Comments by Mahi Palanisami

Comment for "Is Dating a Lost Art? What's Up With Dating?"

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Awesome!

I am totally guilty of texting only!
Thanks for telling me that I don't feel alone!

Comment for "Stephanie Coontz: Marriage Today Ain't So Bad"

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Review of Stephanie Coontz: Marriage Today Ain't So Bad

This timely topic hit the spot with people like myself, members of Generation X. With an out right acceptance that sexual orientation is not as narrow as the past dictated it to be, with an acceptance that many of our parents practiced the term "divorce" on an unprecedented scale 30 years ago, we struggle with the notion that we are without a proper family model in life.

I personally like this piece because I constantly battle the notions of what is right and wrong when it comes to deciding how I should go about finding a life partner. I am constantly ridden with guilt. My parents come from a strong practice of arranged marriages, a practice I am constantly forced to question. However, I am finding over time with the help of talks like this one, that the concerns and values aren't as different as I thought regardless of how one finds a life partner. Regardless of whether one had an arranged marriage or love marriage, there is a country-wide assumption that our country's family values are on the decline because people stopped adhering to what is "right."

Professor Koontz sets the biases straight by using her title as a historian to talk about the institution of marriage in various cultures, and how we understand the word marriage today.
Professor Koontz effectively dissects the word "right," and takes apart the biases that make it appear that there is a perfect way to creating a sexual relationship, family, or single life. She has ridden me of mounds of guilt, and has stepped up as an academic to tell everyone that whatever you feel is okay!
Thank you KUOW!

Comment for "Silence Like Air"

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Review of Silence Like Air

Teresa Goff expertly covers this sensitive topic by letting people speak for themselves. It is so refreshing to hear a piece about the diaspora India community that doesn't relate to the exotic or obvious entertainment bit of the "clash of two cultures" or the dancing Bollywood girls.

Choosing to end the piece with the subtle, but powerful comments of Wally Opal, really proves her ability as a news reporter that understands the power of radio to build community.

Go, Goff!