ENTERTAINMENT

When a buddy made disparaging remarks about Zeenat Aman, the son of the business owner intended to use a bat to get revenge on her honor!

Zeenat Aman demonstrated how to be a good mother by sharing a flashback photo of herself and her sons on Instagram earlier this afternoon. She also spoke about our boys’ upbringing and the “perfect” world.
She said, “I’m too cynical to see a flawless world, but I still have enough hope to think that things may improve.

Being my boys’ parents couldn’t have been an easy childhood. Even though I had left the spotlight by the time kids started school, they nevertheless sometimes encountered offensive remarks, obscene inquiries, or sensationalized news stories about me.
Which is why this movie brought back memories. In the late afternoon of the 90s, we were in Bandra. The boys and the neighborhood children were playing near the building’s entrance. I didn’t think they would return for a few hours, but all of a sudden, one furious son barged through the door and into the home. I watched in confusion as he put on his batting pads, grabbed his cricket bat, and slammed his helmet onto his head. With that bat in hand, he somberly told me that he was going to get revenge on my honor. You know, while describing me, one of his playmates used some really colorful language.”
“I would have laughed if he wasn’t so upset, but his outrage moved me,” she said. Naturally, I intervened to prevent him from taking out his rage on his pals. That evening, I engaged in the first of many in-depth discussions on men, women, and global customs with my boys.

We can all never be perfect feminists. Though I don’t understand why a sex worker deserves any less respect than you and me, even the idea of sex work is objectionable here. Then there’s the plain reality that women are still expected to bear the emotional burdens of males and boys while being denigrated.”
She then brought up a few important points. “So, how should we proceed now? Before discussing feminism and hope, she asked, “How do we raise ourselves and our children to be thick-skinned but sensitive, astute and forgiving, kind, not violent, empowered, not indoctrinated?”

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