Lessons from Sarees, Kitchen and Homes
For many years, my professional life revolved around classrooms, lectures, and textbooks. History, as a discipline, has trained me to examine people, places, objects, and patterns closely over time. In fact, my day does not begin in the classroom. It begins at home, with the slow rhythm of morning light peeping through the drawn curtains of the windows, a bath followed by my daily puja, the sound of utensils, the quiet negotiations we make with time. Somewhere between these familiar moments and the walk into college, I choose what to wear and it is always a saree.
However, somewhere along the way, I realised that some of the most fascinating historical lessons were unfolding quietly, every day, outside the syllabus set by the University for my Students. They were present in the sarees folded in my cupboard, the smells rising from my kitchen, and the way our homes slowly changed with time.
The Quiet stories of Everyday Life
As teachers, especially women teachers, our lives are rarely confined to one role. We carry domestic selves into professional spaces and bring professional fatigue back home. The saree absorbs both. It carries the warmth of home into the classroom and returns with the weight of the day folded gently into its fabric.
To most of us, it is a garment beautiful, traditional, and sometimes ceremonial. But look a little closer, and it begins to speak. The fabric tells you about the climate. The weave hints at its regional and community origins. The motifs reflect trade routes, patronage, and aesthetic preferences shaped centuries ago.
Similarly, kitchens preserve history in the most intimate ways. Recipes passed down through generations often survive political change, economic hardship, and social transformation. Ingredients enter and exit our kitchens depending on availability, aspiration, and exposure to the outside world. Even the tools we used, from stone grinding (Shil Nora in Bengali) to Mixture grinders, pressure cookers to microwave cooking all mark distinct moments of change.
Our homes, too, are living documents. The shift from joint families to nuclear ones, from courtyards to balconies, from heavy wooden furniture to modular, multifunctional pieces none of this happened randomly. These changes reflect how we live, what we value, and how we adapt.
How teaching history shaped Everyday Living
Teaching history sharpened my curiosity about everyday life. It taught me that the ordinary is never really ordinary—it is simply familiar.
Over time, I began asking questions not only in my classroom but also at home:
- Why did certain traditions endure while others faded?
- Why do some objects feel timeless?
- Why do we return to old practices during uncertain times?
I realised that understanding the why behind everyday things changed my relationship with them. A saree was no longer just worn; it was appreciated. Cooking was no longer a necessity; it became reflective. Decorating a home was no longer about trends alone, but about comfort, memory, and meaning.
The idea behind the Blog
Today, we are surrounded by content that tells us what to buy, what to wear, and what to cook. Much less attention is given to why these things matter, where they come from, or how they evolved.
Everyday Explained is my attempt to bridge that gap.
This is not a blog about nostalgia, nor is it about chasing trends. It is about slowing down and understanding everyday life through history, culture, observation, and personal experience.
What this space offers
In this space, I will write about:
- Sarees and textiles , their history, craftsmanship, care, and relevance today
- Food and baking, not just recipes, but health, traditions and techniques
- Homes and décor, how our living spaces reflect who we are
- Travel and journeys, understanding places through experiences
Each piece will try to explain something familiar in a way that makes you see it a new.
An invitation to pause and reflect
This blog is for readers who enjoy understanding the world a little more deeply. For those who believe that everyday life deserves attention, thought, and care. If you’ve ever paused mid-task and wondered why things are the way they are, I hope you’ll feel at home here.
“So tell me where should we begin with: a saree, bakes or a journey?”
Welcome to Everyday Explained.
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