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. Vijay Avatar

    Ha ha, wonderful stuff :). As a former resident of Chennai and father of a daughter who studied in Vidya Mandir in Luz, I can so relate to this genus. More strength to your pen (or keyboard), Kaushik!

    Like

  2. Asha Avatar

    Classic! am still rolling over from laughter 🙂

    Like

  3. rlramakrishnan Avatar

    Sizzling stuff! Now how about one on TamBram Maamas? 🙂

    Like

  4. R. Santhanaraman Avatar
    R. Santhanaraman

    Excellent piece which I shared on receiving by e-mail. Tempts one to classify his own mami, mother, aunty, sister, her own self etc. Could have been dedicated to all those ‘unfortunate(?)’ TmaBrahm mamas. There is one variety quite different from all the listed ones being the endangered one rather than being dangerous. She is the lackadaisical, at ‘his’ beck and call, robotic type creatures whose mamas generally come with a perennial countenance on their faces. That’s why she doesn’t deserve a mention in this list.

    Like

  5. Harihar Krishna Iyer Avatar
    Harihar Krishna Iyer

    Wow a nice read. Superb one

    Like

  6. ASN Avatar
    ASN

    Reading this blog reminds me of reading ” WASHINGTONIL THIRUMANAM” by SAVI again, in a different form!

    Like

  7. raadha Avatar
    raadha

    apt..vivid, and so funny….am tambram myself married to a Punjabi/Bengali….we tambrams are unique..need to learn laugh more at ourselves and of course preserve our ‘cultural citadels aka mylapore , Triplicane and and west mambalam ‘!

    Like

  8. vidyaaltwork Avatar
    vidyaaltwork

    Wonderful blog. I laughed so much today. How did you omit the ‘poojai Mami’? The Mami who is the reference for Srividya upasakas, the Mami who will give you upadeshams and the Mami who teaches you santoshi mata vratham. One ‘santoshi-possessed ‘ Mami I know eats only yellow foods as prescribed by her vow. That includes delicious besan laadu. Just like we have open standards in software industry I noticed that Pooja mamis have open industry standards that they can freely integrate with. One Srichakram enlightened kannada Mami from shimoga easily interops with a similar tambrahm Mami. Keep writing. You have a brilliant sense of healthy humor.

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    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      Thanks. Glad you enjoyed this. Been getting feedback on ‘Maamis’ I missed out on, the terror of the Maami indeed pervades everywhere. Do read the my posts in my thirtymlmusings blog

      Like

  9. ranjuthomask Avatar

    This is gem. Me being a mallu and in US, closest thing i can hear in my mother tongue are these aunties making loud noises in Indian store. 🙂 I love them. They own the place.

    Like

  10. Bhagi Avatar
    Bhagi

    Hahaha!!!! Hilarious!!!!! Loved it!!!!!

    Like

  11. Prem Rao Avatar

    Thanks for an excellent piece, Prasad. Brought back memories of my college days in Chennai.

    Like

  12. meera30 Avatar
    meera30

    For all the boys who marry Harpreets and Janets, remember there is a potential Maami marrying Harvinders and Jacks – the Maami is making herself indispensable to the other cultures with just as much passion!

    Like

  13. Jayashree S. Avatar

    I cracked up at this post. “The hand that mashes the Thayir Saatham rules the world.” But there has to be an addition: The hybrid tambrahm mamis like myself- the generation of madisar loving AND jeans strutting, needing staple Thayir Saatham AND cheese, defying aacharam and brahminism hierarchy but keeping the kalacharam of being a Tambrahm, and belting out MS Subalakshmi right after rapping along with jay-z…. Maybe this is the next evolution of mamis. Anyways, funny read (except that future matchmaker mami needs to open her search criteria for the Tambrahm LGBTs…. Then we would be truly evolving.)

    Like

  14. Aarya (shravanthi) Avatar

    Hahahaha…. Dei ambigala, Future Tambrahm Mamis ah safe guard pannarthukaavadhum amma appa paathu vecha Ponna Kazhichukongo daa!!!

    Like

  15. savithaswaminathanSavitha Avatar

    I have a visa maami in my family and needless to say she drives everyone nuts, you’d think she was the White House Chief of Staff. Good to know I am not alone in my misery.

    Like

  16. K. Sunder Avatar
    K. Sunder

    Hilarious yet, well balanced. Picturesque characterisation. We relate to it so well. Makes excellent reading

    Like

  17. Ramkumar Narayan Avatar
    Ramkumar Narayan

    Enjoyed reading this. it is hilarious.

    Like

  18. Nita Avatar
    Nita

    Prasad, this is brilliant..really loved this piece.

    Like

  19. Sue Avatar

    Loved this post and have promptly sent the link to my mother. We are Bengalis with a very soft spot for Madras and its maamis.

    Like

  20. Saffrontrail Avatar

    Beautifully written and hilarious to boot! Enjoyed reading this!

    Like

  21. sowmyavatsan Avatar
    sowmyavatsan

    Good work!

    Like

  22. Varadharajan Avatar
    Varadharajan

    This is what too much “Interrogations” does to a person! 😀 Totally nailed it.Being able to relate to everything, this is just too hilarious!

    Like

  23. Bhooma Avatar
    Bhooma

    Hilarious and aptly put. I would like to add this one category called “mumbaikar acting maamis” for those of you who have resided in chembur, mulund, maatunga..u will hear what I am saying 😉

    Like

  24. s k raman Avatar
    s k raman

    this is an excellent rendition of tambram culture we have to face in all our traditional marriage. my sincere compliments to the author.

    Like

  25. Vijay Avatar
    Vijay

    Brilliant and outrageously humorous!

    Like

  26. Janaki Satish Iyengar Avatar
    Janaki Satish Iyengar

    Enjoyed reading this article… Every day affair at our house – only did not realise that they were this common and had a nice nickname !

    Thanks.

    Like

  27. Usha Mallya Avatar
    Usha Mallya

    classic!!!! awesome!!!

    Like

  28. vidya Avatar

    totally enjoyed reading this post. Wonder if I will grow up to be a new-age TamBrahm mami 🙂 or (shudder!) into one of the categories you mention.. but should not matter, for after all, as you say – the hand that mashes the thaiyir saadam rules the world.

    Like

  29. Kaushik Avatar
    Kaushik

    “After all the hand that mashes the thaiyir saadam rules the world” _/|\_
    Awesome article!!

    Like

  30. Buvana Avatar
    Buvana

    Ha ha ha its a riot and i have met each variety of “maami”……….they were a pain in my unmarried years………….

    Like

  31. Prats Avatar

    Thanks for this laughathon. My entire TNagar clan came dancing into my picture through every line.

    Like

  32. Durgalaxmi Ramachandhiramani Avatar

    Very humorous! Thank you for making us to smile after a hectic day of work. Please keep writing :).

    Like

  33. patty Avatar
    patty

    Brilliant…Brilliant…Brilliant…Never knew blogs were so fun to read

    Like

  34. Vasudha Gulyam Avatar
    Vasudha Gulyam

    Loved the write-up.

    Like

  35. Rashmi Iyer Avatar
    Rashmi Iyer

    I couldn’t stop laughing even when my cheeks hurt. Definitely a truth, but I doubt if any of the maamis will accept that they belong to any of the categories mentioned above. I had to forward it to every TamBrahm I know (except to the maamis with hotmail, gmail, yahoo, skype or FACEBOOK ID!!!). Hats off Mr. Prasad Kaushik!

    Like

  36. Rajeswari D. Sheth Avatar

    Hilarious! And oh-so-relatable 🙂

    Like

  37. Suja Avatar

    Amusing! And distressingly true! In fact, many mamis are hybrid-mamis, incorporating traits from your various sub-species. I myself am a mix of Visa mami (lived in 4 continents and shuttle between 2 now, travel agent for family and often friends), Mother of Black-Sheep Mami (my son’s girl friend is a vallakari, possibly my future mattuponnu!), Centum Mami (both kids are doctors, both had scholarships too! ), Google Mami (have an unmarried daughter) and Carnatic Mami (I write a Carnatic Music blog!!). Good study 🙂

    Like

    1. Shridar Avatar
      Shridar

      Brilliant Prasad….Nailed it to the ‘T’. It brought up more than a chuckle and left me reminded of my youth in Chennai….Thanks a lot. Would love to read more of your work!!!

      Like

      1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

        Thanks for reading the ‘Maami’ post. Pl. do read the other posts in the blog

        Like

    2. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      A “Janet maami” in the future? Hope and the taste of vadu maanga are indeed eternal.

      Like

  38. Chandru Shankar Avatar
    Chandru Shankar

    Abso-freakingly funny, Prasad! Thanks for livening up my day. Also, my company (Microsoft) found a new segment to market to – the Visa Maamis 🙂

    Like

  39. Meenakshi Avatar
    Meenakshi

    Superb!! No other word!! Very well written and very satiric!! 🙂 🙂

    Like

  40. Ganesh Prasad Avatar
    Ganesh Prasad

    A very nice post. U have got all the mamis in their elements. Oh man, this piece is very well written and sure to cause a riot. Sure have to save this.

    Like

  41. Preeta Avatar
    Preeta

    Hilarious! My dad,retried head cashier from a nationalized bank, was a victim of almost all the maamis mentioned here. He laments about it everyday. I should definitely share this with my dad 🙂

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      Your dad has indeed gone through a lot. He deserves a Nobel 😉

      Like

  42. Anjali Venugopal Avatar

    Good read and I love the name “thirtymlmusings!!”

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      small pegs. 30ml. thoughts in small measures.

      Like

  43. Ramya Ramesh Avatar
    Ramya Ramesh

    Being a TamBrahm I can totally relate everything herw. My sister is getting married soon and I know that everything that is going to be running in my mind is…”this is the interrogation maami…let me check out how to take cover” or “this is the Visa maami or Centum maami..”
    Phew. We have ’em all 🙂

    Thanks for categorizing..makes things so easy 🙂

    Like

    1. Prasad Kaushik V Avatar

      the marriage is going to be fun, am sure, with you putting a label to ‘maamis’ you encounter. best wishes for the wedding.

      Like

  44. Mausami Avatar
    Mausami

    Hilarious read! Loved the way u have given detailed & accurate description of each maami…even though am not a South-Indian , could relate to all of these since have stayed in Bangalore for sometime. Will definitely share this….

    Like

  45. iwrotethose Avatar

    Prasad, I was fortunate enough to stumble across your wonderful blog today, and let me say this is the first piece that I’ve read. And it is absolutely hilarious. With the right element of truth in it too. My wife hails from a TamBrahm family, and I have been ..let’s say fortunate…enough to meet a few such maamis. Definitely worth a share! Thanks for the laugh

    Like

  46. savi Avatar
    savi

    Awesome peice, throughly enjoyed reading.. The latest of course in the spiritual mami.. quite deadly!!!

    Like

  47. sunita Avatar
    sunita

    Brilliant piece of work.shared it on FB.

    Like

  48. Suchithra Ramakrishnan Avatar

    This is bloody brilliant is all I can say.
    As someone running away from the daily grasps of the interrogation maami, I’d say
    Man you’ve nailed it
    Kudos
    Cheers !

    Like

  49. Ramkumar Avatar
    Ramkumar

    Great post here! Being a TamBrahm, I can entirely relate to this one. Till now, we always knew these categories of maami’s existed. But now, you’ve given them names! I am already visualizing the various maami’s I know and categorizing them per ur post here 🙂 (ah, this athai is Visa maami, that periamma is Temple Run maami…)
    Someone had mentioned the Carnatic maami. It totally needs to be in the list of classifications along with the Recipe maami – one who knows every recipe of every TamBrahm dish ever made (or not made), right from Pulikaachal to Pulla-pethaal marundhu to kothavaranga paruppu-usili to ribbon Thenkuzhal…the list can go on and on! Of course, this is your blog and your idea of classifications. Nevertheless, these 2 categories simply came to mind right away!
    But my personal favorites were – “After all the hand that mashes the thaiyir saadam rules the world.” and “But hope and the taste of vaddu maanga are eternal.” You really nailed it right there!

    Like

  50. dropsofjupiter10 Avatar

    I am the thirty-one year old unmarried girl he’s talking about! hahaha

    who-have-done-what-cannot-be-said: my grandmother referred to this in relation to our promiscuous maid as “mariyaadai ilaamaa paduthukutta”

    Like

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