Sunday 8 September 2013

On Dealing With Marital Troubles



Prequel to Some warnings on dealing with marital problems

Dear Boys and Girls

Expectations are very different these days from a marriage and from spouses. Quite rightly these will be changing and some will struggle to cope. It is true that often the trigger is trivial which blows up into rows which may lead to permanent hurt and its effects (separation, divorce etc)


We face trivia and put up with it all the time (stuff related to neighbours, friends, relatives, traffic, work place, et al) yet we sometimes find it difficult to cope when it happens due to your spouse. Reflect on that.



They also say once you are married a bad marriage is better than no marriage at all. It is not always true but I have seen cases where people have put up with terrible behaviour in the past and now live happy lives with the same spouse. You see times change things could get better over a period of time or you could simply get used to (thick skinned) as a trade off for any other benefits (social, financial, stability, money, visa, kids, etc). Sounds awful but it is practical truth.



Of course this does not mean you should not have some clear cut red lines. Some common red lines are:


Violence (physical)
Unrevealed/hidden history of pre-existing and persisting alcoholism or serious persisting sexually transmitted disease or addictive drug usage
Adultery


To these many add their own personal red lines - go easy on personal red lines - do not make it so harsh that it is easy to fail - after all it affects both of you. What are your personal red lines?


Remember that (mother)-in-law is only good in small doses in any situation especially when the situation is turning bad. Avoiding references to in-laws or parents (and other family members) is actually a decent thing to do when having a row as it always escalates a dispute (often even when the reference is a positive one).


Be very forgiving, be very tolerant.


Marriage is a very strange thing - two people of the opposite sex (overwhelmingly) who are essentially strangers (in most cases even when you think you know the person) decide to share everything hopefully for the rest of their lives. If there was no such thing as marriage and you were creating one today on the above principle most reasonable people would say it was a mad unworkable idea. So most of us who are married, who hope to be married or who were married are all miracle workers (and it is no surprise that sometimes these miracles do not happen - that is not a failure but it is more likely a default position).



Okay. I have said enough. I must reveal that the main reason I wrote this prequel was because I have received a few private emails after I posted the below in a British-Indian doctors forum with people briefly describing their difficulties and thanking me for doing my original post. My thoughts and prayers are with them. I thought if that previous post has provoked thought in a few this might also be some food for thought for others.





WARNINGS ON DEALING WITH MARITAL DIFFICULTIES
Especially relevant to doctors in UK (even more so for doctors or Indian/Asian origin)



Dear Boys and Girls

Actually I write this quite seriously.

When you are married, sometimes for some people, things do not go so well. For some it gets so problematic that you consider leaving or actually leave your spouse (separation, divorce). This always uncomfortable often unpleasant.

During this process a common emotion is anger. Tempers flare. Real or perceived slights, insults, words, actions, emotions can cause quite severe long term harm to the psyche. It can be so bad that you want to retaliate and do so in a way that hurts the other person really badly. Some go ahead and really retaliate.

Now this is where it get really complex and ugly. For doctors please remember once you start off on an angry path or retaliation to your estranged or to be estranged spouse you are not going down the drain alone, your career goes down the drain with you. At least in UK.

At the risk of provoking a degeneration into a gender bias debate - which is not my intention it will be reasonable to say that though things are eventually quite fair in UK systems when they deal with this issue, often in the initial stages the benefit of doubt is towards women. Given the broader context and history of the issue that may be acceptable.

If you are Indian man and your spouse decides to take the debate across to India, it can get very murky not just for you but for your family as well - I believe the laws are different in India and apparently for good reason. Though I learn that some men feel that these laws are not always applied evenhandedly.

Now, why I am I writing this. I have had the occasion to support and advice boys and girls who were having marital difficulty to put euphemistically, directly and indirectly. I have also supported and advised people who were dealing with such boys and girls.  I can tell you it is very messy.

This does not mean boys and girls will never have to separate or divorce - that will happen from time to time. What I recommend to doctors (and anyone for that matter) is to keep it decent and polite.

I have been told about abusive vulgar intimidating language used (which was recorded), texts sent, emails sent (obviously those are records as well); police being involved, hospital security being called (that will be evidence for or against one party). Once anger turns into words, letters, sounds, threats, it very soon becomes actually or potentially illegal. The police wants to know that and for doctors the GMC wants to know that. There have been some pathetic attempts by some boys and girls to get the home office involved to use the visa status as another item of ammunition in their battles; after all at this stage it becomes a personal power game.

You do not want arrests, cautions, investigations, prosecutions, convictions, GMC hearings, monitoring programs, etc. You know its not good for you.

I am not the expert in this, luckily I have not seen too many boys and girls like in this situation, However, here is what I have to say - keep it polite, keep it civil, keep it legal. Do not threaten anything (threatening is what the weak minded do when they get irrational). Stay calm, stay stable, stay rational. It is not worth the hassle especially for a man or a woman who is decided to leave you or has left you or if you have decided or actually left a man or woman.

In reality, if it is so bad that you have to leave somebody or someone is leaving you, the more appropriate reaction might be to think what the future might bring, how bright the future might be; an anticipation of peace, quiet, new adventure, happiness (or at least the lack of sadness) and so on.


Behaving badly in a troublesome situation quite simply multiplies your agony.


© HEMADRI
Follow me on twitter @HemadriTweets

PS: BTW alcohol and (mother)-in-law topics usually makes these situations worse; stay away from those.

Monday 6 May 2013

Kolaveri & Soup Boys

Kolaveri Di - sang by Dhanush, music by Anirudh for the film 3 (Moonu - meaning Three) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YR12Z8f1Dh8 was a raging international sensation. In 10 days it had 5 million hits; the official version now has more than 68 million hits, if you count all the versions it probably touches or crosses 100 million. Belly achingly hilarious.

But what the hell do those lyrics mean? You need to be really local to Chennai, to get into the heart of the song, to feel the underbelly of the true meaning. I tell you the meaning is even more hilarious.

'Kolaveri' is literally translated into 'murderous rage'. In Chennai lingo thats not what it means - Kolaveri is the feeling of something unreasonable that provokes you to retaliate unreasonably. Mind you its only a feeling, when it translates into action of actually doing something to retaliate unreasonable, the term 'kolaveri' is not normally used (at least in a trivial sense). So when Dhanush sings 'Why this Kolaveri Di?' all it means is 'Why did you do this to me?'

Okay. So what about 'Soup boys'.

The soup in the song does not mean the soup that is made or served during a meal. No. It means a messed up situation and hence soup boys refers to young men whose life is distorted by difficulties in romantic relationships which may be real or imagined.

In Tamil if you said soup it means suck as in thumb sucking or slurp as in slurping down a soup. The soup boys hence simply alludes to the young men who are at various stages of rejection and are trying to cope; like a child does by sticking a thumb in its mouth and sucking it. It alludes to varying degrees of helplessness, frustration, feelings of powerlessness, sulking, inability to act and so on - usually of a temporary nature.

Most 'soup boys' do suffer from 'Kolaveri' and if you had 'Kolaveri' you are best advised to use the 'soup boy' technique to get over it.

Go Chennai (I still like Madras)

©M HEMADRI 
Follow me on twitter @HemadriTweets

Tuesday 2 April 2013

Eating in Florence

Florence or Firenze as Italians know it, is of course full of history and beauty.

On a recent visit which was marred by rain - never mind history or beauty all we wanted was some good food to eat when we were given time by our tour guide. On a search of menus, this one had no pizza on the menu.

An Italian restaurant in the middle of a tourist area with no pizza in the menu has to have two things going for itself - good cooking and great confidence. Turns out they had oodles of both.

Casa Toscana http://www.trattoriacasatoscana.it/home_eng.html great food, great service, very reasonable prices, friendly staff.

I was vegetarian for the day which limits my choice and yet the bruschetta al pommodoro e basilico, tagliatelle with mushrooms, pana cotta (with chocolate sauce), tiramisu ending with espresso were simply supreme

We went to Firenze with the aim of seeing some history - it was so enjoyable we ended up tasting history as well.







©M HEMADRI 
Follow me on twitter @HemadriTweets