COLUMN: Spouse's Turn
Divya talks about
her life with singer Madhu Balakrishnan
Photo by Mithun Vinod
By Shevlin
Sebastian
Divya met singer
Madhu Balakrishnan for the first time at her family tharavad in Kothamangalam.
At that time, there was a marriage-fixing ceremony between Vinoy, Divya's first
cousin, and Mini, Madhu's first cousin. “He was wearing a saffron kurta and
jeans,” says Divya. A music aficionado, she already admired him as a singer.
“My brother
[cricketer] Sreesanth is also a great fan of his,” she says. Madhu and
Sreesanth bonded and became close friends. The singer would take the cricket
star to the Maharaja’s College practice ground in Kochi and bring him back.
At that time,
Madhu had a song programme, ‘Raga Tharangam’ on Surya TV, which was aired every
Saturday. After the programme, Sreesanth would call up Madhu and compliment
him. Sometimes, Divya would come on the line. “I had a tendency to point out
mistakes,” she says. “Madhu would tell me that people usually praised him.”
During her final-year
degree in chemistry at Sacred Heart College,
Thevara, she had got the papers ready to do her masters at Kansas University, USA.
It was then that Madhu told Nivedita, Divya’s elder sister, who was a singer,
that he liked Divya and wanted to marry her. “I also had feelings,” she says.
“But my parents were upset because they wanted me to do further studies.”
Anyway, there was
a mutual agreement between the families and the wedding took place on September
10, 2001. Asked about Madhu's qualities, Divya says, “He does not get tense.
Madhu is not one to be overjoyed, nor does he feel too sad. He is a steady
person. I feel a lot of tension, regarding my children, but Madhu always tells
me to relax.”
Divya also
admires his dedication to singing. “Madhu’s father died when he was in Class
9,” she says. “So, he had to struggle a lot. Today, he is a self-made man.” The
couple lives, with their sons, Madhav, 9, and Mahadev, 3, in a large bungalow,
with a lot of woodwork, in Thripunithara. There are a couple of cars in the
courtyard.
Both are
religious-minded, and go often to pray, with their families, at the Chottanikkara
Bhagawathy Amma temple. “Madhu loves my family as his own,” says Divya.
Madhu also
swiftly jumps to the aid of people who are being harassed. On a recent afternoon,
Madhu and Divya had just set out from their house in their Toyota Innova
vehicle. On the main road, Madhu happened to look into the rear-view mirror.
And he saw an astonishing sight. A boy and a girl, both students of the nearby Government Arts College
were walking along the sidewalk. Suddenly, the boy slapped the girl. Madhu
reversed the vehicle, till he reached the pair, and asked the boy why he had
acted like that.
The boy was taken
aback, and said, “We are friends. She did not put her dupatta properly and that
was why I hit her.”
Madhu said,
“Never do that. You have no right to slap her.”
Regarding his
drawbacks, Divya says, “Madhu gets angry quickly. Sometimes, he gets upset over
the smallest of things. On the other hand, I rarely lose my temper. When I get
upset I keep quiet.”
Another drawback
is that Madhu is unable to understand the hidden motives of people. “There have
been a few times when those, whom he has trusted, have let him down,” says
Divya. “Madhu has suffered financial losses because of that.”
Still, she is
deeply in love and gets a thrill to see Madhu perform on stage. “I feel lucky
that he is my husband,” she says. Her favourite song of Madhu's is
'Chentharmizhi' from the film, 'Perumazhakaalam.' “I never get tired of listening
to it,” she says.
Asked for tips to
have a successful marriage, Divya says, “In earlier times, when a product went
bad, we would try to repair and reuse it. But, nowadays, people throw it away
and buy a new one. That is not right. Similarly, if there is a defect in people
we must accept and learn to live with it.”
She remembers
what her father told her once. “It takes two hands to make a noise,” she says.
“So, when your husband gets angry, if you keep quiet, there will be fewer
problems. And it can be vice-versa also.”
About Madhu
Balakrishnan
Madhu became
famous when he sang 'Amme Amme' from the film, 'Vaalkannadi' in 2002. This
enabled him to win a Kerala Government State Award. So far, he has sung 300
songs in Malayalam, Tamil, Kannada and Telugu. He has also sung more than
10,000 devotional and non-film songs. In 2010, he set up the S-36 band, which
is helmed by his brother-in-law, the cricketer S. Sreesanth. Madhu has
performed in concerts in USA,
Canada, the UK, the Middle East and Singapore.
(The New Indian Express, Kochi and Thiruvananthapuram)
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