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            I Love You, But  We Cannot Be 
              I am an Indian girl, and this is the burden I have been raised to bear. 
            
            by Archeeta  Pujari  
            I  love the way your blue eyes twinkle with emotion, and the freckles of your nose  dance as you wrinkle it in delight at the sight of me. 
                          But you see, I am Indian, and you are not, and  although the colour of my skin makes not the slightest difference to you, for  me it is a different story. By virtue of the simple fact that I was born as a  girl, to Indian parents, I carry upon my shoulders, the burden of centuries of  expectations, traditions, rituals and responsibilities that every Indian girl  must bear from birth till death. 
                          I was two years old when my parents left the  shores of India forever and came here to build a new life for themselves. This  was the land of dreams and opportunities; it offered them a future that India  never could. The air was cool and temperate, not hot, damp and sweaty; the  children were plump, fair and healthy, not weedy and malnourished; and the  streets were clean and litter free, not writhing with the tangled limbs of the  handicapped, destitute and starving. 
                          I went to school with the white kids. We  played together in the blissful lighthearted way that only very small children  can, but I was always reminded that I was not one of them. Their kind was to be  treated with suspicion, with their depraved concepts of single parenthood,  divorce, boyfriends, pubs, gay rights and female bus drivers. We could live in  their country, eat their food, ride their trains and occupy positions in their  companies, but we remained apart from them, lest we be tempted by their sinful  lifestyle and carefree ways. I was different, you see, I was an Indian girl. 
                          I did not go for sleepovers with my friends,  as their parents, however friendly, could not be trusted. As I grew up, I could  no longer wear shorts or dresses on hot summer days. I was taught to cover up  and not draw attention to myself. When I was 10, and the topic of my  conversations among friends began to veer away from TV shows and made-up games  towards boys for the first time, I was withdrawn from sex education at school.  While my peers learnt about puberty and growing up, I sat alone in the library  with my mother’s sharp words that there was no need for me to be learning about  such things rang in my head. 
                          I was invited to discos and movie nights and  parties, but of course, I could not go. I was told that it should be my  priority at all cost to stay away from boys, as they would bring nothing but  shame and disrepute, and who could recover from that? If I argued that all my  friends were allowed to go, I was reminded time and time again that it didn’t  matter; the rules were different for Indian girls, even ones that had no living  memory of India at all. 
                          You do understand, of course, that this  was all for my own good. My parents only wanted the best for me. They only  wanted to give me the best education, the best career and the best shot at life  in this foreign country of dreams, with no unnecessary distractions. So I did  my best for them, I made sure that their sleepless nights and tears and raised  voices didn’t go to waste. As you know, I finished school with top grades and  secured a place at an excellent university to read the subject deemed best for  me by my parents. Despite finding it both unchallenging and uninteresting, I  finished top of my year, and went on to be hired by one of the largest and most  reputable firms in the world. I worked 14 hour days, often seven days a  week for three years and, at the end of it, received the promotion I had been  working towards. I rang home, longing for my parents to share my hard earned  happiness but although they congratulated me heartily, I discerned a hint  of something else in their voices. 
                          For you see, although I had done all they had  asked for and succeeded in the path they had chosen for me, it didn’t matter  anymore. I was 24, and an Indian girl. What use was a high flying career or a  large salary – if they could not find a suitable Indian boy for me to marry and  settle down with? 
                          I see the confusion in your eyes, my love, and  this was how I felt too. All my life I had been told to shun boys and focus on  my education and career, and now that the fruits of my labor were at last  beginning to peek out of the dense, leafy foliage, I was faced with this  alarming u-turn, and told that in reality, none of this would bring my parents  any satisfaction or happiness at all. My life, and their’s, would remain  incomplete until they procured for me an Indian husband. They had to act now,  before I grew too fond of my independence, before I began to test the  boundaries of my Indian womanhood, set so painstakingly for me since childhood,  before I met someone like you. 
                          I love you but I must leave you. You can  understand a daughter’s reluctance to inflict grief upon her parents by her  choices. How can I explain to you why their happiness hinges not on my own  happiness and trust in my abilities, but on this meticulous desire to control  every aspect of my life, to tie my destiny irrevocably with this man I do not  know, and do not care for? 
            You have shown me nothing but respect and  kindness and patience in the years that I have known you, but know that he will  always be preferable to you, even if he demands lavish gifts and all expenses  for the wedding to be borne by my parents. For Indian men have such high  standards, unlike men of your race, and he is doing me such a favor by agreeing  to marry me. Who am I to be so ungrateful as to refuse? 
                          Your parents have welcomed me into their homes  and hearts with open arms, simply because you chose to love me. Yet you will  never be good enough for me, even though his parents treat me like an outsider,  a performer of domestic tasks, nothing more than a bedroom companion for their  adult son. 
                          My parents say that your type cannot be  trusted, that if, one day, we no longer see eye to eye, you will divorce me and  leave me to live your life apart. The Indian man will never do so. If our personalities  are not compatible, I will be forever locked in the security and safety of the  loveless marriage, and endless years of apathy, hatred and depression. Unlike  you, he will never make me suffer the indignity of living as a divorced woman,  with the freedom to live independently, travel the world or seek the love of  another man. 
                          And what of this baby in my tummy? Your face  broke into a smile of delight when I whispered the news to you in tremulous  tones. You said that we would raise him together, love him unconditionally till  our dying day. But you know this can never be. The penalty for illicit love  like our’s is severe, possibly even death, for there is no greater shame than  this. And only an Indian parent has the strength, the unshakable mettle, to put  honour, tradition and duty above all else, even an only daughter. 
                          I love you, but this is it. I know you will  understand. I am not like you, free to live and love as I please. Wherever I  go, whatever I do, I will always be followed by a billion eyes, and a billion  tongues, watching my every move, judging me at every turn, ready to shred me to  pieces at the first sign of falter. 
              For I am an Indian girl, and this is the  burden I have been raised to bear. 
              (Note: This is a work of fiction based on my  experiences as an NRI growing up in London).  
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              Archeeta Pujari is  a 23-year-old Investment Banker. Cooking, painting, writing and Harry  Potter are the great loves of her life! Raised in London, but an Indian at  heart, she feels strongly about the hypocrisy, misogyny and discrimination that  continues to plague Indian women 
              Archeeta Pujari | LinkedIn  
              https://uk.linkedin.com/pub/archeeta-pujari/95/29a/215  
            London,  Greater London, United Kingdom - Analyst at Goldman Sachs 
              
              
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