By Sunita
Palita
As more and more women go out
to work, equations on the home front are facing turbulent weather, points out
Sunita Palita.

Rahul and Vatsala are both excellent management professionals in
their respective workplaces. At home, they are man and wife. They first met in
Singapore at a conference and with common personal and professional interests
they decided to tie the knot.
There were many deterrents, including
parental objections but they managed to overcome them. The duo earned kudos for
handling the conflict with sensitivity. Nothing then had seemed more beautiful
than this self-arranged marriage.
Three years later, Rahul and
Vatsala find themselves facing a new challenge, the ‘personality
clash’ as they call it. Rahul is in a dilemma. Ranged on two sides are an
ailing parent and move to another city and, the wife’s career and an
altered job structure. A decision in favour of one equates
‘unfairness’ to the other. The issues in focus are identity, career
and responsibility.
Does this situation warrant sacrifice? If yes,
from whom? Rahul sums up his marriage as: ‘‘Our marriage withstood
all kinds of external pressure but ‘us’ against our marriage is
ruining it
all.’’
MARRIAGES
UNDER PRESSURE
Rahul and Vatsala are not the only couple facing
critical commands from the changing role patterns of men and women today. Though
the rights and the wrongs in a marriage are always relative, more and more
marriages are crumbling under pressures demanding critical decisions in favour
of the family as a unit, while affecting one partner adversely. In most cases
though, women are seen as the worst sufferers.
But why should a woman
alone be asked to give in or why should she give up more than her husband to
make a marriage work? Is it fair to ask a woman to be the proverbial
‘sacrificial lamb’? Why should a woman’s career and her
personal desire be sacrificed at the altar of marriage? At this juncture, rises
the issue of economic
independence.
RETHINKING
REQUIRED
It is an acceptable precinct today that women be given
equal opportunities for education and employment. But behind the closed doors of
a home, equality has not stepped in fully. While not disputing that the mother
is the natural caretaker of the child, the crucial factor of joint parenting
does not go down too kindly with the present day youth.
Once married
and confronted with the actual rearing of the family, men often find it
difficult to shoulder major responsibility at home because of their job
compulsions. Long working hours impose still more pressures, making things go
from bad to worse. In similar circumstances if a woman suffers the same, she is
expected to leave the job or in the absence of a support structure at home alter
her job structure.
In fact it appears that though issues like
changing of jobs for the sake of husband and family can be handled without
reaching a breaking point, a fear grips the families when it comes to assuming
responsibility of children while both parents are away at
work.
NO
CHOICE
Many a workingwoman today is seen succumbing to emotional and
physical pressures arising out of home and work responsibilities. This, even as
a majority of women have to work because of reasons economic.
A
national level statistical update shows that 80 per cent of women in the
workforce come from the economically deprived class and are forced to work
outside home due to financial compulsions. Not undermining the contribution of
the remaining 20 per cent of women who support the intellectual strength of the
country at large, one is still under an ethical binding to speak in favour of
those who toil hard to meet their survival needs.
Isn’t it time
therefore, that if women are increasingly shouldering the burden out of home,
men learn to do the same within the home?
Got comments or questions? E-mail us
at femina@timesgroup.com with ‘versus— At Home At Work’ in
the subject line.