Chalkhill Estate. It was one of those ‘phantom’ council estates I’d heard about but never seen. It was always in the news for robberies, violent gang crime and drug scandals. As a child, whenever we drove through an area of Wembley remotely close to Chalkhill, my parents didn’t have to remind me, I already knew the drill: lock the car doors and be careful.
Paraphrased, Wikipedia says about Chalkhill:
By late the 1970’s, local shops were frequently robbed. The neighbourhood around Chalkhill was deteriorating, and criminal activities in the area soon seeped into the estate.
Milkmen, who had previously delivered to residents’ doors, had to restrict operations due to the uptick of robberies. The buildings were decaying. Lifts weren’t always operational, and the ones that worked often had a stench of urine.
Residents had no other option but to walk up dozens of flights of poorly lit concrete stairs. The two high-rise car parks were just as dangerous, rife with car thefts and drug deals.
The recreational facilities suffered as well. Children’s play areas, such as the paddling pool and sandpit, became unsafe due to the prevalence of broken glass. The flower beds and seating areas for the elderly were destroyed as fast as they were repaired. Gradually these facilities were decommissioned or replaced, only to be vandalised once again.
By the 1990s, Chalkhill Estate was infested with drugs and gangs.
In 1997, the 1,900 houses and flats were demolished, and a new low-rise estate was planned as replacement. Some of the old estate land was sold to Asda, who then built a large supermarket that opened in March 1999.
Despite the new layout and buildings, crime remained and gang presence increased. Multiple Chalkhill-area gangs arose, such as Crack Hill Mob and Chalk Hill Boys. The Press Road Crew remained notorious for crime in Chalkhill and surrounding areas. In 2003, seven members of the gang, with 100 convictions between them, were issued ASBOs.[9] Rivalry between the Press Road Crew and South Kilburn gangs resulted in the murder of 29-year-old Jason Greene in 2006.
There was an increase in reported incidents of youth robberies, shootings, and drug raids on the revamped estate throughout 2009–10. In January 2010, a young man was shot on the estate and left with a fractured skull after an incident on Chalkhill Road.
In 2011, three high-ranking members of a £20m drugs network … were jailed for a total of 22 years. During the police operation, £6m worth of heroin was recovered from a home on Chalkhill Road and in a nearby flat.
After being married into a prominent, multi-millionaire, religious Jain family and living in a nine-bedroom house on a private road backing onto a golf course, with every material comfort as a wife and mother I could ask for, would you believe, this very same Chalkhill Estate, in 2001, became my home.
How the hell did that happen?
Well, as I mentioned previously, I needed a place to live closer to the children. And the girl whose room I was occupying at Milli’s student house was returning to live there so I didn’t have much time. I had no other friends to turn to. The ones I had then were all Maanav’s friends’ wives and girlfriends. I couldn’t go to them. Going back to my parents’ home was out of the question. I could only deal with my father for a few hours a week whenever I took the children to visit him and my mother, and we all played happy families for Jai and Veer’s sake.
I was broke too. I can’t remember if Maanav had stopped my bank cards to our joint account or if I had given them back to him; either way, I didn’t have money. I didn’t ask anyone, least of all my parents to help me financially. I went to sign on for JSA (Job Seekers Allowance) which meant the state gave me around £40 per week to live off until I found employment. I was confident that once I figured out where I’d be living, I could find a job in that area.
I could easily have taken the children’s birth certificates to my local borough council, and they would have given me a place to live, probably a flat, big enough for me and my children, rent-free, as I would have qualified for housing benefit and other living support benefits. If I had done that, I wouldn’t have had to worry about anything, accommodation, food, etc., and I could have had the children stay over with me to spend more time with them.
But Maanav knew this, so, of course, he didn’t offer the birth certificates, and as I knew what the outcome would be, I was too afraid to ask for them. I couldn’t handle the conflict. I read somewhere that often children who grow up in abusive households grow into either very aggressive, angry adults or become so sensitive they’ll do anything to avoid conflict. I was the latter. I would do anything not to ‘rock the boat’ even if it were to my own detriment. I did whatever Maanav and his family said. And I didn’t ask them for anything. At the time, I felt they had a way of making me feel that everything was my fault, I deserved nothing, and I should be grateful for whatever they were offering me – including time with my children.
With regard to the divorce settlement, basically, there wasn’t one. I didn’t fight Maanav for anything. A rumour went around that my father-in-law had bought me a flat to live in. This simply wasn’t true. In fact, my relatives in Kenya brought it up only last year. Up until I set them straight, they all assumed it to be true. It couldn’t be further from the truth. I didn’t take anything from them in a settlement, not one penny.
In any case, Maanav didn’t own anything in his own name; everything was in a trust, except for the factory. I knew it belonged to my father, it was only Maanav’s in name, and I wasn’t going to ask for a piece of it. Maanav and my father sorted out the factory between themselves. My father got an extremely raw deal and had to remortgage his house to keep his business. Maanav, obviously made a handsome sum from it.
From that sum, Maanav repaid the £7,000 career development loan I had taken out when I’d wanted to carve out a path for myself and not rely on anyone financially (I thought I was doing something noble but that obviously didn’t work out). Maanav and his family let me keep my car and half of my wedding jewellery.
Only half, why? Maanav’s mother told me I had to return everything she and her family had given me and I could keep what my family had given me. I had gone jewellery shopping with my mother-in-law and all the items we’d bought were of my choice. She knew they were sets I loved and chose so that I could regularly wear them with my sarees and Indian outfits. My mother-in-law told me that if I wanted to keep any of them, I had to give her the sets my mother’s brothers had gifted me on my wedding day.
I didn’t know what the traditions were, what was right or wrong, or if I was being wronged. All I know is that any time Maanav or his family told me I must or must not do something, I complied without argument. I felt like a stupid little child who didn’t know anything, who had made a big mess, and as it was all my fault, I had no say and had to let the grown-ups clear it up. I didn’t ask anyone what my rights were. I didn’t get any legal advice or help at that time.
I remember when I was married and living at the house, my father-in-law was looked up to so much as the head of the community that whenever anyone had problems, even marital problems, they would come to him. I served drinks and snacks to them, so I listened a bit while my father-in-law carefully mediated a particular couple’s divorce. He made sure to help both parties get what was fair.
But when it came to me, I had zero guidance; I didn’t know where or whom to turn to. In fact, the signing of the divorce papers was done in such a shady way when I look back on it. It was done at their house, with just Maanav, his father and I present. I trusted my father-in-law and I had no lawyer, just as when we first went to court about the kids, I had no legal representation (I’ll write about this properly soon).
The only time my own father reached out to me to help me was to make a chart of living expenses to take to court and demand financial support from Maanav. There were a few extended family members in that meeting whom I know, meant well, but didn’t understand the kind of help I really needed.
They were writing with markers on a big sheet of paper, things like rent, education, food, gym membership etc.
They were all focused on it, but my head was spinning. I felt invisible. I was having an anxiety attack just looking at it and listening to all the people around me, talking numbers, telling me I need this, I need that… it was too much.
“Stop!” I yelled. “I don’t want anything from him. The children live with him. If I’m taking from him, it means I’m taking from them. I don’t care how much money he has. I don’t need it. I will sort myself out. Please just stop all this.” I got up and left. They never bothered me about it again.
Throughout the separation and divorce, although I know it’s not true now, back then, I felt my parents didn’t care about me. I felt my father was more concerned about money and his business than my wellbeing. If he or my mother tried to talk to me beyond Jai and Veer’s visits, I snapped back at them. The truth was I had walled myself off. There was too much pain. It was better to stay in my hole.
My brother had disappeared off my radar completely. The very few interactions we had rarely ended well. Either he had something nasty to say to me, such as calling me a whore, or he just wasn’t around much. We never spoke on the phone. We never asked each other how the other was doing. It wasn’t until years later that we found out he was struggling with his own abuse-demons back then too. Nobody realised what he was going through until the breakdown when the very red, red flags cropped up and he became extremely unwell. More on this in a future chapter.
So there I was, again, trying to figure it all out without family support.
Content to go it alone, and probably used to, by then, being pulled with the tide, when a friend of Milli’s took me to his cousin’s house in Chalkhill, and the cousin, Saleem, sparked up a spliff, handed it to me, and said I could stay there, I didn’t hesitate.
So, Chalkhill, full of guns, gangs, drugs and police vans, ironically became my safe haven and home; a place where I could be someone new, a world I could completely lose myself in. I did exactly that.
And, of course, I fell in love with Saleem.
20 comments
I cannot imagine what you go through each week, to write about such sad memories. This is heart breaking. Sending you lots of love and light ❤️
It’s heartbreaking to read about the amount of trauma you have been through Diya ji. I am kinda scared if that’s gonna happen with me too. Life is so tough. Oh Krishna.
It won’t, my lovely. Swami ji is with you. We are with you. I was lost back then, I didn’t have His Grace and wisdom. You have it. You’ll sail through beautifully. I’m always here for you. Reach out at any time. A big, loving hug to you, Krittika ji. Jai Sri Hari!
The title reminded me of a book I read on Cambodia- the land of girls, guns and ganja. Reading about your life is like watching a Bollywood movie sometimes. A script full of flashbacks, pain, love, revenge, excitement, adventure and a hope. Going through a divorce is never an easy affairs specially when lil kids are involved. Jai Sri Hari.
It’s like caught up in a horror story and then life shows up with red roses and apple to make it up. We think atleast now something good will turn around! With a fool’s heart we again believe. Why nature has no compassion? I understand , we are here to learn, but why can’t nature says okay take a break.
Bless you Diyaji!
I would have also assumed that the people you cared about would be more ethical and honest and trustworthy with these things! Such a pity!
I can see where you came from…brutal outcome! I’m sorry you had to go through what you did. I’m just happy to see where you are now. That’s all that matters! Big hugs and love you! Jai Sri Hari! Om Swamiji ki Jai!!
Jai Sri hari Diyaji
You have been through so much
You are very strong person now on positive note
Sending you lot’s of love 💕
Lots of love to you Sushreeji. Pranam.
Very heartbreaking to know how you were treated.
But Swamiji’s presence made you the calm and smiling person you are now. Om Swami ki Jai🙏
Very heartbreaking to know how you were treated.
But Swamiji’s presence made you the calm and smiling person you are now. Om Swami ki Jai🙏
Lots of ❤
Very heartbreaking to know how you were treated.
But Swamiji’s presence made you the calm and smiling person you are now. Pranam
Its heart breaking to read how younwere treated at the time of separation. And its a wonder that you forgave even after being so terribly hurt. Your compassion and kindness is beyond limits. ❤️. May Sri Hari’s blessings always keep you happy.
It’s so heartbreaking to know you have to go through all that memories all over again and it’s so sad to know that you had no one by your side back then. I can’t imagine how difficult it must have been to go through all that.
More strength to you.. may you heal writing all this to beyond imagination .. May Shri Hari fill your life with bliss 😊💕
It’s so much pain in our lives but when we listen read others pain ours pain feel so invaluable. But thank you for writing this changed my perspective for many people I have judged to be bad and deserving for their suffering. Though somewhere it’s all past karma whose fruits are ripping now and we all suffer. And when we have lords grace he himself has come to hold our hand and walk us the path, worrying will be a dishonour of his presence. It’s all illuminating where he is and so his presence is light in dark lives.
When I first saw you at ashram, you were wearing white saree with red border,someone told me ‘she has worked in bollywood’. I felt a child in you a sweet girl moving around lost in her own songs. Also felt little odd among kind of devotees we normally assume. But not even in dreams I can think the same girl you are am reading now. When we suffer our bad karma destroys and may be all this suffering let you to Swamiji ,maa and hari in physical body. Lots of love wishes to the inspiring brave loving kind n true mother Sushree Diya Om
Ji
It’s so much pain in our lives but when we listen read others pain ours pain feel so invaluable. But thank you for writing this changed my perspective for many people I have judged to be bad and deserving for their suffering. Though somewhere it’s all past karma whose fruits are ripping now and we all suffer. And when we have lords grace he himself has come to hold our hand and walk us the path, worrying will be a dishonour of his presence. It’s all illuminating where he is and so his presence is light in dark lives.
When I first saw you at ashram, you were wearing white saree with red border,someone told me ‘she has worked in bollywood’. I felt a child in you a sweet girl moving around lost in her own songs. Also felt little odd among kind of devotees we normally assume. But not even in dreams I can think the same girl you are am reading now. When we suffer our bad karma destroys and may be all this suffering let you to Swamiji ,maa and hari in physical body. Lots of love wishes to the inspiring brave loving kind n true mother Sushree Diya Om
Ji
I must say, your story gives me strength. 💙🌻
I think back to what I was doing around that same age, when you were going through all of this. I would have never known what to do, if I was in that very same situation, so young and naive. I would have trusted and did trust many souls at that age, and that didn’t end well. Early 20’s and going through an ordeal, even I would have been lost too. Heart breaking to hear that you were going through so much.
Dear Sushree Diya Om ji,
I really feel that every time you write your experience, you are untying one of the mental knots empowering you even more and giving you more control on your emotions. Please keep writing…
Jai Shri Hari
Honestly, after readings your journey .I’m moving towards seeing more positive aspects in every situation of my life.
Reading your journey is helping me become more positive. I sometimes visualise what I read and that visuals make me feel sad but as I have learned from your journey- bad times in life are temporary and this bad times shall pass too !
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