Monday, June 15, 2009

Miss India 2009 - Pooja is an inspiration for all women

Published in Times of India:
Neera Chopra lived through abuse, poverty and some tough choices to make her once-unwanted girl child, Pooja Chopra, the Pantaloons Femina Miss Pooja Chopra with her mother.
I don’t know where to begin... they were terrible times. My husband was well-placed, but the marriage had begun to sink almost as soon as it began. Like most women do, I tried to work against all the odds .
My in-laws insisted everything would be alright if I had a son. My first child was a daughter, and that didn’t do me any good... but I couldn’t walk out. I had lost my father, my brother was in a not-so-senior position in Bata. I didn’t want to be a burden on my family and continued to live in my marital home in Kolkata.
I looked after my mother-inlaw, who was suffering from cancer, and while bathing her, I would tell myself she would bless me and put things right.
I don’t know how I tolerated it all. The least a man can do, if he must philander, is to not flaunt his women in his wife’s face. Then began the manhandling. I still wanted my marriage to survive. I was a pure vegetarian and learnt to cook non-vegetarian delicacies thinking it would please him.
Then, I was pregnant again. When Pooja was eight months in my womb, my husband brought a girl to the house and announced he would marry her. I thought of killing myself. I hung on the slight hope that if the baby was a boy, my marriage could be saved.
When Pooja was born a girl, for three days, nobody came to the hospital. There was a squadron leader’s wife on the opposite bed, who was kind enough to give me baby clothes for Pooja to wear. When she was 20 days old, I had to make a choice. I left the house with my girls ‘ Pooja and Shubra, who was seven then. I haven’t seen my husband since. I promised myself, even if we had just one roti, we would share it, but together.
I began life in Mumbai with the support of my mother, brother, who was by then married. It wasn’t the ideal situation, especially when he had children ‘ space, money, everything was short. I began work at the Taj Colaba and got my own place. How did I manage’ Truth be told, I would put a chatai on the floor, leave two glasses of milk and some food, and bolt the door from outside before going to work. I would leave the key with the neighbours and tell the kids to shout out to them when it was time to leave for school.
Their tiny hands would do homework on their own, feed themselves on days that I worked late. My elder daughter Shubhra would make Pooja do her corrections... This is how they grew up. At a birthday party, Pooja would not eat her piece of cake, but pack it and bring it home to share with her sister. When Shubhra started working, she would skip lunch and pack a chicken sandwich that she would slip in her sister’s lunchbox the next day.
I used to pray, ‘God, punish me for my karma, but not my innocent little kids. Please let me provide them the basics.’ I used to struggle for shoes, socks, uniforms. I was living in Bangur Nagar, Goregaon. Pooja would walk four bus stops down to the St Thomas Academy . Then, too little to cross the road, she would ask a passerby to help her. I had to save the bus money to be able to put some milk in their bodies.
Life began to change when I got a job for Rs 6,000 at the then Goa Penta. Mr Chhabra, the owner, and his wife, were kind enough to provide a loan for me. I sent my daughters to my sister’s house in Pune, with my mother as support. I spent four years working in Goa while I saved to buy a small one-bedroom house in Pune (where the family still lives). I would work 16-18 hours a day, not even taking weekly offs to accumulate leave and visit my daughters three or four times a year.
Once I bought my house and found a job in Pune, life began to settle. I worked in Hotel Blue Diamond for a year and then finally joined Mainland China ‘ which changed my life. The consideration of the team and management brought me the stability to bring them up, despite late hours and the travelling a hotelier must do.
Shubhra got a job in Hotel Blue Diamond, being the youngest employee there while still in college, and managed to finish her Masters in commerce and her BBM.. Today, she is married to a sweet Catholic boy who is in the Merchant Navy and has a sweet daughter. I continue to finish my day job and come home and take tuitions, as I have done for all these years. I also do all my household chores myself.
Through the years, Shubhra has been my anchor and Pooja, the rock. Pooja’s tiny hands have wiped away my tears when I broke down. She has stood up for me, when I couldn’t speak for myself. Academically brilliant, she participated in all extra-curricular activities.. When she needed high heels to model in, she did odd shows and bought them for herself.
When I saw Pooja give her speech on TV, I knew it came from her heart. I could see the twinkle in her eye. And I thought to myself as she won ‘My God, this is my little girl.’ God was trying to tell me something.
Today, I’ve no regrets. I believe every cloud has a silver lining. As a mother, I’ve done nothing great.
‘I won due to my mother’s karma’
Pantaloons Femina Miss India Pooja Chopra’s mother promised ‘One day, this girl will make me proud’. Pooja speaks on fulfilling that promise... When I was 20 days old, my mother was asked to make a choice. It was either me ‘ a girl child, or her husband. She chose me. As she walked out she turned around and told her husband, ‘One day, this girl will make me proud’. That day has come. Her husband went on to marry a woman who gave him two sons. Today, as I stand here a Miss India, I don’t even know if my father knows that it is me, his daughter, who has set out to conquer the world, a crown on my head. Our lives have not been easy, least so for my mother. Financially, emotionally, she struggled to stay afloat, to keep her job and yet allow us to be the best that we could be. I was given only one condition when I started modelling ‘ my grades wouldn’t drop.
All the girls in the pageant worked hard, but my edge was my mother’s sacrifice, her karma. Today, when people call to congratulate me, it’s not me they pay tribute to, but to her life and her struggle. She’s the true Woman of Substance. She is my light, my mentor, my driving force. My win was merely God’s way of compensating her.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Mentor - Conversation 1


There is this prayer group called Spiritual Revival Ministry which I used to attend every Friday in St. Michael’s church, Sharjah. This prayer had delivered miracles in my life and most amazingly had given me strength and peace in my life even when I was facing the worst in my life. I was happy and relaxed. Months passed by and the summer came. The prayer starts 12.30pm and the weather became very hot. I can’t tolerate the heat so much and therefore started being lazy to go to church during the Fridays. I started going to church on Sunday evenings for 3 weeks.

From the second week of missing the prayer I started feeling tired with my life. I couldn’t handle my problems. After missing the third week I became so restless. At this point I called my mentor who always inspires me and guides me. I am posting here a part of our conversation which made me calm and relaxed and helped me to see things clearly at least for the time being. The beginning is missing as I started recording the conversation only after a while…

Pleasure and joy is different!!! joy is an experience a heavenly feeling from inside out. Only god or the source can give us inner joy.

We always look into the past and make judgments which is the most smallest and petty thing we do. No one knows what god is preparing us through our current situation of life. We cling so much in to the past that we are not able to see the future.Every new invention comes from the future and not from past.

Life is like a tree which has roots upside and branches down where the roots grows and supports the whole tree. It is not the past pushing us and it is the future pulling us.

If we look at life and all the problems in the world; the reason for all the problems is not politics or religion. It is because; the divine force wanting to come down to earth/matter and the resistance of the earth / matter to accept this. Everything is happening due to this resistance.

It’s not that there are no more ideas in the world; but our mind cannot expand to accommodate the ideas god gives us. Becoz we human beings have a tendency to fight for our smallness/narrowness.
People have so much passion about their problems in life…or whatever happening in their life.

We have been told a big lie by the whole world that happiness/pleasure is not good.
It is very easy to control someone who are unhappy. It is not at all easy to control people that are happy and enjoying life. We have been hypnotized by the society of the so called religious intelligence systems making you sad and unhappy. I am sure god want everyone to experience abundance. Abundance is so natural and poverty is a sin.


The eye of the body is an organ of division
The eye of the soul is the organ of vision

We divide everything with our eyes. Unless and until we open the eye of the soul we cannot see truth of life. What we are seeing is not necessarily the truth. For eg. When you put a stick in the water and look the stick through the water you will feel that the stick is not straight.

True freedom is not the freedom to do everything that you want to do in life. To be in true freedom is when you start living inside out; when you can chose the way you respond to any event. There are forces that will try to stop you in reaching the truth.
One is mind…. Mind will ask you lot of questions…… Try to keep your mind silent or stop thinking and enjoy the peace.

The conversation was broken here…. I am sure I will get the continuation in some other conversation…..