Voices

Why my 40-year-old sister marrying a younger man is a tale of inspiration for me

Akil BakhshiApril 5, 2018 | 14:40 IST

My sister finished her law studies and joined the local sessions court as an advocate in early 2000. Back then, women were not a common sight in regular male bastions, especially when it came to a small hill town like ours. The first few days were hard. The process of learning the practical aspects of jurisprudence and the task of making a space for herself continued simultaneously. I remember the evenings when she would come back exhausted and would yet jump right into the kitchen to help our mother prepare dinner. For us, it was routine. For her, it was duty.

It was around this time that talk of her marriage first began. It turned out she had already met someone during her LLB years and had made a decision. However, when it comes to Indian families, inter-caste marriages are a tough pill to swallow. My father opposed the arrangement tooth and nail. So did many others who thought that a woman marrying of her own choice was an inappropriate and imprudent idea.

With everybody providing an unwarranted opinion and nobody taking any concrete action, my sister decided to take the matter into her hands.

Call it diplomacy, honesty or ingenuity, somehow she managed to convince everyone who mattered. But by then, it was too late. The boy who had promised her the very best for eight long years had abandoned her at the slightest hint of a rocking boat.

She was almost 30 when this happened and though she never showed it, the entire episode took a toll on her. A huge piece of her soul had been wrested. Since then, professional competence became her only agenda and she spent the next decade of her life devoted to her job. Most of the cases that she accepted dealt with women who had been mistreated, deserted, violated or abused.

It took me a while to figure out that getting justice for them probably gave her a semblance of closure.

The boy who had promised her the very best for eight long years had abandoned her at the slightest hint of a rocking boat.

Once again though questions about why she wasn’t married yet began to be raised. Nobody was willing to accept the fact that a woman could be self-dependent, single and happy. While some began to attribute her resistance to what had happened in the past, others began to suspect that this might be due to a flaw in her character. Why else would a woman possibly prefer a career over a man, right?

Realising the gravity of the situation, a number of "well-wishers" took it upon themselves to compel her for "settling down". It was already late, they said. A woman is only as significant as her biological clock, they argued. Conception of children would be difficult, they put forth. Quite clearly, her choice about what she wanted to do with her life was rendered irrelevant. Nevertheless, she did not give in.

Today, at 40, she has finally decided to take the plunge, on her own terms. She has found understanding and companionship in a man five years younger than her. Together, they’ve decided to build a home where individual freedom is placed much above in the order of priority than societal expectation.

Her story may not be extraordinary, but her resolve to battle the notions which propel patriarchy and misogyny as an everyday affair most certainly is.

In her own quiet way. One step at a time. As a living example.

Also read:Why it is impossible to separate BJP from Postcard News founder

 

Last updated: April 05, 2018 | 15:10
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