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There
is no readymade, straightjacket
answer yet even though
this question has raged
India and many other
countries for 2 decades
now.
There
are clear advantages
and disadvantages to
both and ironically
each set of advantages
correspond directly
to the set of disadvantages
of the other.
The
metros today are distinctly
turning nuclear whereas
small towns and other
cities still have joint
families as part of
its culture.
What
are the advantages of
joint families? Most
importantly, children
are automatically taken
care of within joint
families with grand
parents and may be two
brothers and their wives
and kids living together
under one roof. Also
children get a lot of
exposure to people of
different natures and
values and they have
many more children to
play with and form bonds
of love and affection
with people of different
ages. This can be a
very enriching experience
during the growing up
period.
Joint
families have the advantage
of shared work, shared
finances, shared values,
old world wisdom and
modern ideas existing
side by side and intermingling
and having a chance
to balance things out
and blunting sharp edges
of any one point of
view.
Within
a joint family, members
don't think twice about
supporting each other
during difficult times,
for example sudden illness
or accident.
The
children growing up
in joint families have
the advantages of imbibing
their parent's values
but also learning from
the wisdom of older
generation.
Also
a couple can always
make plans to go out
in the evening for a
party or to meet other
friends leaving children
in the care of their
parents without much
thought or guilt. Thus
it helps them keep the
bond with their friends
and other relatives
alive.
What
makes it difficult for
a newly married couple
to live side by side
with the parents today
is the generation gap.
The conflicting set
of values become battle
ground for members which
steals the peace of
the house.
Changing
values of new generation,
changing dress code
of new generation woman
and her status as a
liberated woman and
an equal partner in
their son's life gives
older generation a sense
of unease. This is a
point of conflict many
couples must have experienced.
Couples find it easier
to live separate to
preserve peace, love
and affection rather
than letting it all
get marred by daily
clashes.
Is
it the emotional abandonment
on the part of new generation
that hurts the old parents
more or the fact of
physical separation?
This is the question
that needs to be asked.
There
are thousands of nuclear
families today comprising
of working man and woman
and young kids. Nuclear
families give couples
a sense of freedom,
an opportunity to break
free off some stifling
traditional rituals
and dogmas and purse
a lifestyle that they
want.
But
taking care of children
is a big act of jugglery
in nuclear families
and this is the central
focus in the debate
on nuclear versus joint
family. Working couples
today are ready to take
this strain to earn
privacy, space and freedom
in their lives. These
ideas are the pillars
on which nuclear families
have been built.
They
employ nannies or day
time maids to take care
of children. This is
not really a bad option.
But most mothers suffer
guilty pangs for having
left the kids in the
care of an outsider.
Why do fathers not suffer
from guilt as much as
mothers do is a question?
Is it because certain
stereotypical gender
roles are etched deep
in our psyche?
What
is good and what is
not is specific to the
members of a particular
family.
One
thing is for sure, older
generation needs to
be taken care of and
children also need love
and affection of grand
parents.
If
living separately becomes
inevitable, a middle
way should be found.
The young generation
should not emotionally
abandon their parents.
Therefore, even when
living separately, weekend
visits, week-day dinners
and lunches can become
regular features. Once
or twice a week, if
living in the same city,
couples should visit
their grand parents.
If in different cities,
regular visits to parents
should be made. Regular
phone calls and other
means of communication
should happen so that
the familial bonds never
become dead.
And
older generation should
become active in their
lives through community
programs or through
learning computers or
even taking up a part
time or full time job.
This will also keep
them engaged and relieve
the new generation from
feeling guilty about
loneliness of their
parents and burdened
that parents are dependent
on them for happiness.
More often than not,
this brings children
and their parents closer
to grand parents.
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