Parents and the Priceless Value of Money
It all began with a plant pot for planting aloe vera. Yes, just a simple pot the kind you buy, place by the balcony, and promptly forget to water after two days. But in my dad’s eyes, this pot became a symbol of everything wrong with our generation. According to him, we kids “don’t know the value of money” and “live lavishly.” Lavishly, mind you not on fancy vacations or imported cars but on clay/plastic pots. For two days straight, he gave me the full Financial Management lecture. Apparently, I should have told him about my desperate need for a pot, because there are several ‘idle pots’ waiting for adoption in our ancestral courtyard.
“You should’ve said! I would have brought one from
Palakkad!”
Apparently, the solution to my extravagant lifestyle was
to transport a clay pot across two state borders Kerala → Tamil Nadu →
Karnataka and for what to save a whopping ₹50. As the saying goes: penny
wise, pound foolish or in my case pot wise, petrol foolish.
Anyway, I eventually went alone to get a new pot. Like
all well-trained children of age-old parents, I followed the unwritten rule - always
quote half the price when reporting back home. So, I said, “Got it for 50
bucks!”
His eyes lit up for a moment until the inspection began. The
pot was inspected like an archaeologist examining a rare artifact. Tap-tap.
Squint. Judgement. “Not as good as the one at home.”
Of course it isn’t! The Palakkad pot has character,
heritage and possibly ancestral blessings. Mine is just from a store. At that
point, I simply smiled and said the only phrase that saves one’s sanity in such
moments:
“Noted. Will do that next time.”
And that is how a simple plant pot turned into a
masterclass on frugality, state logistics and the eternal parental belief that
we buy everything at gold rates.
Because in their world, a cup of tea still costs 5
rupees, jeans are 200 bucks and anything above 100 automatically falls under
the “luxury purchase” category. But hey who are we to argue? We might not know
the value of money, but we sure know the price of peace.

So relatable Puri 😁😁😁.. the unwritten rule to quote half price 😄😄. Guess that's universal 😜
ReplyDeleteLol 😆. Actually Valar I realised over the years most of us either quote less pricing or don't tell them at all. Sigh sad how we are stuck
Delete