OPINION
The Indian Man
August 25, 2008
IdeaSmith
IdeaSmith
I remember reading a review of Honeymoon Travels which described KK Menon's character as thus:
He isn't quite a male chauvinist, just an Indian man.I didn't quite get that at the time. Then I saw the movie and thought I understood a bit of what the reviewer was trying to say. KK Menon's Partho is a stiff-necked prude with very propah notions of behavior (for the Indian woman). He is quite unfortunately (for him) married to a vivacious Milly who tests his patience, shocks him with her uninhibitedness and generally keeps him quite jumpy. Change in the known order and spontaneity are not things that Partho symbolizing the Indian man, is comfortable with.
Recently, I was having a conversation with a friend, about the situation of 'going too far and too fast'. He shared a personal experience of that type saying,
We were on our second date and things happened. That was really too fast. But she didn't protest at all so I went ahead.I had to stop him because I didn't think he realized what he was saying. That perhaps it wasn't 'too fast' for her. And that if it was 'too fast' for him, he didn't have to wait for her to stop; he could pull a stop sign himself. He looked at me as if the very thought had never occurred to him.
Oh well, Indian men. We deplore their ways, we roll our eyes at their habits but we love and live with them. I've resigned myself to the fact that 'Mama's boy' is not only a fitting description for every man of this species but also that most of them consider it a supreme honor higher than the President's medal.
The Indian man can be sweetly (and not so sweetly) ignorant of the female anatomy. Or he can be a regular Don Juan. But either way, he'll still be extremely startled when the woman climbs atop him and demands more. The Indian man, no matter how educated, liberated or metrosexual is completely unfamiliar with the concept of female sexuality.
A lot of Indian men are prudes. Oh right, they may make their lascivious remarks, their lecherous jokes and their elbow-nudging antics may drive us up the wall. But all of that is just bravado, a need to fit in with the peer group, no matter how old they are. At heart, it seems like they've all got issues with their own bodies which might be one reason they approach their partner's body the way a teenager might - tentatively, furtively, clumsily and quickly.
So now that I've derided the Indian man's approach to sex, let me tell you what I do find likable about him.
The Indian women is definitely the driving force even if she isn't exactly in the driver's seat. After all the feminist sirens from Bengal, the women auto-rickshaw drivers in Tamil Nadu, the demure-but-independent nurses from Kerala, the 'homely'/shrewd Gujju girls all live with Indian men. They have fathers, brothers, husbands and sons. Sometimes I think feminism and women empowerment just manifest themselves in unique ways in India, but exist they do. We've perfected the art of backseat driving in a lot of other areas of our lives.
The Indian man, he's quite green in this whole modern-world thing but he can be taught. Yes, beneath the somber pinstripes and the flashy gizmos, our desi Neanderthal man lurks but with some firm, tactful handling this man can actually be trained to be a worthwhile human being. I think I'd be right in saying that a lot of times our men hold us back. But in some ways, they are our safety valves, our terra firma. After all, they are also our papas who stay distant all through our childhood then run away to sob in silence when we get married, our protective bade-bhaiyyas who will just never learn that little sister grew up a long time back and doesn't always need a bodyguard, our mischievous but fond chote devvars and well the patis if not parmeshwar.
Quite tellingly, at the end of Honeymoon Travels, Partho in a rare bare-all moment tells Milly that he is intimidated by her, afraid of losing her to her spontaneity, afraid of letting go of terra firma. Hmm, quite touching and sweet actually.
I guess what I'm trying to say is that the Indian man isn't at the forefront of his kind but maybe we, the Indian women, don't need him to be.
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Abha
URL
August 25, 2008
07:16 AM
Great piece, made me laugh out loud a few times. I agree with everything you say here and your last line concludes it perfectly.
For the reasons you say, I wonder if I will ever last with an Indian man...but my parents think that when I realise that all his "Indian-ness" is actually what will keep us together, that's when it will work. Sigh.
smallsquirrel
August 25, 2008
12:51 PM
So are you telling me that my husband is the only exception to everything you've mentioned here, or.....
Come to think of it, I know a lot of guys who do not fit your stereotypes here. Hmmm... not sure what to say.
kerty
August 25, 2008
05:26 PM
Indian women enjoy soft power that men can only envy about.
As they say, first 10 years of married relationship belong to men where men dominate women, and women let men inflate their ego till they burst. The second 10 years belong to both of them as women domesticate the men down to their size by their love, suffering, endurance, sacrifices. But rest of the years belong to women and women alone. Women by now know every trick and tactic to dominate and subdue their men - women by now know all the weak and vulnerable points and hot spots of their men and know how to press them enough to make their men dance to their tunes. Men may hold an illusion of power, being strong - but real power is wielded by women in a family. Ask mightiest men who is one person they can not live without and sigle most source of their strength - most probably it will be some woman in their life.
temporal
URL
August 26, 2008
12:29 AM
heheh
good one IS:)
ss:
the truth is either one can be on top at any given time (said with tongue in cheek)
but not both at the same time....that is what perhaps she means in her unique way?
IdeaSmith
URL
August 27, 2008
04:12 AM
@ Abha: That's an interesting perspective. I guess for all my cribbing, it's the very 'Indianness' of the man that draws me.
@ smallsquirrel: I don't know your husband but yes, every rule has its exceptions.
@ kerty: :-) Thank you for the validation.
@ temporal: LOL!
Rakhi
August 31, 2008
02:24 PM
High five for ya I!! :) This is one helluva piece! Gotta send the link to the Neanderthals I know. Muahahahaha! :D
bharati
URL
September 22, 2008
06:51 AM
Sigh when will Indian men realise that Indian women hold them in contempt.
too late I guess becuase they are too busy getting themselves high blood pressure workig and trying to keep her in over material comforts.
After as Justice Dhingra of Delhi said all a even a women demand even aftre earning herslef Rs 80000 per month is more money
kerty
September 22, 2008
10:15 AM
Bharati
Making a distinction between men/women in general and men/women who suffer from certain malafide orientation or men/women who act certain way because they are caught in a broken relationship is important in order to diagnose the problems correctly, or else bogus ideologies that rest on false diagnosis and false remedies would be more than happy to kill the patient in the name of saving and empowering him/her.
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