I met my husband Ravi when we were both working at a manufacturing plant in the outskirts of Surat. Both our families were poor. Our combined income was around ₹60,000 per month.
After rent, electricity, food, and daily expenses, we were left with around ₹35,000. Every month, Ravi sent ₹12,000 to his family back in the village. The remaining amount he put into savings.
One evening, I gently asked,
“Ravi, can we send a little something to my parents too? They’re struggling to pay for Papa’s medicine.”
He sighed and replied:
“My side has more responsibilities right now. You’re a woman now, married. Your duty is to your husband’s house. You understand that, don’t you?”
I didn’t dare argue. I quietly began trimming our grocery budget, sending ₹300–₹500 each month to my parents.
Some months, when urgent needs came up back home, I borrowed from friends to send more.
When my younger brother was hospitalized suddenly, I sold my wedding ring in secret and sent the money to my parents.
Ravi found out.
The final straw came just last week.
My mother called late at night, her voice shaky:
“Beta, can you send some money for your father’s medicine? His cough is getting worse…”
Tears welled in my eyes.
But our bank account only had ₹2,500 left. We had just received our salaries, but Ravi had sent most of it—₹30,000—to his family to begin renovating their house.
I turned to him, voice trembling:
“Papa’s really sick. Can I please have ₹1,000 to send home?”
Ravi stood up, walked away, and said coldly:
“You’re married now. Don’t even dream of taking care of your parents anymore.”
Those words hit me like knives to the heart.
I stared at his back as he walked out the door. Suddenly, our rented room felt cold, vast, and terrifyingly unfamiliar. My legs gave out. I sank to the tiled floor, shivering from the inside out.
Tears streamed down my cheeks, soaking the worn fabric of my kurta.
I clutched my chest, where my heart ached like never before. Not just sadness—this was helplessness.
I couldn’t help my parents when they needed me most. I couldn’t make my husband understand or even care.
The tiny room that once felt like a home now felt like a cage. Every breath was heavy. I sobbed into the silence, alone in a place I thought was ours.
Ravi was gone—leaving behind only silence, responsibility, and the suffocating weight of emotional abandonment.
That night, I stared at my ring finger—empty. The ring was gone. I had sold it weeks ago to save my brother’s life.
When my mother had called that day, desperate, I knew I couldn’t ask Ravi. I rushed to a local pawn shop and handed over the only valuable thing I had left: our wedding ring. In return, I got ₹5,000—just enough for my brother’s emergency treatment.
I hadn’t told Ravi. I had hoped he would understand someday.
But now, sitting alone, I asked myself:
Would he ever see the sacrifice I made—not for luxury, but for love?
Or would I always be the “ungrateful wife who only cared for her own family”?
My phone buzzed. It was Priya, my best friend—the only one who had helped me countless times when I was desperate.
I stared at her name on the screen, hesitating. I needed ₹1,000. But I had already borrowed so much from her.
Shame burned inside me.
Still, I pressed “Call.”
“Hello? Anika?” Her voice was warm, like sunshine through clouds.
“Priya…” I broke down.
“What’s wrong? Where are you? Are you okay?” she asked, instantly alarmed.
“I… I need help again,” I sobbed. “Papa is really sick… I need ₹1,000… please…”
Silence. My heart pounded.
The next morning, weak sunlight slipped through the window, touching my face. I hadn’t slept. My mind was spinning—would Priya help? Would ₹1,000 even be enough?
My phone rang. My heart jumped. It was Ma.
I answered, voice shaky:
“Ma?”
Her voice cracked:
“Anika… Papa… he had trouble breathing this morning. We rushed him to the hospital…”
I froze.
“What did the doctor say?”
“They say… it’s worse now. He needs a stronger treatment. Very expensive, beta…”
Her sobs pierced my soul.
Stronger treatment. More money. And I only had ₹2,500.
My breath hitched. The world blurred. I was drowning in a sea of panic.
I hung up the phone and collapsed. My entire body trembled. I needed to go home.
Not just for money—but to be with Papa. To hold his hand.
I stood up and packed whatever little I had: a few faded salwar kameez, my toothbrush, and my ID.
There was nothing else of value left. No gold, no savings. Only pain.
I looked around our room one last time. Once it was filled with hope—now it was a prison.
Ravi wasn’t home. Probably out discussing how to rebuild his parents’ house.
But my house—my family—was breaking.
I zipped the suitcase. And then the door opened.
Ravi stood there, stunned. He saw the suitcase and frowned.
“Where are you going?”
“Home,” I said quietly. “Papa is dying. I need to go now.”
His face darkened. “Again with the drama? Yesterday your mom said he just had a cough. What, trying to guilt me into giving you more money?”
I stared at him, heartbroken.
“He’s in the hospital, Ravi. I begged you yesterday. I have nothing left. I’m going.”
He scoffed. “I already send ₹12,000 a month to my family! We don’t have money to waste on your side too!”
He pointed at my suitcase. “And who said you could leave? This isn’t just your decision.”
I looked at him—this man I once called husband. And all I saw was a stranger.
“He’s dying, Ravi,” I said softly. “I have to go.”
He gave a cold, cruel laugh. “Go then. Let’s see what good you can do with no money. You’ll be back. Don’t expect me to wait.”
I didn’t answer.
I walked past him, suitcase in hand. Out the door. Into the night.
The streets were dark. But I felt something stir inside me—a strange, fragile strength.
I called my mother.
“Ma… I’m on my way.”
That night, I walked alone—but I walked with purpose.
Leaving wasn’t weakness. It was survival. It was love. It was freedom.
I didn’t know what the future held. But I knew this:
I couldn’t live in a house where love came with conditions and empathy had to be begged for.
I would return to the people who never asked anything from me—except that I come home.
Maybe we’d still struggle. But at least we’d struggle together.
And maybe, just maybe, I’d find peace again.
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