Thursday, 8 December 2011

Transitions

I have just moved back from Dubai and it was our decision to move back. My husband's and mine. So when I say that I mean the recession hit Dubai and loads of people were laid off, fortunately neither of us were laid off in fact we were both at great places in our careers if success is to be measured by earning capacity and peer respect. We spent 4 years in Dubai before which I spent just over 2 years in London, doing my Masters in Family Therapy. My husband worked in Dubai for 9 years in retail electronics and has moved to Delhi with the same company. My husband, Vijit, was also in the US for 3 years before that. 


The above factual boring stuff was important to give the reader a sense of how long we have been away and thus removed from the nuances of Delhi life. Being away had the usual disadvantages  of missing our friends, family, milestones in their lives, milestones in our lives etc. The advantage was the kind of time Vijit and I got to ourselves and what thats done for how we know each other and appreciate each other. 


Our moving back was much more difficult than I anticipated. The people I met in Dubai pleasantly surprised me and I believe I have formed some relationships that will last a life time. I dont know if this thought will remain a reality down the years but I really would want it to. I also think this is what makes me defend my experience in Dubai when people call it shallow or superficial. Don't get me wrong, I have not just seen but experienced the superficial, racist and prejudicial side of Dubai, but I cant help but looking back at the 4 years I spent there and feel fortunate for the experiences I have had!  The other day a friend of mine in Delhi said you seem to be a in such a good place in your life and I am and I feel I owe that so much to my experience in Dubai. 


So having been here a month now life seems to have gotten into some sort of routine. Work has kicked off and people and us have gotten used to us being rooted here again and not just visitors. We have been very lucky to have a set of family and friends willing to welcome us back and actively include us in their lives. I am grateful for all these old relationships which I have to say I definitely don't take for granted ( I am also sure if I do I would be told off fairly quickly). 


People have asked "So is the traffic getting to you?" "Are you regretting it?" and honestly I can say none of this is getting to me. I am truly happy to be back in my life in Delhi. In Delhi again I am fortunate not to have friends too affected by the recent economic boom experienced by India. 


The one thing I am struggling to get used to again are the social nuances of Delhi. The biggest disadvantage or advantage (I guess which way you look at it) about having lived away for so long is that I have or we have decided our own rules as long as it fits within the larger sociological norms of the culture(Dubai) and sub culture(Expat life) we were in. 
I am not convinced that even within my caring and real relationships here Delhi is any less superficial and judgmental than Dubai, albeit about different things but are they comparable?


There are layers of power dynamics within relationships here that sometimes its hard to just be you, or define your relationships exactly the way you want them to be. (My sister would disagree, but she has been fortunate to live by her own rules that govern social dynamics)  Its been really hard because my friends who know me to conform to all sorts of norms think that I am being 'weird' ( I had a weird phase in my life) and I am taking my cue from them because I am getting reacquainted with "what people expect". So some relationships here seem a bit forged, because there are so many "have to's" so many "cannot's". I think Delhi can trigger of insecurities so easily because it can make you questions who really loves you for you and who is complying with social norms. 


Unfortunately for me my relationships are defined by people I can talk to and people who can talk to me, over the last 7 years( and actually always) I haven't had relationships which don't contribute to me as an individual. The personal time I have had with my friends and family I cherish so much but the 'real' conversations are so far and in between because there is always some over riding social dynamic that we all are trying to cope with. 


I still have no regrets about moving back, all the above is just a reflection of my own personal journey from a person who has been desperate to please to someone very content with who I am, I wonder what being back will do to this very comfortable sense of self I have developed. Or maybe as one of my friends keeps telling me I will "Stop over thinking this"

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