Srilaaji: the Gilded Life and Longings of a Marwari Goodwife by Shobhaa De
Author:Shobhaa De
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: S&S India
Published: 2020-01-15T00:00:00+00:00
PART THREE
WIDOW
Men still stared at my breasts. That was nice! Why lie? I hate it when women pretend they get offended when men look pointedly at their breasts. It is natural. Normal. Yes, women donât stare at menâs crotches. Unless the men are wearing âlangotsâ. Then, of course, that is the only place the eyes go. Langots and ballet-dancer tights. Those, too. They conceal just enough to arouse our curiosity. Rather, forget curiosityâto arouse. I enjoy being aroused. It makes me feel wiggly and slightly giddy. Especially if I am in a car and there are many speed breakers on the road.
I had once asked a friend if she also felt the same, and she glared at me. âYou are a pervert ⦠you know that, Srilaa? A full pervert! Good, clean girls donât feel dirty things like that. We keep that part which is down there only for our husbands. Not for ourselves.â I ignored her. And in any case, she stopped talking to me. How stupid! So, even though, I was happy with my breasts and all that, I was not happy-happy. I was missing having a man in my life. A proper man. My precious solitaires were gone. âThat Manâ had pocketed them neatly, after almost choking me to death. I realised I had left them in the hotel room. I started calling them my âbad luckâ solitaires. But they were a small price to pay for my freedom. I wasnât paralysed any more. I was breathing better. My voice was back. So was my appetiteâfor everything.
I looked at myself in the full length bathroom mirrorânot bad! Well ⦠not perfect, either. Everyone in my circle was doing pilates, had personal trainers, went to the gym regularly, walked and swam. I did nothing. Men still talked to my chest, though. So, I felt fine! Here I was, hitting forty (actually, I had hit it long ago, but I always lied), and my breasts were holding up really nicelyânot droopy at all. Even I talked to my breasts from time to time. They were sweet and comforting and I enjoyed staring at their different shapes, which altered according to my posture. I was not body obsessed, as such. But which woman is not vain? Despite feeling confident about myself on most levels, I still felt a lack of energy. I think it had to do with my diet. And an overall sense of non-fulfilment, which wasnât directly related to men and how they treated me. I hated my daily life and what appeared on the dining table. Even though Marwari kitchens had undergone a dramatic change, our meals were far too rich and oil soaked. I developed acidity and a bad temper.
One day, while I was arguing with a very grouchy Maharaj about the amount of oil he used in our everyday meals, an idea struck meââDiet food for Marwarisâ. Especially for Marwaris. Sounded like a contradiction in terms, I know, but the Marwaris of my generation had also changed.
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