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I’m an interior design consultant and my partner is an exceptionally talented fine arts professional. After marriage, I planned a short break from professional practice to set up our art studio.
But as it happened, the hubby turned out to be a typical artist who could never treat his work as business. After four years of marriage, with all my savings exhausted and he still to come into his own, I wasn’t sure I would be able to conceive.
During pregnancy, a careless gynaecologist confused me with another patient and administered high dosage hormones that led to ketosis, a bed-ridden two months and the loss of 11 kgs when I was supposed to gain weight instead.
The spa design I executed during my pregnancy turned out to be a very successful project. I worked until the second-last day of a full-term pregnancy, standing, and occasionally fainting, at the construction site until midnight and thereafter. I ensured that the inauguration went smoothly, and the spa was well-appreciated from all quarters.
However, I wasn’t able to submit the contractors’ and my own service bills on time due to this highly stressful schedule and the exhaustion that I was feeling during the ninth month of pregnancy. Besides, within the first four days of his birth, Agasthya had to be re-admitted to hospital for jaundice.
Hence, I returned to work with a new project only 13 days after undergoing a normal delivery – with my body still swollen, and with a new-born baby still recovering from the aftermath of hospitalisation.
Those days, I would travel in auto-rickshaws. Soon, it was monsoon and I remember how my husband would wait outside in a rickshaw, holding our one-month-old infant – even as I went on site visits and walked into under-construction buildings to attend meetings.
Eventually, I decided to avail a loan in the midst of an already severe financial crisis; I purchased a car. Feeding the child became less stressful thereon.
I used to wake up each day deciding not to let the situation affect my behaviour with anyone around – be it family, clients, vendors or especially, the husband. To a large extent, I was able to sail through only because of Agasthya in my life, for whom I wanted to keep my chin up.
I felt like I was living on an emotional roller-coaster, between maintaining extremely high levels of optimism, and facing extremely low blows on a daily basis, for almost three and a half years.
Whatever little compensation I had arrived at, after hours of negotiation with the cheats, was undone every time some secretly-wannabe-actor from the family tried to replicate some Bollywood melodrama.
I had reached an extreme low point where I had seriously started to entertain thoughts of suicide. I fought them only because I couldn’t leave my child behind, and I knew that no one else would be able to give him a dignified upbringing.
As a result of the ordeals of that time, I still face body stiffness whenever I am exposed to wind, air-conditioning or soured foods.
But there was a silver lining to my cloud.
Even in his infancy, Agasthya developed a keen sense for things that hurt or help. He never put an inedible object in his mouth like average toddlers do. Through observation, he developed a superior ability to dodge physical obstacles, as there are umpteen objects slipping or falling at construction sites all the time.
In the tug of war between projects and Agasthya on one end and me on the other, I gave my best to the former, and ended up compromising on my own fitness and health!
(Aamrapali Bhogle is an award-winning Interior Design Consultant based in Mumbai, practising since the year 2002. Her work has been globally recognised. She is a published author, portrait photographer, a full-time professional and a full-time mother to Agasthya.)
(Aamrapali Bhogle has sent her blog to The Quint as part of our series of stories about India’s working women.)
(The Quint is trying to investigate what makes it easier or harder for women to be at the workplace. Can she return to work after a maternity leave with equal support from workplace and home? Does she carry the guilt of being away from her children while at work, and vice-versa? Even with or without baby, does the family share household responsibilities with her? Share your story, if you have one to tell, and we’ll publish it.)
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)
Published: 25 Sep 2018,06:01 PM IST