That is Indian family life. It is loud. It is crowded. It is sometimes exhausting. But you are never alone. And in a fast-moving world, isn’t that the greatest luxury of all?
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There is a saying in Hindi: "Ghar wahi, jahaan chulha jale." (Home is where the stove burns). xxx bhabhi romance
But last night, when the power went out during a storm, we all gathered on the big bed. We lit a candle. The kids stopped fighting. My husband started humming an old Kishore Kumar song. Within minutes, we were all singing, laughing in the dark.
In an Indian household, that stove is never really off. It is the heartbeat of our daily life—simmering lentils for lunch, whistling pressure cooker for evening snacks, and brewing the first cup of cutting chai before anyone has even brushed their teeth. That is Indian family life
By 7 AM, the house is a hive of activity. School uniforms are being ironed while a child eats their paratha with one hand and searches for a missing sock with the other. Three people are shouting for the bathroom mirror simultaneously. And yet, no one raises their voice in real anger. This is just our language of love. We don't just live in a house; we live in an ecosystem. My parents, my in-laws, two kids, and a very judgmental pet parrot named Mittu all reside under one roof.
My mother-in-law is already in the kitchen, grinding spices for the day’s sabzi . The sound of the mixer grinder is the unofficial national wake-up call of India. By 6:30 AM, my husband is bargaining with the subzi wala (vegetable vendor) on his phone about the price of tomatoes (which have, inevitably, become "costlier than petrol"). It is sometimes exhausting
This is sacred time. The chai (tea) is made with ginger, cardamom, and what feels like a kilogram of sugar. We sit on the balcony or sprawl on the living room floor. The TV is on (usually a reality show or a 90s movie rerun), but no one is really watching.