less attachment to parents, too independent and stubborn, less emotional , may marry an american etc
For each of the above I can give you an antitheisis to this in US and cases to go with what you have to say in India.Things have changed so much in India. Materialism and flashy lifestyle has caughtup. Everyone is in the rut of making money. Just like elsewhere family has little time for each other here too.
Daybefore yesterday the front headline was that
family disowns son who is parapelegic. This guy meets with car accident in US and is a burden on US economy so is shifted to a big named hospital in India on the government funds and when time came for family (mother and brother) they don't even bother coming and meeting him... he is a burden on the family too..now he is shifted to a sort of hospice. Cases like these are an everyday thing.
Children killing parents for money / inheritance.
More and more elite class folks into all kinds of drugs, crime etc.
"Call centre money " "too much money in pockets before even having maturity of thought" leading middle class kids into all kinds of things.
What culture are we talking about?
Parents in India too are struggling to give their children a sense of balance and in the end hope they will emerge better.On this side of the fence:
I have many cousins who were either born in US or migrated to US when they were just mere toddlers. Most of them did okay given one or two.
In fact a friend of mine and her sister are two girls they and their parents migrated 2 decades ago. Older one married a German and my friend married a IITian from same community as hers. The Indian husband treats her like trash and the German guy not only treats his wife preciously also he built a in laws house of his in laws and let them stay with them. His kids though young today have imbibed best of both cultures.
My cousin may not live life of an Indian making upma vada etc everyday however, their thought process in not entirely Indian either. They are not very comfortable when they have to come and live in India for a longer than 3 weeks. Yet their care for their parents, keeping in touch with all their verry much Indian cousins and being comfortable around them, and celebrating couple of Indian festivals with the same fervor and devotion as Christmas and Thanksgiving, tells me that they are lot more Indian than any Indian can be.
Environment does matter maybe by moving into an all Indian community area with lot more Indian activities to participate and more Indian group to mingle with WITHIN US will preserve the Indianness rather than moving to India.
ALSO you as parents must be able to Identify with the lifestyle in India if not it will end up just being a sacrifice which has a 50 50 chance of working out.
Just my 2 cents.
MK
neha;87455We are not able to decide if we want to R2I or stay here in the US for the rest of our life. We love staying here in the US, but our single most concern is that our kids will grow up very differently(less attachment to parents, too independent and stubborn, less emotional , may marry an american etc).
Are we being too paranoid of our kids growing up differently? Are there any examples of kids who have grown up here and who still have attachments to their parents?
Any info will help.
Thanks.[/quote]