The Wedding and the Hot Seat
My niece got married last weekend - a full-blown Palakkad Iyer affair with all the usual ingredients: silk, sandalwood, and a sea of relatives. It began peacefully enough smiles, small talk and cousins pretending to be interested in the rituals while really scanning the buffet.
Then, like
clockwork, the concerned aunt brigade assembled. I don’t know how they do it maybe
there’s a secret radar that activates when they spot an unmarried person in the
vicinity. Suddenly, I was in the hot seat. “Don’t delay!” one said. “Loneliness
is terrible!” sighed another. “Who’ll look after you in old age?” came the
final blow.
And I just
stood there thinking, “who knows if anyone will look after me, or if I’ll end
up looking after them?”
Some cousins,
sensing drama, came by to check what was happening. I told them flatly, “I just
don’t want to live a miserable life like my mom and die with regrets.” That
silenced the table for a bit but not Dad, who’s been loudly lamenting my single
status to anyone within earshot. At one point, I simply had enough. I got up and
walked out. Just stepped outside the mandapam and stood there away from the
noise, the questions and the pity. The breeze, the temple bells, and the faint
smell of jasmine felt far kinder than any conversation inside.
Honestly,
that quiet exit said more than any “fitting reply” ever could. Sometimes silence
is the attitude.
And isn’t that India in a nutshell? Everyone has an opinion about everyone else’s life, free of charge. All these self-appointed advisors will happily lecture you for hours but not one of them will ever bring a good alliance to the table. Reminded me exactly why I try to skip my dad’s side family functions.

Everyone has an opinion - could it be any better put? You are absolutely right
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