Men in urban spaces are marrying
high-achiever women, who work hard and party harder! Are these couples burning each other out, asks Vimla Patil
Burn-out has become the biggest epidemic among young, upwardly-mobile men and women in metro India. Here is a huge number of metro-sexual men who not only drive themselves to achieve financial and personal success even as the hit the mid twenties, but also tie the knot with young women who are equally qualified and share their zest to make it big in life before they have reached their thirties.
Ambition to possess all the comforts of life is high among young achiever couples and while both drive themselves beyond their physical capacity to earn more, take more loans and pay more EMIs, they both pay the price by losing their health and peace of mind while doing this.
Life in EMIs
Vivek Bapat is one such young man. A thoroughbred Maharashtrian IIM graduate, he married his colleague Vedika Saxena. Both set up house in a flat in an upmarket suburb in Mumbai and began the hunt for a home of their own. Today, Vivek has to pay the EMIs on the flat, the car and various equipment they have in their home.
"My wife has to work as hard as me to create enough money to meet all these installments and to run the house. Our petrol bills are heavy because we live far from our place of work. Vedika works long hours and often gets home later than me. We live on snacks that we phone out for or pick up meals from 'take aways' which have proliferated in our area. This means that we live on pizzas and biryanis - all of which are very unhealthy.
Sometimes, in my rare quiet moments, I go back to my parents' home in a quiet area of Pune and love the images of my mother arranging flowers in the home and doing pooja every morning. It seems to me that Vedika and I have forgotten what it is to laugh together. We are both stressed, hyper and just want to get the money needed for our lifestyle!"
Role expectations
Vivek and Vedika are just one couple experiencing the 'burn out' of this 'work hard, party harder' age. Nilesh and Krittika are a couple with a different story. "My wife and I go partying every night," says Nilesh, who comes from Lucknow and has settled in Mumbai because the metro offers more opportunities, "Coming from the hi-fi society of Mumbai, Krittika smokes and drinks, sometimes enough to make her inebriated.
Then I have to drive her home and put her into bed for the night so that we both can go to work the next morning. I cannot stop her or reprimand her because I do this too. When we were courting and decided to get married, there was a tacit acceptance that both of us are equals and there would never be any role expectations from each other.
Yet, I find that I long to be a father, just like my own. The way Krittika is going, she has no desire to be a mother for some years to come. She dismisses the idea of motherhood as an anathema and I can't even express my unhappiness because the EMIs are staring at me all the time. If she takes leave or quits her job, we will be in big trouble. In fact, we are banking on earning a certain planned amount so that our lifestyle can be maintained and for this, both of us have to work harder."
Do these new age couples burn each other out too fast and end up breaking their relationships as well? Yes, say social counsellors, things are becoming tough for urban couples are bitten badly by the bug of equality. The roles of husband or wife - or for that matter boyfriend and girlfriend - have taken a 360 degree dramatic change in this generation of urban youth and married couples are finding it difficult to cope with the change.
Devil and deep sea
Neither are young women prepared to be 'home makers' nor are they keen on being 'traditional mothers'. These rebellious thoughts are well expressed by Maya Murjani, an IIM graduate who works at a very high job in an engineering company. "I think I am an equal of my husband in every way. In fact, my career is going better than his at the moment.
So if he gets home early, he has to cook and keep the dinner ready just as I would if I get home before him. This is the new age and men cannot complain about doing 'female' things any more. We devote time to earning money equally and he has to run the home equally. I don't know what we will do when children come but I'm living only in the present."
Most such couples live away from their parents and have less interaction with the extended family, say counsellors, because of the lifestyle they lead. They are at their workplaces till late in the evening, change in the office restroom and drive directly to the party venue. "Where is the time to visit relatives except on Diwali or a family function?" ask counsellors,
Isolation
"Naturally, this isolation from a protective, balancing environment takes a toll on the marriage or the peace of mind of both partners in an 'equal' marriage and trouble is not far away. Many couples squabble every day and eventually, blame each other for the travesty of their relationship.
The Family Court is full of couples who apply for a divorce and many of them come from such marriages where the ideal of 'equality' has proved to be the albatross around the necks of the married couple. Should they slow down their ambitions and give more time to each other and their home?
Most couples would not even think of this alternative because of their driving ambition to own a home and all the comforts of a high lifestyle at a young age which is sold relentlessly in the media. And so they live their lives with everything expect that elusive peace of mind.