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Film News on August
The deconstruction of infidelity,
courtesy Bollywood
By Lamat R. Hasan, Indo-Asian News Service
New Delhi, Aug 24 (IANS) The notion of infidelity in marriages -
a hitherto taboo subject in India - is being deconstructed like
never before after Bollywood director Karan
Johar's three-hour film "Kabhi Alvida Na Kehna" (KANK) opened to
full houses earlier this month.
News channels are going live with shows that explode the
hypocrisies of relationships gone wrong and newspapers are
dedicating the sacred edit space to debate if
marriage is a dead institution.
We have Bollywood heartthrob Shah Rukh Khan saying "marriage and
infidelity are the same" and "sometimes it is fun to flirt with
somebody's wife or husband"; author
Shobhaa Dé defending the institution of marriage, but claiming
that infidelity is a "non-issue" for today's generation; and the
very eligible Karan Johar saying "marriage is not
for me".
Shah Rukh-speak is endorsed by his fans on the web: "I totally
agree with Shah Rukh. Sometimes it is fun to flirt with
somebody's wife or husband. This brings some kind of
freshness," says G. Shobhana. Another comment by Manish reads:
"Marriage is an outdated institution. It is on its way out in
India too. The intelligent youth can see that it
does not suit this age."
In this sea of contradictions the
only clear message we get is: Every one cheats. And infidelity
after all is not a big enough reason to walk out of a
marriage/relationship.
Neshat Kaiser, a senior sociologist, who patiently sat through a
KANK show says, "I think infidelity in marriages is an
interesting theme; that's why the channels are treating
it as an issue of national importance. Who knows if the shows
are manufactured?"
Manufactured or not the shows have got everyone talking - about
infidelity, about marriage and about love.
A 24-year-old journalist thinks her chances of getting involved
with someone are "very high" after marriage. "I believe that
human beings are many-partner animals," she
reasons. But she is not willing to write off the institution of
marriage so easily for its many comforts.
Adds Anurag Basnet, 22, who works for Penguin India: "You can
cheat on your spouse as long as you don't get caught." Asked why
relationships don't last, he says, "Lots
of reasons but mainly because people get bored."
Kaiser argues that human beings are essentially promiscuous and
have always been disloyal. "From the time of Babylon we have
been cheats. There is no married man or
woman who has not thought about someone else at some point of
his/her life. If there is an element of desire even in the
thought process it amounts to infidelity."
Shinie Antony, author of "Planet Polygamous", a book about
infidelity, says: "Affairs are open-ended, a fresh slate, power
play. Like a new face cream, it's an anti-ageing
illusion, playing up a misplaced craving for spontaneity."
But infidelity is not easily defined.
"If you have a boyfriend and don't sleep with your husband, then
you are being faithful to the former, isn't it? And if a guy is
having an affair but occasionally sleeps with his
wife, technically he is sinning," adds Antony.
Under such circumstances it is best to walk out of a marriage,
suggests Kaiser, "Couples are not conjoined twins that they
cannot separate easily. A break-up is always
emancipating and liberating."
But what happens to the children?
"They did not demand to be born. So it is up to the parents to
minimise their suffering. Children are attached not due to
biological determinism but due to social
determinism. The process of parting is painful, but those who
have learnt to live with flies and mosquitoes can tackle
infidelity in marriages," argues Kaiser.
According to Dr. Sanjay Chugh, a leading psychiatrist in New
Delhi, people who are dissatisfied in marriage turn outside to
fulfil those needs. The need could be sexual
pleasure, emotional security, appreciation, approval, or plain
simple love.
Chugh says there are two types of people seeking love (or
whatever else) outside marriage.
"The first kind has a tendency to keep moving from one person to
another. The second kind has been in a state of deprivation for
long and so finally, post-saturation, they
decide to step out.
"Both kinds are looking for easy solutions without knowing what
the problem is. A person in such a situation invariably presents
himself or herself as a victim."
The fact also is that divorces are becoming more acceptable.
"We often find people walking into a marriage with the option of
divorce in mind. They are constantly trying to look for escape
routes instead of trying to understand how they
managed to invite a particular problem," he adds.
Many people feel they are married to their jobs; many more feel
they are married to their co-workers or office-spouses - as they
are now called.
So is it time to say good-bye to the institution of marriage?
"No," says Dr. Samir Parikh, chief psychiatrist, Max Healthcare.
"Family dynamics are changing, but the institution of marriage
is not dead yet. No one compromises
his/her marriage so easily."
"Every one is vulnerable to attractions - this is a lifelong
experience. Whether one has an affair or not is a different
issue. But our inhibitions are falling easily because every
one around us is doing the same thing."
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