For successful, career women, finding a groom has become a problem as the value-system has not changed much and the homemaker wife is till a preferred choice , finds Ritusmita Biswas

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She works in one of the largest multinational companies in the city and draws a whooping salary of ninety thousand per month. 34-year-old Sharmila Majumdar is beautiful and attractive. A postgraduate from IIM Ahmedabad, Sharmila, however, is desperate to "get settled" in life. But she is yet to find a right match for her.

Sharmila is not an exception. There are several other women who are shelling out hefty sums to the marriage bureaus across the metros hoping that they will find that special someone who will add a dash of colour to their routine lives.

In fact, a survey of the premier marriage bureaus in Kolkata and Mumbai show that several of their clients are successful, independent career women who are in their mid- thirties. "With more and more number of women being highly educated and thoroughly career-oriented, the equation in the marriage mart has changed. Earlier, women were usually seen in the role of homemakers even if brilliant in studies and were married off at the first opportunity. But today, many urban women wait till their careers take off to think of marriage. "On the other hand, even today most men look for a bride who is young, not so ambitious and essentially a homemaker," says Bidyut Ghosh, proprietor of a premium marriage bureau in Kolkata.

Agrees Jeet, a well settled, just- married professional in his early thirties: "If I am well settled financially. I definitely looked for a bride who is essentially a homemaker. The basic purpose of marriage is to create a home and if we both partners are highflyers, how can we have a well-settled home?"

His claims are rubbished by Jaya Barua, a senior media professional. "If you are keen, and if both the partners are co-operative despite heavy schedules, you can have a lovely home and a great family life. Basically, men feel insecure about marrying more successful women," she says. Till date Jaya has not married as most of the suitors who have come into contact are unsure about her hectic media schedule and have hinted that she shifts to some other more "womanly" profession. "But I am not ready to do so. It took me years of hard work to achieve the place I am in now, so how can I just sacrifice everything for an elusive institution called marriage?" she says.

Agrees Neha Jain, a marketing manager with a reputed national organisation. "Absolutely out of the question! Under no circumstances can I give up my career. Marriage is important but it can wait until I find an option that is suited to my lifestyle and career," she says.

Psychoanalyst Indrani Ghosh, however, says that often around 35 women undergo an emotional metamorphosis. "I remember this particular case when this woman, around 36 years of age and a senior manager with Pepsi, had a nervous breakdown. She came to me for treatment and while talking with her I realised that acute loneliness was the major cause of her problem. Women, I believe, have some natural urges, like that of being a mother which they cannot defy. And why only women? Marriage, or any sort of emotional companionship, is the basic need of anyone and so denying this basic need for unduly long periods of time can spell psychological trouble." She ,of course, did not ask her client to get married at once as she was not in the right frame of mind but she did ask her to take a break and explore other avenues in life except her career; maybe take up some interesting hobby.

"Unlike a 32-year-old man, a woman of the same age is often under tremendous social pressure to get married. These women often busy with their careers hardly find any time to socialise and so the best bet is to go for an online marriage agency," says a senior official of the matchmaking website Shaadi.com. He confirms that several of the profiles posted in their site are of women who are well past what is called the "decent marriageable age."

Over the years, the crisis of women in the marriage market has worsened confirms Bidyut Ghosh of 'Bibaha Bandhani'. "The basic rule is that every woman is an eligible candidate but every man is not. With more and more women carving out a niche career for themselves and the rising level of unemployment in the country, the numbers of eligible bachelors has waned." Moreover, women do not want to marry less established or less qualified men as compared to themselves, Ghosh observes.

A senior official of 'Tathya Kendra', another popular marriage bureau of Kolkata, points out that for every 350 would-be brides, there are not more than 30 grooms enrolled in their bureau. Is there a way out of this crisis? "Yes," says software engineer Satarupa Ray: "Firstly, one has to realise that there is no crisis. I have seen among my friends that however educated or established a woman is, she is often desperate for a relationship. This should not be the case. After all, marriage is a necessity for both men and women. Moreover, educated women should have the mental strength to defy societal taboos and get married to a man who is less educated, successful, younger or shorter than her!"

 

 

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