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By 6:15 AM, Meera had already lost a small battle. She wanted to make poha for breakfast—light, quick. But Savitri had silently placed a bowl of soaked chana and paneer cubes on the counter. The message was clear: today was a protein day. The children had exams.

“I called him yesterday. He said Thursday,” Meera said, flipping a paratha .

At 9:15, after the school bus swallowed the children and the father-in-law settled into his newspaper, Savitri spoke. Not to Meera, exactly. At her. -Xprime4u.Pro-.Slim.Bhabhi.2024.720p.HEVC.WeB-D...

She also cleaned the smudge of last night’s chai from the marble floor, paid the milk bill via a UPI app her mother-in-law still called “that magic phone thing,” and reminded herself to buy harad (myrobalan) for her father-in-law’s digestion. No one thanked her. No one noticed. This was the family’s oxygen—invisible, essential, and taken for granted.

Meera finished her oil massage, washed her hands, and poured herself a glass of water. Tomorrow, the belan would scrape again at 5:47 AM. The onions would need chopping. The invisible ledger would gain another entry. But tonight, she allowed herself one small truth: this life—this exhausting, crowded, thankless, loving, complicated Indian family life—was not a trap. It was a river. And she was learning to float, not fight. By 6:15 AM, Meera had already lost a small battle

At 1 PM, when the house finally fell into the hush of afternoon nap—father-in-law snoring on the sofa, Savitri watching a rerun of Ramayan —Meera closed the bedroom door. She pulled out a small, locked diary from under the mattress. Inside: no secrets, no poetry. Just a list.

Jan 15: Paid Kavya’s art class fees (₹2,500). Rohan said he’d reimburse. He forgot. Jan 22: Bought new pressure cooker gasket. Old one leaked. Savitri blamed me. Jan 28: Called doctor for father-in-law’s knee pain. Rohan said “do what’s needed.” Didn’t ask cost. The message was clear: today was a protein day

She turned off the kitchen light. The apartment sighed. And somewhere, in the dark, a tulsi plant waited for the morning’s water.

By 6 PM, the apartment was a pressure cooker about to whistle. Kavya was crying because her science project (a volcano made of clay) collapsed. Aarav was refusing to do homework, claiming a stomachache (a lie, Meera knew, because she had seen him eat three bhajias at the neighbor’s house). Savitri was on the phone with her sister in Pune, loudly discussing how “daughters-in-law today have no sanskar (values).”