The Ascent of the Maami

The Ascent of the Maami

The terror of being accosted by the TamBrahm Maami at family functions has persisted right from the dawn of the Madisaar Ages to the times of the Churidaar (aka. Punjaabi dress) to the Jeans era. When Darwin said, ‘it is not the strongest of the species that survives nor the most intelligent but it is the one that is the most adaptable to change’; he was alluding to the TamBrahm Maami.Not unlike Jane Goodall who spent decades studying her subject in the forests of Tanzania, this seminal work on the TamBrahm Maami is a result of years of keen observations at countless Kalyanams, Seemanthams, Nischayathaarthams, Poonals, Valaikaapu, Shashtiyaptapoortis, Sadabhishekams and Punyajanam functions. Much knowledge of the various types has been gathered by silently observing Maamis over yellai saapaadu, lots of patient listening and steadying twitching nerves with tumblers of piping hot Kumbakonam degree coffee. The TamBrahm Maami, scientific name; genus maamium mylapoorum; can now be seen across the world – from the narrow lanes of Mylapore to Australia to both sides of the Atlantic. Irrespective of where you are accosted by her, a quick study of this treatise will help you understand the consequences of such an encounter, help you take precautionary measures – like running away – far away – from the TamBrahm Maami.
The Visa Maami is one of the most commonly found maamis. Just say ‘Boston’ or the name of any American city within this Maami’s earshot and be prepared for a long discourse from this walking Lonely Planet America edition. The Visa Maami is a resident expert on all things American – from Visas to getting a Green Card to American Universities to American geography to Indian stores in any part of the States. Owner of a 1,000-page passport, a true citizen of the world, when she bumps into other Visa Maamis in India she fixes her next meeting at ‘Frisco or LA. Try inviting her to a Ganapathi Hoomam next week; chances are that she will decline as she has to catch a flight to visit her son in Texas. Nine out of ten Visa Maamis have a Hotmail email account and most definitely have a Skype id – they are always the early adopters of technology and in the future when teleporting becomes a reality – this clan is the best segment for tech companies to target. Boredom with the unsolicited America cram session or teeth-gnashing due to the late realization of being the only TamBrahm left behind in India are the usual effects of an encounter with the Visa Maami.
The Pin-code Maami is a study in contrast to the Visa Maami. She is only aware of the streets, shops and temples within her pin-code. So for example, if she is from 600004 (that’s Mylapore’s pin-code) this Maami will only know East Mada Street, Kapaleeswarar Temple, Tank and Luz Corner. And if you dare compare her locality with another – you will be assaulted with so much tripe that if Copernicus were alive he would willingly admit that the sun indeed revolves around Mylapore. The Pin-code Maami is always accompanied by a family member to functions – she simply can’t get back to her pin-code by herself.

Let’s say you cracked the JEE, you ooze confidence and walk six-inches above the ground. Avoid the encounter with the Centum Maami at the Shashtiyaptapoorti. She will wrestle you to the ground – slam dunk, coz, she is the Centum Maami. She is the one who’s children have scored centum right through school or have cracked a first rank at JEE or have passed through MIT (with straight As). Studying at REC are you? That’s no good – it’s IIT Madras or nothing. Studying at XLRI are you, its IIM – Ahmedabad or nothing – you get the drift? Encounters over lunch with this kind will instantly curdle your paal-payasam, force you to rush through straight from the first course of sambar rice and escape without eating curd rice.

Mother-of-black-sheep Maamis are the tragi-comedy of the clan. Until a few decades ago, mothers of TamBrahm boys who married Russian girls or mothers of thirty-one year old single TamBrahm girls would be classified as such. But times have changed, these days, parents are grateful that at least their sons are getting married to a girl and have not run off with another boy. Mothers of TamBrahm sons or daughters who-have-done-what-cannot-be-said are called mother-of-black-sheep Maami. They skulk into family functions, look furtively, stare at the groom or bride wistfully and sniffle despondently into their sari paalu. This Maami stays normally aloof, but in case she accosts you the music in the background instantly changes to a 60’s Sivaji Ganesan tragedy.
And then there is Interrogation Maami. This one is the T-Rex of her kind. For her, nothing is kosher. If you are her unfortunate prey, she will ask a zillion questions – loudly – for the benefit of everybody within a 20-mile radius. Weren’t you hugging (katti pudichifying) that Christian girl – Lisa – in Coffee Day yesterday? Abishtoo. Why did you hide behind the car and pretend you didn’t see me when I saw you smoking last Monday? What were you carrying in black plastic bags I saw you hauling near the TASMAC shop last night? Be very afraid of the Interrogation Maami – if she is at the function you are in, run for cover – to the farthest other Punyajanam or don’t-care-what-function there is.
And then there is the Temple Run Maami who either runs off visiting temples or talks about her visits to them. Delhi or Wisconsin or Toronto or Alaska or even the moon – it really does not matter where or who she is visiting. With MS’ Suprabhatam the most commonly used mobile ring tone this maami has an innate ability to discover temples you didn’t know existed. Severe boredom or sheer exhaustion from visiting temples or listening about temples or a sudden surge of bhakti is the effect of an encounter with the Temple Run Maami.
The Google Maami always has her search mode on – for a bride or a groom for her son or daughter. Settled in America is a constant in her search algorithm. She looks at every eligible boy or girl in the Poonal function with her search function on, enquires about their background, discusses nakshatrams, raasis, gothrams and candidates rejected in the match-making sessions. If you are married and have been caught by a Google Maami, you can escape her clutches by providing references of unmarried friends or cousins but in case you are unmarried – there is nothing else but getti melam in store for you.

The Aadi-Sale Maami. normally found feverishly shopping wherever the word ‘discount’ is seen, is single handedly responsible for the economic fortunes of T-Nagar – from Pothys to Chennai Silks to Nallis. She drops into Seemanthams usually on her way for shopping. If you are her unfortunate prey, you will have to drive her to Renganathan Street, become a coolie and carry her shopping bags. Caution, avoid accompanying her and make excuses about needing to check on the Caterers or whip out your phone, yell ‘Hello. Hello’ and walk away muttering about the poor quality of the mobile signal inside the Hall.
And finally there is the mmm…Mmmmaami – the TamBrahm edition of the yummy-mummy is an extremely rare kind. Think of her as Simran and Shobhana kneaded into one. Seen with a fat balding potbellied Maama – who is usually taken to be her father but turns out to be her husband. Encounters with this kind of Maami are extremely pleasant, laced with the fragrance of malli poo and end with you imagining how she may have looked during her college days or salivate imagining what did they wear to college in those days – paavaadai-daavini? This is the only kind of TamBrahm Maami you really look forward bumping into. But the odds of this encounter are as bright as the odds of seeing butter-chicken on the Kalyanam lunch menu.
Grave doubts are being cast on the ability of the TamBrahm Maami to survive the current age. After all, when Tamil boys are marrying Harpreets or Janets how will the next generation find TamBrahm Maamis? But hope and the taste of vaddu maanga are eternal. The TamBrahm Maamis are a hardy lot; they will persist and continue to evolve. After all the hand that mashes the thaiyir saadam rules the world.

174 responses to “The Ascent of the Maami”

  1. nmaha Avatar

    Enjoyed this thoroughly. It’ll be fun to see a review in 10 years. You may have to add Maami types, such as me – does match-making for endless cousins, can efficiently plan any TamBram function based on extensive diary notes, ex-NRI moved to Chennai into a joint family after marriage, chooses Hindi as the second language for her children coz she can’t write or read Tamil (and cheats by reading Ponniyan Selvan in English) and disguises herself with a madusaru to escape questions on why her kozhukattais are not as juicy as her mil’s 🙂

    Like

  2. Sudha Balachandran Avatar
    Sudha Balachandran

    Prasad Kaushik, enjoyed your writeup of the maamis! And ofcourse, we can easily identify the various kinds/types of maamis in our own families too! Great sense of humour! Keep it up!

    Like

  3. sonali Avatar
    sonali

    Very nice read! I also feel that the properties (or meta-data) of these maamis is common across regions. One can find such maamis in other parts of the country too. Its just that the jargon may change 🙂

    Like

  4. Pavithra Sivamani Avatar

    Hilarious! May I add one more sub species – Maamium Saapadum? The breed is a critic of food at all functions and discusses recipes of all items on the menu and off the menu. Considers herself the last word in cooking, she can identify any dish and take it apart ingredient by ingredient.

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  5. Maya Sharma Sriramy Avatar

    There is yet another kind- the Reluctant Mami. The one who has vowed in her childhood never to become like her Amma-Patti, goes to a kayanam in a georgette or other non- kanchivaram , wears non- vaira thodu accessories, make sure her hair is permed and virichi-pottufied and then is asked at the pandi,”sambhar venuma maami?”

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    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      LOL! crushing…. the people serving at the pandi cut you down to size, always

      Like

  6. Bhavani Avatar
    Bhavani

    Hilarious post! New to your blog, loved reading it and I have shared it so my friends and family can have a laugh too. Perhaps you should do a follow up post based on all the other suggestions you’ve been getting.

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      Thanks. I am new to blogging too… just started off on a lark

      Like

  7. aparnauteur Avatar

    Hilarious post! Might I add one more to the maami set? Many of the maamis I’ve grown up with (other than my mom) fit into this category: the show-off or peethikara, maamis. They find a way to work in every little piece of jewelry, any new purchase, or the fact that the heat wave won’t bother them coz “naanga second class AC la pogaporom” (When I grew up, AC tickets were a luxury) into the five minute phone call they made to verify their avakkai recipe.

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  8. Chanz... Avatar
    Chanz…

    HAHAHAHAHAHA…. Laughter riot… but true in every sense

    Like

  9. Hyderabad mmmmmami Avatar

    really really enjoyed the article ! will share with my friends ! looking forward to reading your other articles too! great breezy style of writing!keep it coming !

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      Guess your name says a lot about you! did you read the other posts in the blog?

      Like

  10. Divya Mohan Avatar

    Enjoyed reading it!!!! Loved the scientific name!!!! 😉

    Like

  11. Rekha Baala Avatar

    Great post. You forgot the ‘Moral Police’ maami who judge you by the size of your ‘pottu’ or the lack of it 😀

    Like

    1. Narmadha Avatar
      Narmadha

      And gives free advice as to why your jadai should always be dripping oil, and not be in the front of your shoulder, but always at the back…

      Like

  12. Ramnath Sundaram Avatar
    Ramnath Sundaram

    besh besh… romba nanairukku

    Like

  13. Aparna Avatar
    Aparna

    Awesomeeeeeeeeeeee! Loved the article through and through! 🙂

    Like

  14. Aarthi Avatar
    Aarthi

    This is just so hilarious! I have not laughed this hard and so loud in ages!! A TamBrahm having grown up in Mumbai and now living in the US, have seen many of these Maamis in my family and social circles!! Loved the spot on and classy description you have of each of them!Don’t know which is my fav line – genus maamium mylapoorum or “the odds of this encounter are as bright as the odds of seeing butter-chicken on the Kalyanam lunch menu” or “After all the hand that mashes the thaiyir saadam rules the world” A great piece of work! 🙂

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      Hi. Glad you enjoyed reading it, pl. share it with your friends. BTW I have grew up in Bombay too. My personal favourite is ‘hope and the taste of vadu maanga are eternal’.

      Like

      1. Aarthi Avatar
        Aarthi

        Hahhaa! Thanks! Have already shared. I got it from Facebook it seems to be doing its rounds there too!

        Like

  15. Ranjan Aiyer Avatar

    Very interesting to read all your posts. Great wit & humor. Living in Mississauga, Ontario Canada, I enjoyed the visualizations of each of the posts.

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      Glad you read the other articles too. They definitely feel ‘unloved’

      Like

  16. Midwest mami Avatar

    If you love this article, Check out the blog!

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      Hi. Glad you read the other articles too. They definitely feel ‘unloved’ 😉

      Like

  17. Capt.Shankar Avatar
    Capt.Shankar

    Brilliant and hilarious writeup

    Like

  18. Anamika Avatar
    Anamika

    Brilliant post Mr Prasad. Enjoyed reading every line of this piece. I have many tam brahm friends and I can relate to this post. 🙂

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      Thanks. Thought non-Southies may not connect. Glad you enjoyed reading my Maami post 🙂

      Like

      1. The Spook Avatar
        The Spook

        Nyet, de Nada, nix, I disagree. A Northie born south is not exactly like a Lion in Alaska. In fact, you have more fun when you encounter a wedding or such common ground where innocent observers can partake of fusion feasts where they get to see Maami repertoires of different ethnicity.

        Italians have the next best hand and probably go Maami Mia more than Mama Mia (he maa!).

        Like

  19. Shruti Nargundkar Avatar

    LOL! So funny! And may I add a paradoxical spinster Mami from the Aravam neighbourhood that I spent my childhood in! She used to be the terror of the neighbourhood kids who would have their knuckles rapped by her stick attending her Carnatic music classes as a rites of passage! As a non-Tamilian, I couldn’t understand how their could be a Mami without a Mama… 🙂

    Like

  20. Anupama Avatar
    Anupama

    This was a hilarious post! As I laughed through your piece, realization suddenly dawned- “Ayyayo! I AM a Tambrahm maami!” I can only hope to strive for your ‘Mmmm… maami’ category. I grew up in Mumbai and live in the US – am one of your ‘haves’ from your visa post :)- and have met all categories of mamis that you describe above. Thanks so much for the laughs!

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      Happy that the post made you happy. Thank you for also reading other posts and spending time on thirtymlmusings ! Pl share with your friends and all the best with ‘striving to become mmmmmMaami’

      Like

  21. Vijay Iyer Avatar

    Thala!!! Kalakkiteenga thalai!!! 🙂 Super!!!

    Like

  22. meemou Avatar

    Loved the article !
    If I may add !
    There is also a paddhati maami…who keeps reeling rules about various rituals..she starts every sentence with “engaathu paddhati padi ..” She excels in performing every action in the most optimal and religious way possible that every other person is either underperforming or overdoing it. She believes in only Kaanchi Periyava and dismissses all new age sant jan who keep coming on the TV saying this and that…”Eva ennavo ippadillam sollara…aana engaathu paddhati padi kaapikku gasla thanni ethittu daan kolam podaradu nalladunu enakku padradu” ….now beat that !

    Like

  23. jayantadeepa Avatar

    Very well-written. Next time I meet a TamBrahm, i will see if I can slot her into any of the Maami’s you mentioned…haha

    Like

  24. divya Avatar
    divya

    great article!!!!!! all visions of different maami stalking me and closing in for kill went through my eyes while reading!!!!! keep writing 🙂 🙂

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      Take cover, quickly 😉 pl share if you liked it. Thanks

      Like

  25. SU Avatar
    SU

    great article! I am one of the harpreets who have constant interactions with mother-of-a-black-sheep mami (you can guess who!). As per my experience mamis can also be a combination of given types. Usually visa and centum mamis come in one package; so do mother-of-a-black-sheep and temple-run mami and so on.

    Also, you shouldn’t worry about their extinction, for after being around the current mamis, even the harpreets of the world cant stop themselves from transforming into one. And it may not always be the mmmm mmmaaammmii!

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      🙂 You are absolutely right about the combo-package. brilliant logic. mother-of-black-sheep maami probably seek solace in the divine and hence become temple-run. If Balaji (just a random name) has been scoring centum, his mom is a Centum Maami. Since he’s been scoring centum, chances are he is abroad & by default his mother – the Maami – becomes a Visa Maami. wow! People like you reassure me that ‘Maamis are forever’. Thank you “Harpreet Maami” (to-be)

      Like

  26. Pattu Iyer Avatar
    Pattu Iyer

    Do read this

    Ammaa Please………

    Like

  27. Pattu Iyer Avatar
    Pattu Iyer

    ROFL!!! Good one after Ammaa Please 😀 😀 😀

    Like

  28. Aloke Surin Avatar

    Even though I am not a TamBrahm, I thouroughly enjoyed reading your treatise! Super.

    Like

  29. Vasumathi Avatar
    Vasumathi

    I am a Mami myself (going by my chrono age), but when I read this, I was reminded of my childhood, when my friend and I used to classify the colony mamis according to terms apt in the 1970s 🙂 I had a hearty laugh reading this, and felt like I am just 15 years old 😀 😀 Thanks!!

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      Ha! Glad you enjoyed it. Pl share with your friends

      Like

  30. Suchi Govindarajan Avatar

    This is too funny, and scarily accurate. I especially admire Temple Run Maamis. They pioneered all-girls trips and travelling solo as a woman!

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      🙂 glad you enjoyed it. Absolutely agree on the all-Maami-trips. Pl share with your friends.

      Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      Thanks. Glad you liked it. Pl share with your friends

      Like

  31. Revathi Avatar
    Revathi

    Another maami – who gets up to the sahasranaamam, does her cooking for breakfast, lunch, dinner (cant eat leaves in restaurants) and hurries to her programmer job driving in tune to MS CDs. On weekends, she turns into one of the maamis described above.

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  32. Sujatha Avatar
    Sujatha

    enjoyed reading this. The interrogating maamis also pry and probe, specially the girls, whatever their age. If a child, the mother gets asked, aduthathu eppo ? if in early 20s eppo kalyanam, kalyanam anavala iruntha endi, kulichindrikiya….. it goes on. And it is embarassing and rude. My mum is 75, but knows to go online, chat with her children in various parts of the globe, she is on FB, has an email account, reads tamil magazines and newspapers online. (She lives in sydney herself). and she goes for walks with her ipod and head phones 🙂 She is what I like to call ‘Tech savvy’ maami (patti rather). We also have the overseas settled desi maamis…. they live overseas, wear formal clothes to work, and jeans and tops otherwise, but come varalakshmi vratham, navarathri, karadai nombu, vinayakar chathurthi, etc and they dress up in traditional wear, make sundals, kozhakattais, etc. (they bring all the paraphernalia required on their visits to india). I recently went to a long lost friends home and they gave me vethalai paaku, with blouse piece !!

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      Glad you enjoyed reading this. Have got several comments about the Maamis I probably missed out writing about. Thanks for the tip! Pl share with your friends if you enjoyed this. 🙂

      Like

  33. vvintrospects Avatar

    hmmmm interesting indeed
    🙂
    I say

    Like

  34. C.k. Subramaniam Avatar

    WE WOULD LIKE TO SEE YOU AS A PATTU MAMI SOON

    Like

  35. Sundar Matpadi Avatar
    Sundar Matpadi

    In US, I find a set of maamis’ whom I refer as ‘carnatic maamis’. These are the maamis who aspired to be carnatic musicians back in India but could not become one. They are in US in a vengeance and wants to make sure that her kids are carnatic exponents. Here they make sure that their kids learn atleast vocal/dance and one carnatic instrument. Ensures that the arangetrams are performed before the end of highschool and herds her kids to Cleveland music festival during April and in maarghazi to Chennai Festival. Has connections through her kids guru and various maamas, chittappas, periappas back in Chennai, to secure some sleepy spots during the noon time in various sabhas in Chennai. Clicks innumerable photos and videos of the concerts and posing with various artistes in facebook and expects all her friends to like it and say ‘sabhaash’.

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    1. Sunita Avatar
      Sunita

      Loved this post. Stumbled on your blog when a friend shared this post and discovering your old posts too. Just wanted to add that there is also a ‘show off mami’ that rears the ugly head during the functions. The prosperity is because of the greenbacks sent by the dutiful children in US. The kind that goes ” my son got me a 50 inch 3D tv for the living room, installed the ‘latest security system’ from US, took me on a Bahamas cruise and got me this diamond/ruby/coral necklace… Yada, Yada, Yada to all the unfortunate people who are stuck sitting with her.

      Like

  36. Ranjit Avatar
    Ranjit

    Funny!!! I experience the Gadget Maamis who record their own Carnatic singing and ask me if they are recording it right. I get reminded that in my generation I am the one of the very few left in India so can help out with gadgets while their sons are in Arissona, San Hosse or Dullaas. The Ignorant Maamis are the funniest cos they believe their sons are pure 24 Carat thangam while Ambjuam’s son has married a vella-kaari and eats non-veg whereas in reality their sons are doing Parisheshanam for chicken tikka.

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      LOL! Ignorant one (aka. ‘paavam maamis’ ) is a good one. Join the gang, the-ones-left behind 🙂 You may relate to the other blog I wrote here https://thirtymlmusings.wordpress.com/2013/08/01/go-forth-you-have-the-visa-power/

      Like

      1. Ranjit Avatar
        Ranjit

        Awesome! I did my MS in Shtates so I take quite a bit of flak for moving back 🙂 and can relate. Yen Paa Balaji got a job in Kali(read it like Kali gaalam Kali)-fornia, Google, Intel va va nu kooptalum, I want to work only in start-ups nu sollittaaan. Green card ku apply pannittaan, I am most likely to visit him for 6 months this year. Ooor-gai allow pannuva illeyo. I reply Oh yes maami, ooor-gai best side-dishu;).
        Keep the writing going.

        Like

    2. Sampath Avatar

      I am sure you would have quipped- recording ennavO manna thavam irukku!

      Like

  37. annapurna Avatar
    annapurna

    Good reading!!! but you must remember these are the maamis with lateral thinking, rational ideas and creativity.

    Like

  38. Gopalan Sampath Avatar

    Then there is a “nOosey” maami too. “Een avathu mappillai dhideernu Rendu Naalleye Kelambi poittaar?

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      Aha! thnaks.. have been getting feedback about the ones missed out. Someone commented earlier about ‘Veen Vambu” Maami too

      Like

      1. Sampath Avatar
        Sampath

        No worries.keep up ur good stuff.

        Like

  39. musikwala Avatar

    Also, you left out the biggest one of ’em all… the Worry maami – the one who worries for the outcome of every damn thing under the sun… and one who expects her son/daughter to sms/whatsapp them no matter where they going, what they doing and whatever the circumstances. Suggestion courtesy wife. 😉

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      Ya, have been getting feedback on the misses. ‘Worry maami’, hmmmm interesting.

      Like

  40. musikwala Avatar

    Really funny stuff! My wife and I were laughing at the descriptions of all the maami types. Genus maamium mylapooram cracked me up! Great job. 😀

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      Thanks, stopped by on your blog too. Nice work!

      Like

  41. Nandini Venkat-Sapru Avatar
    Nandini Venkat-Sapru

    Funny :)…. amazing one.

    Like

  42. vaishnavi Avatar
    vaishnavi

    Hahaha hilarious! My mom was called the mall maami…cos she would know about every nook and corner of all the malls in Bbay..take ppl shopping and they end up spending a lot..so any visiting relatives from Chennai would ensure they get a stack of money if they are to stay with mall maami..lol

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      LOL! Glad you enjoyed reading this

      Like

  43. John Avatar
    John

    Quite funny. About the only subgenus left out by the author is the “veen vambu” maami. This maami is most skilled at picking up all the subliminal complaints and injured feelings among those attending any function and relaying them with colorful embellishments to friends and distant relatives, all the while claiming that she is never interested in gossip. You will recognize the maami with this gifted trait easily; this subspecies is to be found mostly on the fringes of the ceremonies, with her one eye watching the ceremony while the other eye roves around three-hundred and sixty degrees.

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      Ah! Quite a big miss.

      Like

  44. LS Avatar

    Hilarious. Crazy, slightly cruel , but true. Know many such ladies. And thanks for including the last mentioned maami — Mmmaami, yummy mummy maami, the maami who has learned to live with change. I’m hoping i’m one such. I’m in my fifties actually, though thirtyish in my head, but try and live a full life as a person who survives life with a sense of humour. But, mind you many of the mentioned maamis are also survivors of hard times, running households on small incomes, getting past the problems created by weird in-laws, lazy husbands, the lot. Amen to them too.

    Will definitely share your post.

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      Hi. Glad you liked. Was not being judgmental. Realise they go through a lot, just a perspective on Maamis

      Like

      1. LS Avatar

        You were not being judgmental. Really funny. shared on my own fb page and my son’s page. Must add my own type of maami — ‘my son/daughter/ grandchild does not study, whiles away time..and manages to score 85 to 90 % after last minute revision. If ony he/she would put in effort–will be a 98percenter. Look at your child , burning midnight oil…’ My midnight oil burner scored 75%…but I’m fine with it.

        Like

      2. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

        Thanks for sharing. Aha! Just realized why this type of Maami sounds familiar, that’s what my mom used to say. LOL !

        Like

  45. panfusine Avatar

    ROCKING Awesome post..loved reading over and over!

    Like

  46. Usha Athai from Oz Avatar
    Usha Athai from Oz

    Great Prasad! We even have some here down under in Sydney, Adelaide, Melbourne and Canberra.

    Like

  47. Murthy Avatar
    Murthy

    Crazy, but true! Enjoyed! Keep writing!

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      Thanks! glad you enjoyed it

      Like

  48. Usha Athai from Oz Avatar
    Usha Athai from Oz

    You made my Day.

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      Thanks Usha Athai! Happy New Year.. hope you guys had fun & all well @ home

      Like

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