ACC Automation: PLC & Industrial Control Learning
Practical Tips and Techniques
From age 3, the question is not "What do you want to be?" but "Engineer or Doctor?" The daily story involves tuition classes after school, abacus training on Saturday, and vedic maths on Sunday.
The friction: The daughter-in-law wants to watch a Netflix series; the grandfather wants to watch the news. The teenagers want privacy; the grandmother wants to know where they are going. The harmony: When the son lost his job during the pandemic, no one spoke of "rent" or "groceries." The collective kitty covered everything. When the grandmother fell ill, someone was always awake to give her medicine. From age 3, the question is not "What do you want to be
Dinner is the only time all seven members sit together (phones are frowned upon, though teenagers sneak glances). The conversation swings from stock market tips to a relative's wedding to the price of tomatoes. The harmony: When the son lost his job
The last person washes the dinner plates. The geyser is turned off. The only light is the blue glow of a smartphone as the mother finally scrolls through Instagram. The cycle resets in seven hours. Part III: The Unspoken Rules of Indian Domesticity 1. The Hierarchy of Tea In any Indian household, the first cup of tea goes to the eldest male, then the eldest female, then the father, then the mother, and finally (if any remains) the children. This ranking is rarely verbalized, but it is absolute. 2. The "Visiting Relative" Algorithm An Indian home never says "Is it a good time?" to a relative. The doorbell rings; you open it. The relative walks in, takes off their shoes, and asks, "What's for lunch?" You must feed them. They must refuse three times before accepting. This dance is exhausting but sacred. 3. The Family WhatsApp Group The digital extension of the Indian home. Name: "The Roy Dynasty" or "Singh Family United." Content: Sunrise images with religious quotes, warnings about mobile phone radiation, requests to "like" a nephew's dance video, and arguments about whose turn it is to host Diwali dinner. Part IV: Daily Life Stories from the Margins Not every Indian family is middle class. To understand the lifestyle, we must look at the full spectrum. The conversation swings from stock market tips to
By Rohan Sharma
Between 11 AM and 3 PM, the women of the house reclaim their space. This is when daily soaps are recorded, groceries are ordered via apps like BigBasket, and the "kitchen politics" with the maid unfolds. Daily Life Story (Seema, 38, Mumbai): "My mother-in-law lives with us. She doesn't cook, but she directs . 'Add more salt. The lentils are too watery.' It drives me crazy. But when my husband travels, she sleeps in my room because I'm scared of burglars. That is our unspoken contract." 7:00 PM – The Return The father returns, exhausted. The children return with homework. The house becomes loud again. The grandfather turns on the TV for the evening aarti (prayer).
Scenario: The mother finds a love letter in the son’s pocket. The reaction: Not a private chat. A family tribunal. The father yells. The grandmother cries. The aunt offers unsolicited advice. The son yells, "You don't understand modern love!"