Madhuri Dixit on parenting: 'Never raised my hands on Arin, Ryan'
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Veteran actress Madhuri Dixit Nene has opened up about her parenting philosophy, saying she has never physically disciplined her sons Arin and Ryan, and instead leans on conversation to resolve issues at home. The 59-year-old star said she firmly believes that dialogue, not punishment, shapes children better.
What Madhuri said about discipline
Reflecting on how parenting has evolved across generations, the actress underlined the value of communication over corporal correction. ‘No, I have never, I have never hit my kids. I have never hit them. The only thing is, I don't believe in it. I think a lot of things can happen with communication. You don't have to hit the kids. I have never, never, never raised my hands on them,' Madhuri said in an interview.
How her sons keep her current
The actress also spoke about navigating Gen Z slang, crediting Arin and Ryan for casually keeping her plugged into the latest lingo without any conscious effort on her part. ‘What is there to keep up? You don't have to keep up. My kids teach me like this,' she said.
‘While coming and going… Mom, it's so rad. Mom, it's so cool. LOL and all that. I don't know half of them. I pretend to know them. They just, I mean, they are just around. And I just feel like young when they are around,' she added.
On the work front
Madhuri is currently being seen in ‘Maa Behen', streaming on Netflix. The film centres on Rekha, a mother whose already-overloaded life is upended when a dead body turns up in her kitchen. Alongside her daughters Jaya, the responsible one, and Sushma, the wild card, the trio must think fast and lie faster to keep prying neighbours away from the truth.
Her recent web outing
On the web front, Madhuri was last seen in ‘Mrs. Deshpande', a crime thriller directed by Nagesh Kukunoor, where she played a serial killer. The series also stars Siddharth Chandekar, Priyanshu Chatterjee and Diksha Juneja.
With back-to-back genre-bending roles and candid commentary on family life, Madhuri appears to be balancing reinvention on screen with a grounded approach off it.