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Good parents, bad parents

desigirl | March 18, 2008

One of my former colleagues told me about a habit she had instilled in her children and I decided to adopt it straightaway as it was sound. She told me that she always told her children to have a £5 bill folded and stashed away in one of the many compartments of their purses at all times. This money was strictly for emergency and if it was used, it must be replenished asap.

The daughter, who was also a mate, told me of this time at Uni when she went out on Saturday night with her new housemates. Typically, the girls got sloshed to the gills and except for my sensible mate, none of the inebriated had a penny to spare between them. So Sensible Mate called for a taxi and bundled all of them into it and they all made their way safely home - thanks to her emergency money of £5 tucked away in her purse.

It may seem like a matter of trivial importance but after following my colleague’s advice, I know personally the number of times the £5 had come to my rescue. Whether a teen out for a night out on the tiles or a young mum with a cranky child, safety is paramount and anything that helps you be on your way is worth it.

Why am I talking about it now? I just finished reading Deepti Lamba’s well-written article on the responsibility of parents, with special regard to the Scarlett Keeling case and thought of my old colleague.  It  isn’t easy being a parent and some people do a better job of it than  others. But what sets apart a good parent from a not so good one is the fear - fear for their children’s safety. It is with your heart in your mouths that you let your child go into the world.

But that don’t mean that you hold on to them and stifle the life off them. The trick is in finding the middle ground. In Fiona MacKeown’s case, trusting your 15 year old daughter would be safe in the company of people you have known for a scant few months is nothing short of colossal stupidity. Her argument, that the Aunt who was to have kept an eye on Scarlett, was a church-going Catholic. That endorsement aside, I wonder if Ma MacKeown paused to think of the 25 year old red-blooded male, the nephew of the devout Auntie, who was also in the same house.

In Tamil, there’s a saying, “never put cotton and fire next to each other”. A simple sentiment and one the mum never thought of but 100% valid, nonetheless. You put a sexually active teen next to a man who probably thought of himself as a bit of a stud, with only an aged female as a chaperone, you are just begging for trouble. 

I have heard many a time arguments from otherwise sound people who deride the Western society and flatly say that Western parents, as a rule, are a dead loss at this parenting lark. While the Eastern ones, especially Indians (as most of these loud mouths are, more often than not, our fellow brethren, sadly) are stellar examples of parenthood. Well, I don’t think that good parenting genes are passed into our bloodstream along with the smog and grime from the Indian atmosphere. As Amrita shows clearly, bad examples of parenthood can be found everywhere - even *gasp* in India. Maybe that mother thought she was being the perfect parent by devoting so much of herself to her daughter and her daughter’s education. But did she pause to think of what sort of future she was condemning the same daughter to, when she took her life so cheaply? I don’t think so.

Good parents, bad parents, examples can be found everywhere. Geography has nothing to do with it. At the end of the day, all we can do as parents is be there for our children - in every sense of the world. Everything else, as they say, is in the lap of the Gods.

In the meantime, rest in peace all you young ‘uns who have had your life snatched away cruelly. I dedicate this poem of Dylan Thomas’ to you all:

Do not go gentle into that good night,
Old age should burn and rave at close of day;
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

Though wise men at their end know dark is right,
Because their words had forked no lightning they
Do not go gentle into that good night.

Good men, the last wave by, crying how bright
Their frail deeds might have danced in a green bay,
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

Wild men who caught and sang the sun in flight,
And learn, too late, they grieved it on its way,
Do not go gentle into that good night.

Grave men, near death, who see with blinding sight
Blind eyes could blaze like meteors and be gay,
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

And you, my father, there on the sad height,
Curse, bless, me now with your fierce tears, I pray.
Do not go gentle into that good night.
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

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6 responses

DG - my dad has the five pound rule too!

Amrita | March 19, 2008 | 4:59 am

DG - my dad has the five pound rule too! except it’s a 20 dollar bill or a hundred rupees.
I’ve been thinking of parenting and what it means all this week. specifically havent been able to get that mother and her family out of my head. I understand she was depressed and probably couldn’t even think of anything but her own pain… but can’t help but think of the child. Poor baby.


Ams - pounds, dollars or rupees, it pays to have that emergency dosh stashed somewhere safe for that rainy day, doesn’t it? I hope to drill that into my kids one day too. Smart man, your dad!

I feel for that girl who left the 2 marks question off and the disastrous ending to that. While I understand the mum was depressed (clearly!), my sympathy lies firmly with those who have to carry that mark and go on with their lives. What are the chances that the girl wouldn’t end up clinically depressed too, and if she did, who could blame her?

Yes, having that secret stash is so sensible. Parenting seems

dipali | March 19, 2008 | 8:50 am

Yes, having that secret stash is so sensible.
Parenting seems to require at least a modicum of common sense.
But if they had a common sense exam, how many parents would pass?
I wonder.


Dipali, this whole parenting lark is such a dicey thing. Who’s to know when something will blow up in our faces?
sigh

The 5 pounds is a good habit, must remember that.

Poppins | March 19, 2008 | 9:11 am

The 5 pounds is a good habit, must remember that. But the second link you’d posted had me going nuts. Really? I didn’t speak to my mom during my 10th boards because she annoyed me after a Math exam, all because I said I hadn’t done as well as I’d expected to (I got an 88 which I was happy with!).

She nagged me a bit as to what that meant and I actually just stopped talking to her and didn’t make up until the end of my exams, I hated her getting upset over MY exams. I can’t even begin to imagine what that poor kid is going though right now.. but seriously, a Doctor??


I know! It sucks to hell and back, doesn’t it? How the hell can you condemn that girl to a fate like this? I know doctors make the worst patients yadda yadda but surely somebody could have seen something and stopped it. Seriously, I cannot wrap my head around it. Poor child - destined to a lifetime of therapy. All for what? Jeez!

It is definitely scary, is parenting. As the old saying

dipali | March 19, 2008 | 4:14 pm

It is definitely scary, is parenting. As the old saying goes, ‘Put your faith in God, but keep your powder dry”.


Ha ha! good one!

I've been dying to write on poor Scarlett but putting

Inba | March 19, 2008 | 5:07 pm

I’ve been dying to write on poor Scarlett but putting it off for want of time. As the mother of a teenager almost her age, I do have a lot to say. Sigh. Btw, this panju & neruppu were already afire. This MacKeown woman KNEW her daughter was sleeping with that stud and yet chose to leave her there. Sigh :(

My mum instilled this 5 pound idea way back during our childhood. Of course, then it was Rs. 10. But it’s not working out with my Paiyan — invariably it gets translated into paneer rolls and bubble gums :-/


Inba, La MacKeown is fast becoming a Heather Mills type - coming up with more and more outlandish statements. She ought to be sent back to her parallel universe pronto.
hmm, paneer rolls or being stuck somewhere? give Paiyyan the choice.

i am so itching to do a post on scarlett..

the mad momma | April 3, 2008 | 2:23 pm

i am so itching to do a post on scarlett.. just need to gather my thoughts.


Like Ams asked, who gives a shit about the truckloads of Indian girls who suffer the same fate year after year and not just in Goa? Who champions their cause and gets them justice?
Er, that will be no one, I think.

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