"People almost look down upon you
if you are a virgin after a certain age, which is upsetting. What's the
hurry? There's a lifetime to have sex and if you can wait and have it
with someone you really like you'd enjoy it so much more." - Vidya Balan
It's the novel UNHOOKED by Munmun
Ghosh that led her to speak her mind out on a subject that is so close
to the heart and mind of career women in urban India today.
"There's so much pressure today
on girls to have boyfriends. People look at you as if you are diseased
if you don't have one. And you are made to feel depressed on special
days. I have gone through it too. .."
"...there are no brownie points
for knowing your mind and waiting for what you believe you deserve,
waiting for your dreams, both personal and professional, to be realized,
" Vidya said.
She thinks the pressure to be a
couple, to change one's single status pushes so many people into wrong
relationships. And that's the reason so many relationships are breaking
today.
She adds, "I was single for a
long time and was asked about it. I would say I enjoy being single.
Also, maybe because I led a full professional life, I didn't feel the
pressure much. I have lots of single friends. "
"One of my friends got married at
43 and lost her virginity, that's how she chose it and while reading
UNHOOKED, I felt as if I were reading her story. Also, if you want to
have a romp every weekend, that too is fine. One must be free to
choose," Vidya added.
She loved the novel and
identified with it, having watched people around her, the girls in the
media, and the metros, going through similar experiences as the book's
protagonist.
An SMS request by Munmun Ghosh,
the author of the novel UNHOOKED, sent to Vidya set the ball rolling
this time. As is Vidya's nature, she wanted to read the novel first. The
author promptly sent the book to her and Vidya read it and had high
praise for it. She said 'yes' to the request to launch the book and read
excerpts from it.
Vidya Balan, who was a part of
"Lage Raho Munnabhai", a film that gave birth to the term Gandhigiri,
says she tries to practice Mahatma Gandhi's preachings in her day-to-day
life.
"It may or may not be alive in
my surroundings, but I try to practice Gandhigiri. I am not always
successful in doing it, but I keep trying," she told reporters when she
was asked whether she sees Gandhigiri around her anymore?
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