"PAYAL LAL,
get up! GET UP, NOW! Do you have any idea how much I studied when I was your
age? I woke up at 5 a.m. every morning. And look at you. Still sleeping."
This is the
story of every one of my Saturday mornings. Every one of them. On the Saturdays
my parents have to work, I hear them in my dreams. My parents, live in another
world altogether. They get up at 5 a.m. every morning, even if they have
nothing specific to do. I don’t even do that if my facebook account gets
hacked.
Welcome to
India-a country where the parents are too Indian and the children are too
American
Being part
of generation Y, I can tell you based on experience, it is a combination that
doesn’t go well at all. It’s like having Punjabi food with South Indian food.
Allow me to
tell you why.
Every now
and then my mom barges into my room, see me sitting around and says
“Sitting
around on your bed, talking on the phone and whiling away time on your laptop. I
knew we shouldn’t have given it to you. Stupid useless distractions. I had none
at all when I was your age “
Okay, MOM,
first of all, a laptop or a cell phone did not even exist when you were my age.
There is no way you could have had it. You learnt how to use it about the same
time I did.
Secondly, I
could be doing something productive. Don’t just walk into my room and assume
stuff. I could be discussing the terrible conditions of the Greek economy on my
phone and researching about the Middle Eastern uprisings. I’m not. I actually
just talking to my friend on the phone and chatting with a few others on
facebook. But whatever. Don’t assume stuff.
Not only do
they not like the idea of a laptop or cell phone with their child, but also,
they donot know how to use it.
It’s
understandable considering the circumstances that existed when they were kids. Terrible
circumstances! Worse than poverty!
The other day, I was trying to figure out the deal with these middle eastern countries. I was researching on google.
I asked my
dad who was sitting besides me, “Papa, was Iran earlier called Persia?”
But before
my dad answered, I had already looked up the answer on the web.
When my dad
was my age, he would probably not have bothered to make an effort to find an
answer to such a question. Not because, it was a stupid question, but because
the effort would not have been worth it. He would have to get up, go to the
bookshelf, open the bookshelf, find an atlas, open it, look through the index, find
the right page number, then browse through all the text and then he’d have his
answer. By then Iran would have changed it’s name again! All I had to do was
type two words into google.
And it isn’t
just the computer which had changed things, it’s the cell phone as well.
Commonly known to be a maniac among parents, it’s dearer to us than our own
lives. While they take hours to send a two word text, it takes us seconds to do
the same. If they were to send the same number of tects that we do in one day,
that’s probably all they would do that day. Baby’s today are probably born with
their fingers moving that way. Part of evolution you see.
Facebook is
another hilarious example of the generation gap. My parents joined facebook
much later than I did. And they didn’t seem to like the idea that everyone
could see their profile picture and all their friends could see what they wrote
on people’s wall. When my mom realized this she said “What? What if Vanita sees
what I wrote about her on Renu’s wall? Wont she feel bad?”
They have
been accustomed to emailing. One of my
uncles whose on my facebook friends list has a habit of writing comments in the
form of letters. I once wrote on his wall “Happy Birthday”. The next day when I
logged in I had a bunch of notifications. So I clicked on them and I found that
he had commented on that wall post. He had written
“Dear Payal,
Thank you
for your wishes.
Hope you are
doing well.
Love.
Mama"
Anyone else
would just write thanks. At most a thank you and a smiley.
So it isn’t
only the age gap that creates such differences. It’s also the change of trend.
What our parents did at our age, we wouldn’t even dream of doing. That would
make us a different species altogether. I would call them Boro sapiens.
Gen Y thinks
their parents are impractical, overly conservative, boring. On the other hand,
the oldies complain all the time, about how the younger generation is lazy and
spoilt. We have all been grown up in different environments and different
mindsets. In India, the kind of change that occurred over the last 20 years,
makes 1 generation gap equal to 5. The
generation gap does not allow us to see eye to eye on much, unless we try to
think from their point of view once in a while.
Everyone is
the way they are because of a reason. It’s their background or their upbringing
that makes them that way. Therefore they have a different point of view. That’s
why we are so different from our parents. We have grown up in such diverse
environments.
Next time
you are talking to people who you don’t see eye to eye with, be it people from
the older or younger generation or anyone else, wait for a second before you
pick up an argument with them and put yourself in their shoes. Maybe you’ll
realize that they are right in their own old ways.
(also published in the Hindu : http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/open-page/article2442489.ece)
(also published in the Hindu : http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/open-page/article2442489.ece)
1 comment:
I have no idea you are so famous.
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