Jenelle Evans and the Meridian of Morality
This
issue appears nasty. I did not want to write about it. After grappling many a
turn with some serious questions, I sat down to write it. I could not stop, but
wonder, where on the earth are we, right now. The issues in this article appear
to be from some stupid dimension, but only to disappoint ourselves. These are
from this world of ours, proof that we are getting increasingly vulnerable to
defective identification of stupidity. Hell, I would not ask you to read it, if
you have other interesting things to do. But then, if you do read, you will not
be able to keep quiet that thing inside your head you call mind.
In MTV's second
season of "16 and Pregnant" a young girl appeared, her name was
Jenelle Evans. She was born in 1992 and the world knows her as the ‘Teen Mom
star’. An Indian audience may take it farfetched; Teen Mom series is a reality
show that “follows” four girls and their journey into motherhood. When the
Malayalam Movie Kalimannu released, a
scene portraying child delivery raised furious controversy in Kerala. In a
culture that is vulnerable to such levels of open display, how could the theme
of four girls moving onto childbirth work? Did I tell you all these girls are teenagers?
OK, it is evident from the name of the show itself.
Teens getting
pregnant and being pushed into raising a family of their own seems a cultural
dilemma in the US. Teenagers are in fact, children. To think they can take
charge of a family emotionally and financially is to think asinine. The epithet
to such a social system should be little short of ‘disaster’.
The problem of moral
disintegration is the backbone to such issues. It’s the lost struggle for
virtue, as Stevenson puts it. The struggle to keep moral order is destined to
fail. It is inherently flawed. Even the concept of morality in the contemporary
Indian context is close-read with religious order and the rule of Ram or Allah
or God. When all these excuses involve, violence erupts and people kill each
other, simple as that. What is morality? This question must be answered, here,
right now. This is a humongous risk, since all the people I know of or I will
know or those who lived before me or live right now in another altered dimension
would be waiting for the answer to tear it apart and study it. On this
question, there have been so many answers. Mine is simple, because it is
essentially mine. Morality is the moment of pause when you think would I like
this to happen to my mom, sister, father, or girlfriend.
Image Courtesy: National Geographic |
Disintegration of
moral values is not just a cultural and social problem. It is an imbalance in
the personal level too. I am not saying it is morally wrong to get married or
to ‘get laid’ in an early age. I am just saying you should not procreate too
often. Our already congested social system would burst out with no scope for
all these “new arrivals” in the womb of the earth mother.
Moreover, there is a
political problem too. From what I heard, Sharia, the law of Islam promotes child
marriages. In addition, Hinduism once promoted child marriages. In Kerala,
recently, a similar discourse sprang up and bit all of us—peace loving, and
sleep loving—Keralites. Someone somewhere said that the age for marriage in
girls should be 16—teenage. The court and governments seem to agree with this
notion too.
The fundamental
problem in this stand is that the groom for a 16 year old would be at least 25,
so that the male candidate can achieve financial independence and emotional
maturity, to raise a family. Twenty-five, however, is only in the case of those
who are exceptionally lucky to get a job at the right time and managed to set up
fiscal security.
Twenty-five minus
sixteen: think about the age difference. Think about the vast majority of those
men, who start their job hunt when they were boys and end up, after the quest
of a lifetime, ‘new adults (29-30 something)’ or middle aged men, until they
find a job and a steady income. Think about the age difference between a 16-year-old
girl and 30-year-old man. Think about their family life.
If, in Kerala, they
are legitimizing the imported social system from gulf countries, in America
it’s already a well accepted cultural phenomenon--Teen Moms. They talk about
vigor and sexual energy, the capacity to childbearing and moral corruption of
girls if they are not given proper orientation in familial life as the causes
for supporting child marriage. Fine, but I cannot say how moral it would be to
molest a 16-year-old girl, making her believe it is marriage, and it is for the
common good of all.
Jenelle Evans has a
broken marriage, a controversy over the custody of her child, and a heroin
case, for which she is even jailed. This is where, in my opinion, Sharia, and
all other arguments supporting teen childbearing loses its value. This is when
it becomes immoral to push a child over the edge into the abyss of familial
responsibility. It is not the sexual energy, or family orientation, but the
aftermath to the individual, that matters. An uncommon level of immorality is
at its best play, only to bring a worst future for us all.
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