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Sunday, March 29, 2026

Why Our Generation Is Distancing from Relatives

It started as a casual conversation.

My mother, in her usual tone asked a relative why his daughter hadn’t come for a family function. He casually replied, “She’s not really interested in attending functions…”


To which my mom, genuinely puzzled, asked, Why? What’s the reason? Why are kids of this generation avoiding functions? How they will know the relatives?”

He replied, "Maybe you should ask Deepika… she’s closer to that generation. (Yes, I am just stuck in the buffering zone between the 90s and 2K!” 😄)

That line stayed with me.  She’s closer to that generation. 

Yes, May be I am close enough to understand Gen Z, but still rooted in the older system.

And suddenly, I realized, this wasn’t just about one girl skipping a function. This was about an entire generation quietly stepping back from something that once defined family life: relatives.

Let me be honest. I have what I call a “relative phobia.” I avoid gatherings when I can. I keep conversations minimal. And I often asked myself why?

After thinking deeply, here’s what I believe.

Support Is Rare: 

One of the biggest disconnects is this: Relatives expect you to show up for every function, every ritual, every gathering. But when life gets hard? Absolute silence… or worse, a full blame game without even trying to understand what you was the actual situation. 

Our generation has seen this clearly. We have watched ourselves struggle often alone. We have faced  stress, emotional burnout… and rarely felt support from extended family. In fact, sometimes it almost feels like they are silently happy for your downfall.

So naturally, a question arises: Why should we invest emotionally in relationships that only exist during celebrations?

It’s not bitterness. It’s just… awareness.

Negativity Is the Default Language

Have you noticed how conversations often go in family circles?

Talking about who failed; Comparing whose life is better; There’s very little appreciation, very little kindness.

Our generation is actively trying to unlearn this. We are choosing positivity, mental peace, and conscious conversations. So when we walk into spaces filled with judgment and negativity, it feels… exhausting and draining.

The Endless Cycle of Advice:

This one hits home for almost everyone.

“When are you getting married?”

“Why only one child? “You should plan your second.”

“You are doing it wrong.”

Why are you rejecting that girl/boy…

Having big dreams? 

And I kept thinking:

Have you ever paused to understand our reality?

Our mental load? Our priorities? Our Values?

Have you ever offered help instead of advice?

If the answer is no, then the advice feels like Less care… and more like noise.

Boundaries Are Misunderstood as Disrespect

This is something our generation values deeply boundaries.

We don’t want to share everything because it somehow turns into judgment in front of us and a full discussion behind our backs.

We don’t want to justify every decision, because you didn’t walk through the chaos, confusion, and pressure it took to make it.

We choose silence sometimes, not because we don’t trust you, but because peace feels safer than being misunderstood.

But in many traditional setups, this is seen as:

Arrogance, Disrespect and “This generation has no values”

In reality, we are trying to protect our mental space. We are not avoding people.

Relationships Feel Transactional, Not Emotional

Another hard truth. Where is the genuine connection?

Where are the conversations that go beyond surface level?

Where is the effort to know each other as individuals?

Our generation craves authenticity. If a relationship feels forced or performative, we slowly distance ourselves not out of ego, but out of emotional honesty.

So… Do We Really Hate Relatives?

No. We hate the experience that often comes with it.

We want:

Conversations without judgment

Presence during tough times

Respect for personal choices (We value your opinions too)

If those exist, we show up. Happily.

If not, we choose peace over pressure.

Final Thought: There was a phase in my life when things weren’t easy. And in that moment, almost all the relatives quietly stepped back.

No calls. No support. No “Are you okay?” Just distance and backstabbing. 

Now, years later, I still try. I show up with a polite smile, I keep things normal on the outside. But somewhere inside, the words once spoken, the way things were handled… they don’t just disappear. They stay. They replay.

And I sometimes find myself asking. 

Do we really need people in our lives who were absent when we needed them the most?

This is not anger. But we believe, relationships are not built only on presence during celebrations. They are built on how you show up when things fall apart.

So if someone isn’t coming to you with warmth, happiness, or openness…

maybe it’s not attitude. Maybe it’s not ego. Maybe, at some point, something broke.

And instead of asking, “Why have they changed?” maybe the better question is,

“Did I ever hurt them without realizing?”

Monday, March 23, 2026

So… When Is the Second Child Coming?


There are some questions in life that come from curiosity...wrapped in judgment… and repeated like a broken record.

One such question? “When is your second child getting released?”

Ah yes. The classic. I wanted to reply them, "Relax… it’s like Jana Nayagan, teaser ready, trailer ready, hype full on… and the release date? No updates yet 😄"

Let me tell you about this one person in my life. No matter what I say, literally anything, this question shows up.

Me: I’m going to this place.

That Family Planning Auditor: Why? Waste of time. Are you planning for a second child there?

I mean… seriously?

There was a moment I was genuinely proud of something I had done. It mattered to me. It was my achievement.

And then came the line that truly crossed every boundary:

“Dont you feel ashamed of yourself. Is this what you are proud of instead of producing a second child?”

That moment didn’t just annoy me. It triggered me.  

Because suddenly, everything I am, everything I have worked for, was reduced to one expectation: Have another child. 

Wait! And that person is not not my husband, not my mom or dad, not my sister, not even someone from my in-laws family… that person is just some one out of the blue, but my well-wisher. (lets call it)

So its almost funny how people have created a timeline for everyone else’s life:

Not married yet? “Why?”

Just married? “Any good news?”

First child? “Time for the second!”

And yes we all know it doesn’t stop. It never stops.

Even in 2026, with all the education and awareness around us, people still ask these Intrusive questions as if they are entitled to your life decisions.

I still remember a lady who, right after my first son, yes, while I was still lying in the hospital with stitches, barely out of the delivery room, told me, “You should immediately plan for your second child.”

Immediately? Sure… should I call my husband, who was still standing there holding our first child like it was the biggest moment of his life, and ask him to start the sequel right away?

Come on, I was still trying to figure out how to come back to Earth (not from magic mushrooms), but from the anesthesia the doctor gave me.

That Return Gift Concept: And, Oops, I forgot my relatives who take things to a whole new level: “Just have a child and give it to me. I will raise the baby and give it back to you.”

I am sorry… what?!

First tell me, Have you ever spent a full day with my first child?  This isn’t something you can borrow and return. I am not library to rent and Return.

So, to all those people Behind every “Why not a second child?” there could be a story you know nothing about.

Maybe:

The body isn’t ready

The mind isn’t ready

The partner isn’t ready

Life circumstances aren’t right

Or simply… the person doesn’t want to

And sometimes, it goes even deeper:

She might have gone through an abortion

She might be undergoing IVF or other treatments

She might be navigating perimenopause… or even menopause itself

Not every journey is visible. Not every struggle is spoken about.

So before asking, maybe choose kindness over curiosity.

If you had a smooth journey and a strong support system, that’s wonderful. But not everyone walks the same path.

A Gentle (and Honest) Request. To everyone who feels the urge to ask this question:

Please stop. Not every question needs to be asked. And it’s definitely not a topic for public discussion.

To Those Who Are Tired of Hearing This

If you are like me, hearing this again and again, here’s something to remember:

You don’t owe anyone an explanation. You can simply say: “We will decide what is right for us.”

So the next time someone asks,

“Any good news?" And make you feel guilty for not boosting the economy and controlling inflation! 

Smile… and remind yourself:

You are already living a complete, meaningful life, on your own terms.