you. You let people stick a finger in your face and tell you you're no good. And when things got hard, you started looking for something to blame, like a big shadow. Let me tell you something you already know. The world ain't all sunshine and rainbows. It's a very mean and nasty place and I don't care how tough you are it will beat you to your knees and keep you there permanently if you let it. You, me, or nobody is gonna hit as hard as life. But it ain't about how hard ya hit. It's about how hard you can get it and keep moving forward. How much you can take and keep moving forward. That's how winning is done! Now if you know what you're worth then go out and get what you're worth. But ya gotta be willing to take the hits, and not pointing fingers saying you ain't where you wanna be because of him, or her, or anybody! Cowards do that and that ain't you! You're better than that! I'm always gonna love you no matter what. No matter what happens. You're my son and you're my blood. You're the best thing in my life. But until you start believing in yourself, ya ain't gonna have a life. Don't forget to visit your mother."
Last edited: 08-Oct-11 06:40 PM
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BABAL Khate
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Posted on 10-08-11 8:44
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rabi4
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Posted on 10-09-11 1:01
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thanks all of sharing your views. Saani is indeed a very good writer and we are lucky to have her with us at Parakhi.com . Hope all of you had a wonderful Dashain....
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Pulsar_Beat
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Posted on 10-09-11 3:23
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I have to agree with Babal khate here for breaking it down so coherently. Kudos!
One thing about bloggers of today (esp. the ones that have caught a glimpse of the western world) is the negativity they see in everything in developing world which includes culture. Of course! it is so comfortable to vent about negativity.
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BABAL Khate
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Posted on 10-11-11 9:46
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Pulsar Beat bro,
Completely agree with you. I get tired of seeing this Western culture of dissatisfaction taking over the world. Even Obama came to power on the basis of 'change.' Change, change, change. Nothing is ever good enough. Nothing has ever satisfied. The culture of corporate marketing culture is all about spreading this dissatisfaction as well. Make people dissatisfied with their weight, their look, their social status and sell them products that they think will give them satisfaction.
At least this is not the way I want to live my life. I want to be a satisfied person.
It is like the serenity prayer says: accept the things you can change and the things you can't change and pray for the wisdom to know the difference.
But being dissatisfied about everything...all of the time...is clearly not the answer.
We need to find inner peace and satisfaction within ourself. We have to accept that externallity of the world, our parents, our friends, the amount of money we have will never give us full satisfaction. We have to find inner peace. This is what all the sages, rishi, munis have been teaching for centuries.
It is when we forget the essence of this teaching that we get carried away by the latest politician eager to get into office who spreads his brand of the latest dissatisfaction. Or the latest corporation. We need to immunize ourselves against external dissatisfaction by finding inner satisfaction.
If we find this inner satisfaction then our parents will be respectworthy. Nepal will look beautiful. Our wife will look sexy and our children obedient. And without that inner satisfaction nothing will ever look right.
I am not saying that I am always satisfied all of the time. But at least it is good to know what the ideal should be, or what? The ideal is an inner state of mind and heart and a quality of being. It is not an external state of the world or Nepal or our parents being a certain way.
As long as the world needs to be perfect before we are satisfied....we will always be .
Last edited: 11-Oct-11 09:54 AM
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