2. Dressing up. Dressing too casually will freak your parents out and dressing too heavily might have you mistaken for Meera. And even using that as an argument doesn’t get you out of it.
3. The weird aunties. Some auntie will eye you from a hundred tables away despite your efforts to hide yourself. Even if you’re wearing a bored-to-death look that’ll make Kristen Stewart look hyperactive, said auntie will approach you and take in every detail of your time on earth from you, before moving on to verify your bona fides from the hosts and the people passing by — yes, even them.
4. Having your mother approached. The same auntie will want to meet your mother. Urgently. Yes, she has an unmarried idiot of a son she needs to rid herself of.
5. The gawking. Every fat, middle-aged, mustachioed, beady-eyed man will gawk at you till you wish you could drop dead. So what if his wife is sitting right beside him?
6. Being unable to dance. Despite badly wanting to dance, you can’t because these people are complete strangers. So you sit there and watch all these bimbos dancing to the latest Indian tunes, in the latest Indian styles, in almost the latest Indian clothes. Hey! We’re Muslims, there ARE limits.
7. Arguing with the parents. You whine, sigh, groan, grunt, snort, until you catch your parents’ attention. You explain how you detest every second of being there, and they tell you it’s just a matter of another hour. Then you have a staring contest. Your parents win.
8. The forced courtesy. People mistake you as someone else and tell you all about what’s been up with them recently before allowing you to tell them you’re someone else.
9. Not being able to eat. By the time dinner is served you offer a little prayer of thanks, only to find that auntie has found her way back to you. You leave the food and run. She’ll run after you. Mind you osteoporosis doesn’t have an incidence rate of a 100 per cent. Auntie will manage to corner you and have you meet her son.
10. You know the son. Need I say more?
Published in The Express Tribune, Sunday Magazine, August 28th, 2011.
COMMENTS (19)
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We don't know the son!... Does anybody reading this know the son???
And if you're a hijabi and a teenage, both at the same time. Aunties will take it the other way. Why does she cover her head? duh!
"Life is like a penny and you only get to spend it once"
Live a little dude no need to sulk and groan, snort, moan etc....Life is too short for petty grievances, you wanna dance, then go dance...don't be entrapped by dogma. Go ahead and enjoy your life, because in the end when you get old, all you'll have will be your memories and I'm sure sure you want them to be good rather than regretting that you could've done something.
very well written .. awes0me :D
I hear a sarcastic laugh
Lolzz........ I am soo loving this :)
This is so true!!! lolz...
Such aunties are much more of a devil when they point your girl(from a man's perspective) and offer's their mother with a proposal even before one can ask for the said girl for himself. Aunties really do make things miserable.
Dance, be free. Those limits were designed to keep women suppressed.
Good observation by writer
Great one :D
very well written
Story of my life :P
none of us is that important to the AUNTEEZ and none of the AUNTEEZ are that free to give u that much importance so chill. u want to dance so badly and still u r calling them bimbos and reminding them their religion (ofcourse u guys hv same religion)
bleh.
this is so freaking true =p
haha right