| Single in the City By Lavina Melwani
They
are not married and frankly, my dear, they don't give
a damn.
They're in their
late 20's or 30-something, sometimes even early 40's.
They're not married and frankly, my dear, they don't
give a damn. Or even if they do, they're not showing
it or letting it get them down. While Indian weddings
are held just about every weekend across America,
a sizable pool of Indian Americans, especially women,
are opting to stay single into their thirties. Between
graduate school, long hours at the desk and high-pressure
jobs, between activism, art and working out at the
gym, between the media onslaught, the Internet, the
emails floating around like snowflakes, keeping up
with friends and the reality shows on TV, who even
has time to think, leave alone search for a soul mate
and get married!
A decade or two ago, these singles would have been
double, triple or even quadruple - with the mandatory
spouse and two or three juniors in tow, agonizing
about what to cook for dinner or how to fix the baby's
colic. Life was all about graduating to marriage and
motherhood.
Now singles, both male and female, tend to be more
self-absorbed, independent and living on their own
and for them, marriage is no longer the be all and
the end all of life. The new desi singles are a breed
that seems to be getting married or making commitments
later and later. In a way this echoes nationwide trends
in the United States where the average age of couples
at first marriage has grown dramatically.
According to studies conducted by the National Marriage
Project, an initiative at Rutgers University, "marriage
trends in the U.S. in recent decades indicate that
Americans have become less likely to marry, and that
fewer of those who do may have marriages they consider
to be 'very happy.'"
It cites a decline by one third between 1970 to 2001
in the marriage rate among unmarried adult women.
The median age at first marriage went from 20 for
females and 23 for males in 1960 to about 25 and 27,
respectively, in recent years. Among other factors
responsible for the decline, the report said, was
"the growth of unmarried co-habitation and a small
decrease in the tendency of divorced persons to remarry."
Indian Americans, as part of the larger American population,
reflect these trends, although one can only speculate
to what degree. But surely, this trend has to be agonizing
for Indian parents. After all, marriage is the very
anchor, bulwark and the raison d'etre of all Indian
social life; it is what defines people in the desi
scheme of things.
Safia Fatimi with
husband Ramon Munoz, a Dominican software consultant.
"Before I met him, I didn't think I could click with
someone who wasn't South Asian."
Some parents start hoarding jewelry for a baby girl
when she is born and of course, weddings are the most
important occasion of Indian life. Most parents feel
they have failed in their duties to their offspring
if they don't see them suitably settled in marriage.
They have everything in place, the guest list all
organized and all the details worked out - but where
is one half of the bridal couple? "The reason why
people are getting married later in the Indian community
is basically the same as why they're doing it in the
Euro-American community," says Dr. Sangeeta Gupta,
who received her Ph.D. from University of California
at Los Angeles and whose research includes cross-cultural
issues and immigrant family dynamics.
"And that's because women are working, they've got
careers and they are trying to find partners on their
own - that's their preference. Realize also that Indian
American women are the most educated group of women
in this country so as they are going to graduate school
that also delays marriage to a large part."
Many other complex reasons are also responsible for
Indian women delaying marriage - and one of the most
fundamental is finding a person who not only fits
their own criteria but also that of their parents.
Says Gupta: "Indian parents would prefer to make the
choice for their children, but they don't realize
that that no longer applies to the generation of Indian
Americans that we have who are currently of marriageable
age. More than 90 percent of them reject the arranged
marriage system."
She recalled the case of a 34-year-old woman who's
been in a live-in relationship with her American boyfriend
for 14 years: "Her parents won't even speak to her
partner - they refuse to meet him. The couple is now
getting married next year." While such extreme cases
are rare, parental opposition is often a stumbling
block to marriage.
Sangeeta Gupta: they
reject the notion that love comes after marriage.
During her research, Gupta found that when the children
were in their 20's, parents were often very specific
in that they wanted them to marry not only someone
who was Indian, but also from their community and
caste. Sometimes the children went along and tried
it and were introduced to people, sometimes they'd
refused. Other times it just didn't work out, and
children delayed marriage, citing careers or school.
Indeed, most young Indian Americans don't care about
caste and it just tends to narrows the field.
Once the children start hitting the late 20's and
30's, the parents start loosening their criteria.
As one father whose daughter is now in her early 40's
and unmarried, said, "We just wanted her to marry
an Indian, but now I don't care whom she marries."
A 1990 study "Sex in America" interviewed thousands
of people across the country and it showed that most
people - no matter where they come from - want their
children to marry someone within their own ethnic
group.
Says Gupta, "So Indians are no different from any
other group. The problem is that there is a very small
number of Indians in this country, even though we've
reached a good percentage point. When you think of
a population of 2 million versus a population of 300
million, it's a small group. So you've got the logistics
against you." Not enough people are within that pool
so it makes it difficult to find someone from the
same community and when age and education are factored
in, it's even harder.
"Having just come off a summer where I attended eight
weddings, I don't know if it's necessarily that people
aren't getting married," says S. Mitra Kalita, 27,
a reporter with the Washington Post who grew up in
this country although she has visited India several
times. "The majority of the Indian weddings I went
to were ones where they were marrying white Americans,
and I have a large number of female Indian friends
in their mid to early 30's. It's not that they don't
want to get married, but they can't find the right
person. I am sort of starting to count myself in that
group."
Although Kalita doesn't speak for a whole generation,
she thinks that her story might be echoed in the lives
of many young women who have put their careers first.
"My mother came to follow my father and I think her
dream was that her daughter would not have to follow
anybody, that her daughter would make it on her own.
So I grew up very much with the message: study hard
and be successful. My mother would tell people that
her daughter can't cook, but she can read lots of
books. So it became this mantra she was very proud
of."
S M. Mitra Kalita:
We are grappling with wanting everything.
Once Kalita hit 26, and began a upward climb professionally,
her mother's attitude changed: "She sees the weddings
going on, and really wishes her daughter were a part
of that. Like many mothers, she wonders if she should
have emphasized independence so much, and not the
domestic side as well. I think the message earlier
was 'You do whatever you want,' but except after 25,
now the message is 'Do whatever you want as long as
you get married - please!"
Unlike men, women have the nettlesome biological clock
to deal with and if they have goals in life or aspire
to certain heights in their career then they are really
not left with a lot of time. Says Kalita: "There are
a lot of Indian women out there who are doing amazing
things and we, like our western counterparts, are
grappling with wanting everything. We want to have
a successful career, we want to have a man who supports
us, and we want to have a family life that's stable
and balanced.
"I think what's different with Indian women is that
we also have a whole lot of parental pressure to get
married and we also have the outlets available to
us, like online dating, matrimonial websites and arranged
introductions."
Parents keep pushing suitable candidates forward and
then wonder why their children don't like them. Says
Gupta: "But what Indian Americans are looking for
is some kind of chemistry; they want a different type
of relationship based on companionship and love. They
reject the premise that love comes after marriage.
The fact of not accepting arranged marriage has more
to do with being brought up in this culture, maybe
seeing the marriages of their parents' generation,
and also wanting the idealized love marriage that
you see in Hindi movies all the time."
Some marriages that do take place are undone by patriarchal
attitudes where there is no common meeting ground.
Are a lot of young Indians singles again because of
divorce? Gupta, who won the Cary McWilliams Award
for her research on divorce among Indian American
women, says that the last census data showed that
Indian Americans were getting divorced at a higher
rate than their parents: "The divorce rate is rising
so you will see more singles in their late 30's and
early 40's."
She finds age discrimination too working against women:
"It's OK for a man to be looking for a partner in
his mid and late 30's but if the girl is in her late
30's she's got to marry someone in his early 40's
or at least few years older than her. Parents are
not going to arrange something like that - they are
still at the point where they are matching horoscopes!"
They aren't enough
Indians in the pool.
Kalita agrees that Indian American women have it harder
than men, because males can go down to India and find
somebody and that doesn't happen with the women. "Every
now and then I hear of an eligible Assamese man who
lives in New Delhi, and I say, no, I can't do that.
I see a lot of my friends are in the same predicament
where we can't fathom going back to India to get married
whereas for our brothers, I think it's definitely
more of an option. We fear being with a man with really
traditional Indian values, which wouldn't fit with
the model we grew up with in pretty liberal Indian
households."
Myna Mukherjee, 29, who founded a classical dance
theater company called Nayika in New York, says that
career demands can also derail marriage plans. "Running
a theater company is so demanding and it's a very
nomadic lifestyle. I was engaged once, but I realized
it's so hard to do justice to a marriage and run a
theater company. There was a lot of pressure to get
married. My parents are also very conservative so
I'd rather be single and do what I want than be married
and then perhaps have to go through divorce. I've
seen just too many friends go down this route."
While most women would prefer to marry within their
own community, love often just happens with someone
from across the cultural divide. Safia Fatimi, 30,
is a successful commercial photographer who's done
shoots for Sony Music, Vibe and Glamour and is also
embarking on her masters in education at Columbia.
Her mother is Nepalese from India and her father is
Pakistani, yet when she herself got married two years
ago, it was to someone far from her heritage. It was
hard finding South Asian men who were on the same
page as her.
"It was just that these men didn't understand what
I did and they didn't take it seriously," she recalls.
"They thought it was a hobby and so it was really
hard for me to relate to them. I got to the point
I'd become skeptical every time I met someone new.
It was also probably my attitude - I'm pretty westernized
and I'm not as traditional probably as the guys I
met would have liked."
When she met Ramon Munoz, a Dominican software consultant,
she knew it was just right: "Before I met him, I didn't
think I could click with someone who wasn't South
Asian for there wouldn't be a common denominator,
but that just shows how ignorant I was. He's incredibly
supportive of what I'm doing and open-minded about
everything. I'm just very lucky to have found him."
Prerana Reddy with
her Lebanese boyfriend Jawad Metni: I wanted to explore
my career and do something that was a little unconventional.
Prerana Reddy, program administrator for the African
Film Festival, is 28 and she hasn't found time for
marriage either. She lives with Jawad Metni, her Lebanese
boyfriend and finds the situation quite satisfactory.
"I wanted to explore my career and do something that
was a little unconventional, which is working in arts,
non-profits, and doing freelance work," she says.
"The hours were crazy and the job security was non-existent
so I needed to spend more time toward what was important
to me. It is hard to think of marriage when you have
that kind of focus."
The daughter of liberal parents, she never felt the
pressure to conform. Her mother had been married and
divorced as a young girl and because of that traumatic
experience has never pushed Reddy to rush into a hasty
marriage. "My parents have been here 26 years and
they would never insist on me finding someone Indian
or South Asian. My grandparents probably would, but
they are living in India. I've been with my boyfriend
for nearly five years now and being in New York and
in the U.S., you can live together, you can try it
out. "It's a gradual thing, there's no rush to jump
into marriage. There's no social pressure that marriage
is the only thing. We are just allowed to take things
slowly and see how things work before we jump into
marriage." She questions the security of marriage,
given the number of divorces taking place and feels
it's not much more than the security which already
exists when two people make a commitment to each other,
without the legality of marriage.
"My family who've met my partner love him - there's
no issue," she says. "They see it as a life step and
this is a sequence that happens. Grandparents, however,
can't relax until you're settled and settled means
married, even if you're living with somebody and you've
had the same job for five years - in their minds,
you're not settled till you are married."
Indeed, most Indian parents have weddings as the primary
thought on their minds for their sons or daughters.
As Anand, a teacher in New York who did not want to
use his real name, observed, "I'm 27, male, never
married, and born in Chicago to Telugu parents who
have stepped up their marriage-plan inquisition a
notch recently." Even though he grew up in America,
the language spoken at home was Telegu; he went to
the temple regularly and had his grandparents living
in the home. Although he has merged his two worlds,
he draws the line at the pressure to tie the knot
through arranged introductions.
"Part of it is that often people in my position feel
uncomfortably pushed and pulled because I have my
own script about what I want to do and my parents'
ideas are more traditional, more long term and conservative."
He's pressurized to meet suitable girls regularly
and as he puts it, "It's kind of awkward, because
you're expected to talk to someone for the first time
and think about things that by American standards
are very long term."
He also has women friends who are marrying late for
some of the same reasons. "It's not just an economical
or social relationship - it's emotional, it's personal
- they want to marry the right person. It's the same
for men," says Anand. "For people in my position,
there are things which we can do, professionally and
academically, that are not dependent on being the
patriarch of a family. Post 65 immigrants have a set
of values that is not shared by the whole community,
that's where I'm coming from."
Myna Mukherjee (center).
It's hard to do justice to a marriage and run a theater
company.
He adds, "It's not necessarily a matter of age, but
if you look at it from a traditional mind set, then
there's an age by which you should get married. I
personally think people are much more different than
that and so you can't say there's an age by which
everyone should get married."
The process of finding the right person can sometimes
be painful, like a root canal, and it's no surprise
that many young women have horror stories to tell.
Neera, who declined to give her real name, is in the
software business. She said, "The expectations of
society and family are changing for women and I think
this is a very stressful thing. Women are now expected
to not only take care of their homes, their husbands,
their kids, but are also expected to be well educated
and have 'respectful' careers. It gives the in-laws
the ability to boast about their daughter-in-law,
if she is educated." She points out that the daughters
of new immigrants who come to Canada and the U.S.
and are struggling to find their economic footing,
get it rougher as the parents want to get them married
quickly and not place that much emphasis on education:
"We all search for the best package, and we could
end up waiting a long time to get that package we
are looking for. Those women who have waited beyond
the 'expected' age to get married, are meeting men
their age who end up marrying someone from India,
or someone much younger, and this leaves the women
to be waiting for quite some time."
There is also a darker side to some relationships.
As Neera describes it, "How are you ever sure if you
are with the right person, when your benchmark is
of abusive men, telling you what you should do, and
not what you want to do. So, we end up going through
one bad relationship after another, and then before
we know it, we are older and have passed the 'marriage
age.'"
For some singles putting off marriage it is figuring
out their sexual orientation. Aradhana, not her real
name, is bi-sexual and is dating a woman with whom
she's in a very committed relationship. She says,
"The idea of stability coming from marriage is changing
because the number of divorces is increasing so much,
even in the South Asian community, that I think women
are realizing that stability can be in many other
forms, other than marriage. It's something that you
have to look for within yourself rather than in a
partner, although it's nice to share a life with someone."
And so life goes on: the glossy wedding cards with
the auspicious Ganeshas stamped on them keep arriving
in the mail, giving the parents of unmarried children
a feeling of panic. And the singles rush on in their
life of hurry and scurry, seemingly with no time or
inclination to give in to their parents' demands.
Indeed, this generation of Indian Americans is looking
for something very different from the relationships
of their parents' generation, and that takes time
to find. As they move through dating relationships,
like the larger population, they are also often finding
themselves in agonizing relationships that are falling
apart or are just not what they hoped they'd be.
And so as they try to connect in a swirl of strangers,
finding the right person becomes a challenge, and
time moves on.
Oh, the beautiful simplicity of the village matchmaker,
where the bride and groom had nothing to do but show
up for the nuptials! "I think it's a difficult situation
for both sides, for parents and for the younger generation,
in the sense the parents really, truly want the children
to be happy and the children want the approval and
acceptance of their parents," says Sangeeta Gupta.
"The parents have to accept the fact that their children
are being raised in a different country, that it was
their choice to bring them here and they are not going
to do the same thing their parents did. What I would
like to see is more dialogue between the two generations,
with both really talking and listening to each other."
And in the listening and the talking, mothers and
daughters may finally realize that their dreams and
desires are not that far apart, and that happiness
can come in many different forms.
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