Skip to content Skip to navigation

Ageism infused Assam

Age is celebrated in Assam. People live their life fully through their ageism. Patriarchal ageism goes beyond gender. Any gender might practice ageism. People like to be ageing genders. Owning, patronising, controlling, oppressing and bullying are some of the consequences of ageism. If you are adulting, ageing and male you can earn maximum previlege as an ageist. Some of the classic ageist remarks,"Bura baapekor uporot kotha nokobi." 'Do not talk on top of an old father.' "Ami bohut thair pani khaisu nohoi amatke besi jano niki?" 'We have drunk water from many places, do you know more than us?' "Ajikalir deka tezor bor dom ami nu kun kuta." 'Nowadays young blood has too much power we are hardly anything in front of them.' 

These are some of the ways ageist remarks are part of a popular culture. Ageism is regressive and limits the understanding and innovation which can change many tough challenges and resolve the problems raised by situations and people. Intergenerational learning happens through insitutions only from a hierarchical approach. One really wonders how many students have actually taught their teachers about life, livelihoods and worldview which defines their essence. The ageism within academia in Assam is rampant and such practices have not blossomed new ideas to emerge from within the classroom spaces and from the learning spaces of research, field practices and social actions which strengthen the interdisciplinary approaches in our life long learning practices.

While fulfilling the social development goal for the ageing population and the youth, somewhere the intergenerational gaps are growing deeper with ageism and arrogant egoism.

We complain of arrogance and attitudinal assertions in young people much more than ageing population. Youth leaders failed us, young people have gone astray, youths have doomed the communities with drugs, arms and erosion of values. Young women with independent choices are further blamed for being blots in the cultural landscape of Assam. In most cases when an ageist person irrespective of their age reacts to a free thinking youth, such a person reflects their own unfulfilled desires and fascinations. Ageism is actually influenced by societal structures, personal comfort zones and regressive values which may not be universal and liberating. Thus widening the generation gap and criminalising the young and the old from their respective positions.

When ageism is wrapped up in one generation it is still manageable but when it spills over across generations then it becomes problematic. I have heard stories of children and grand children in some situations controlling their elders to perform age specific activities and they cannot tolerate if the elders deviate from that. Ageism affects the overall well being of anybody but most importantly the mental, psychosocial and at times even the physical well being of the people around the ageist person. All toxicity in words, deeds and thoughts get reflected in such ageist practices when the elders punish the youth and the youth lynches the elders when they deviate from the norms. Ageism fosters heirarchy which reinforces extreme angularity and suppression of ideas and practices. Ageism also suppresses the second or third generation leadership potentials in institutions, projects and different business enterprises too. Strictures of traditions and customary norms further reinforces the ageist approaches in people across diverse communities. Ageism in leadership also limits the multi-dimensional emergence of dynamic implementation strategies and evolving systemic processes. Thus creating clones in every aspect of mechanical existence of human beings. Can we unshackle such stifling ageism by engaging with transformational shifts in restrictive structures and reimagine a vibrant future?

Add new comment

Random Stories

BJP executive body in NC Hills council

24 Oct 2015 - 6:58am | AT News
A special on Saturday at Haflong is all set to end the on going deadlock at the North Cachar Hillls Autonomous district council on Friday. Convened by Governor PB Acharya, The session is begining at...

Ahmed submits report to PM on Assam violence

10 Oct 2008 - 2:41pm | editor
Minister of State for External Affairs E Ahamed has submitted his report on the communal clashes in lower Assam’s Darrang and Udalguri districts where 62 people have been killed, several...

JFA appeals to hoist National flag on I-Day

14 Aug 2017 - 3:22pm | AT News Guwahati
Journalists’ Forum Assam (JFA) appeals to all patriotic nationals to hoist the National flag on forthcoming 71st Independence Day with an aim to honor the known and unknown martyrs of our freedom...

Upen Rabha Hakasam receives Readership Award 2011

24 Dec 2011 - 6:19pm | Paresh Baishya
Readership Award 2011 was given away to Dr. Upen Rabha Hakasam,Head of the department of Assamese of Guwahati University by National Readership Devolopment Forum at Srimanata Sankardev Kalashetra...

Other Contents by Author

Guwahati marked its fifth consecutive Pride march on February 11, 2018. Processions, demonstrations and cultural rallies have always been part of youth events in Assam. To be able to include people from diverse students groups, women’s groups, media groups, children and adults has been a great achievement of Guwahati Pride march. This year the participation from youths from various institutions has been unprecedented. Xukia is a queer collective whose initiatives in creating awareness, association and activism around the issues related to Pride has been exceptional. Glaring shutters, curious bystanders, blank stares of commuters in buses and private vehicles couldn’t stop the enthusiasm of...
Rurality is a context where people define their roots. Any person from a rural background can survive in the toughest of living conditions. Women in the rural context have a major part to play. Rural India lives through the essence of culture, community and cohesion. Women in rural India have been the silent custodians of such cohesive co-existence of culture and community. Rural is often interchangeably used with remoteness which creates an exclusive space for the identity of a person belonging to rural area. Women specifically have to position themselves very strategically when it comes to rural in India. Even though there is a common perception that women in rural areas are bonded,...
Guwahati is again waking up to the lip-smacking taste of sumptuous momos. The dates for this festival are August 25, 26 and 27, 2017 at Assam Engineering Institute Chandmari field. This momo festival presented a promising culinary display of taste, flavours and dimensions of momos from different parts of Guwahati city and from the neighbouring states of Arunachal Pradesh, Sikkim and Meghalaya. These festivals are geared to lure the food-loving city crowd whose existence depends on the most happening events in town. I chose to visit the stall on August 26, 2017 in the afternoon under the scorching sun. I had imagined that the festival will have all the momo vans which are the favourite...
During a recent workshop on violence against women I participated in a discussion around technology as a cause of violence against women. Our growing dependency on technology within private and public spaces has enabled numerous choices for women but it has also paralysed their freedom of choice, movement and decision-making. Social media is a great connecting force but the same platform is breaking relationships, creating huge expectations and enslaving people to perform something which they are not meant for. Technology is a boon for saving time, energy and resources but in recent years such technology is only trapping people with time consuming activities, draining their mental energy...
If the Burha luit could speak, it would definitely clamour about its abundance and endurance. It for a river is obsolete in today’s legislative terminology as rivers are getting humanised. Probably river mystics are waking up from the deep slumbers after decades of industrial pollution, riverbank erosion and siltation around the river valley. Wonder how the psyche of people is played around the river on grounds of religious territorialism and a mirage of development along the river banks. The Burha luit has always been a treasure for the people who live along its banks both for the gains of grains, prosperity and mobility and also for the losses of lives, livelihoods and land. In Assam...
How is ‘Pride’ such a pride for some or rather a very few of us? There is always much ado about everything. Within the realm of everything, pride of bruised souls, bodies and minds was somewhere lost in the crowd. Such loss was never noticed, addressed or heard with sensitivity but ridiculed with negativity, violence and torturous upturns within both personal and public spheres. Wonder why people are always concerned about the straight flow of nature. Sometimes they flow with the norms to avoid any form of complexity and confusion. People are wired and transmitted into a world which is either/or, this or that, here or there, for or against, yours or mine, us and them and even more precisely...
Guwahati is emerging to be a food capital of world cuisine in Assam. New year is a good time to take stock of the old tastes and the new flavours of the month. It is a paradise for food lovers of all denominations. Some of my all time favourites which provides the comfort food defining the essence of the city are chicken rolls at J-14, momos at silk route, Chinese cuisine at China town and Chung fa, Assamese thali at Paradise, Hilsa Fish Curry and Joha Rice at Maa Manasha Hotel in Pandu, Chicken Patties and pastries at Eggs O tic, South Indian food at Woodlands, Unlimited Marwari Thali at Fancy Bazar, Naga food at CBCNEI canteen, Smoked pork at Naga Kitchen, Biryani at Sunflowers, Slice of...
Recently Guwahati has been listed as a priority city to be developed into a smart city. It is indeed a welcome shift for a B grade city like Guwahati. I have lived in this city since 1990s. The constant transformation which the city has gone through is indeed vey drastic. Urbanisation is a novel concept in India which reinvents itself in diverse forms whether through its infrastructure, its people, its institutions or through its disasters. Guwahati has tasted all these flavours to rest at its present condition. Guwahati is a unique city in India which has the perfect blend of hills, rivers, ponds and lakes and forests within its natural ecosystem within the rising sketch of its urban...