Today,
however, the family, as the ‘shock absorber of society, to which the bruised
and battered individual returns after doing battle with the world,’ in the
words of Alvin Toffler in his landmark work Future Shock, is going through a
transitional phase. The breakdown of the joint family has led to a loosening of extended family relationships.
The powerful mother-in-law of the joint family is emerging as the subdued
caretaker of children, helping the educated daughter-in-law augment the double
income of all upwardly mobile young couples. The large, amorphous, supportive
joint family that supported a wide variety of people and bestowed unconditional
love for the crippled, the old and the helpless, has been reduced to the
nuclear family where everyone is in sharp focus. Much like the modern corporation, there is no place to hide, no
place for passengers, and everyone has to pull their own weight. It is our
mission to restore to it its traditional role as a place of rest and healing,
albeit in a new paradigm. There should be one person in the family who can
cushion the blows of the outside world. Someone who is not too busy to listen,
give support, and manage the daily tasks of living. This could even be a paid
caregiver or cook. Networking with parents, in-laws, neighbours, domestic help
and friends is the key for working mothers.
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