I did something a little “odd” a few weeks ago – “odd” in the eyes of the Pakistani society to be precise. There was
a very special family occasion back home and it was my utmost wish to be there
for the celebrations. So, my 6 year old (called Minha) and I travelled to
Pakistan while my 11 month old (called Shehrbano) and her father stayed back in
Switzerland.
Pakistani khawateen be like: “Kyaaaaaa???????”
Let me explain. In February, I
travelled to and back from Pakistan with both my children and to date, I am not
quite over the trauma. Bano didn’t sleep for 12 hours straight. Her incessant howls
throughout the plane ride made me sweat from those parts of my body where I
didn’t even know sweat glands existed. I am sure a lot of fellow passengers
would sue me for damages if the option for suing over a crying baby existed. I
had to carry her across the airport at Abu Dhabi which gave me shoulder and arm
pain for the next 3 months. True story. In the middle of this fiasco, Minha’s
unrelenting bathroom and headphone-fixing needs gave me an unwanted crash
course of professional juggling. Hence, I was in no mood to go through a
nightmarish flight again.
When I had almost decided to not
go for the family function in lieu of the scary flight forecast, my very wise
(most of the time) husband came up with a grand plan: the baby stays. I was
obviously over the moon at the prospect of getting undisturbed sleep after a
whole year and the deal was sealed without much argument taking place between
us very mature adults.
Now, since I blog, the “big news”
was revealed to my Instagram family. The messages and comments of women were
multifaceted – they wanted to understand how F agreed to do something like this
as well as how I felt while travelling without Bano.
Let’s talk about F’s agreement
first. Parenthood for us means we are in it together. With no external help or
support, both of us need to contribute equally when it comes to the children. While
sharing the diapers, showers, meals, naps and school runs, F knows the children
as much as I do. Well…almost. Based on his excellent capabilities of taking
care of his ‘own’ children, I have taken a few day trips and a weekend trip on
my own already. So, when he came up with his million-dollar idea, I knew it
wasn’t something unfathomable.
Agla mauzoo…how the experience was for me. I’d like to describe it
as GREAT. During the flight, I didn’t miss Bano one bit. I enjoyed the meal
service as well as the entertainment system. Even Minha seemed glad the baby
was with baba. “You’re so pleasant this time mama” she said. So, I am pretty
sure on the last flight, I resembled one of Khaleesi’s dragons.
During my time home, I enjoyed not
waking up for milk/crying-for-no-reason episodes multiple times in the night. It
was refreshing to be able to concentrate on myself for a change, on my clothes,
my hair and my makeup. I was able to fully enjoy the seekh kababs and my time with my family instead of dealing with the
baby’s jet lag and the guaranteed tummy bug. I even went to the spa twice. Did
I miss my little one at all? Of course. I’m a mum. I even had a crying episode.
But would I do something like this again? Hell, yes!
To conclude this piece which is
getting longer that I thought it will – why is it “odd” if a mother takes such
a break? Why was it the talk of the drawing room that I have left my baby back
in Switzerland? Kyaaaa? Baap ke paas
chorh aai? Jaisey mein kahin sarhak pe phaink aii! In fact, I was glad she
was chilling with her dad in the comfort of her home instead of going through
the fatigue of travelling.
With reference to the skipped chapter of Reproduction in biology books, if the father is as much responsible for the existence of a child as the mother, then why is childcare the responsibility of the mother alone? Why does the typical saas frown when the pyara beta ‘babysits’ the child? Why do we even use the word ‘babysit’ when the father is in question. We don’t use it for the mother…who basically babysits 24/7. Why is “mein pamper nahin badloon ga” considered okay if the pyara beta says it? Would it be okay if the bahu said the same?
With reference to the skipped chapter of Reproduction in biology books, if the father is as much responsible for the existence of a child as the mother, then why is childcare the responsibility of the mother alone? Why does the typical saas frown when the pyara beta ‘babysits’ the child? Why do we even use the word ‘babysit’ when the father is in question. We don’t use it for the mother…who basically babysits 24/7. Why is “mein pamper nahin badloon ga” considered okay if the pyara beta says it? Would it be okay if the bahu said the same?
The fact of the matter is that
when a couple decides to have a child, the child belongs to the both of them.
The diapers, the homeworks and driving-to-bithday-parties are not just the aurat ka kaam. When my husband is alone
with the kids, he says he gets to bond with them. And bonding with YOUR children
is beautiful, all you lazy daddies out there!
When I came back home and asked F
how it was managing the baby without me, he, being a man of a few words,
replied: “fit”. And yes…that was it.
This article was written for Weekend Magazine, The Nation, Pakistan.