Domestic
issues
Last year the state government issued guidelines
for recommended wages to household domestics. I am afraid the mandarins in the
secretariat were ignorant of the ground situation when they fixed a rate of Rs
224/- per eight hour day. This constituted all work including taking care of a
child. I reckon they did not consult any housewife before making the decision.
For several years we had one maidservant who
practically handled all activity. Unfortunately she pushed her luck a bit too much
with her boss, my wife which resulted in her being given the pink slip. Since
then, my house has been overrun by a bevy of female domestics. We have a 24
hour maid; a morning maid; an evening maid; and a cook. Obviously, this has
played havoc with my routine and I have been confined to my study most of the
time.
Some months back when my wife and I were
on an extended holiday in London, politics reared its ugly head in a so far
peaceful household. Thanks to her superior designation, the cook had become the
self-appointed head of the worker clan and she was also giving the general work
orders. Somewhere down the line, the morning and evening maids seemed to have
had a conflict-of-duties disagreement that simmered till our return. The
morning domo who had her lunch at our place for the past two years also seemed
to suddenly have developed a dislike for our cook’s creations and decided to
eat at her afternoon employer’s house.
On returning, we could sense coolness in the
overall atmosphere of our employees. Panicking at the situation, my wife
followed an age old corporate formula and declared a ‘loyalty bonus’ to all of
them, plus some gifts from London. Peace reigned after that.
That men in our family have problems with
domestics also has a historical perspective. After my father retired from
service and settled down in Mysore there was a need for a cook. Based on
recommendation, an old lady came on board. Unfortunately, she happened to have
served in my father’s household when he was still a youngster. She took this
old connection rather seriously and made herself at home, including having her
afternoon siesta on our drawing room couch. However, what bugged my father was
her regular commentary to my mother about the episodes from his younger days.
At an opportune moment he found a valid excuse and packed her off.
My wife is always on tenterhook when one of our
staff would defect, as there is a big demand in our apartment complex and cases
of poaching with enhanced lucre are quite common. Further, she may need to find
a substitute for our day maid from Nepal who recently claimed that she needed to return home for two weeks to put her kids in hostel.Now we find that the whole story was a fiction and she had actually gone to Jigani to find herself a new job in the garment industry.
In this nebulous situation, as the only male
member in a household of seven, domestics included, the only loyal associate I
have is my computer. Somehow we manage to go through the day.
No comments:
Post a Comment