"Put me on video, beta! I want to see if Anaya is tying her hair properly."
Another grunt. This one meant "Almost."
"Did you finish the physics numericals?" she asked, not looking up from the Poha .
This was her favorite moment of the day. Not the silence, but the evidence. The evidence of a family living, struggling, laughing, and growing. She opened the WhatsApp group. Kavya had sent a photo: a selfie from the auto-rickshaw, showing Rohan cramming a physics book in the background, oblivious. Anupam had replied: "Don't read in a moving vehicle. Bad for eyes." savita bhabhi comics pdf kickass hindi 212
Anaya had sent a voice note: "Maa, I forgot my water bottle. Bring it. I love you to the moon and back."
"Didi is crying!" shouted a tiny, high-pitched voice. It was 6-year-old Anaya, the family's chaos coordinator, running in with a broken crayon. "Her drawing is ruined!"
From the living room, a deep, baritone voice emerged. Anupam Sharma, the father, was already dressed in his crisp khaki shirt—he was a government bank officer. He was performing his sacred morning ritual: checking the scooter’s tire pressure and watering the single Tulsi plant in the courtyard. The Tulsi plant was his mother’s legacy. "No breakfast until the plant is watered," his own mother’s voice echoed in his head, even five years after she was gone. "Put me on video, beta
Anaya grabbed the phone and ran under the dining table. "Nani! I am a secret agent!"
Meena smiled, finished her cold chai, and got up to find a water bottle. The day was just beginning. And in the heart of Jaipur, the small, loud, beautiful story of the Sharma family continued to write itself, one spilled cup of chai, one broken crayon, and one shared prayer at a time.
Breakfast was a symphony of chaos. Rohan ate three Pohas in two minutes. Anaya built a fort with her empty bowl. Meena packed four different tiffins: Rohan’s for school, Anupam’s for the bank, Kavya’s for the library, and a small one for the neighborhood stray cat, Billi. The phone rang. It was Nani (maternal grandmother) from Delhi. This was her favorite moment of the day
Anupam walked in, wiping his hands on a small towel. "Blinking means working. When it's off, then you worry." This was a fundamental Sharma law of technology.
Kavya, 22, the eldest daughter, emerged from her room, looking like a warrior heading to battle. She was in her final year of MBA and had an internship interview online in an hour. Her "ruined drawing" was, in fact, a diagram of a marketing funnel she’d been working on. The crayon had merely smudged a corner.
Rohan, 17, stumbled in, his hair a bird's nest, and slumped onto a wooden stool. He grunted. That was his current form of ‘Good Morning, Maa.’ Meena didn't mind. She slid a steel glass of warm, spiced chai towards him. In a North Indian family, chai wasn't a beverage; it was a treaty. The first sip meant you were ready to face the day.
The next fifteen minutes were a blur of missing socks, a frantic search for Kavya’s ID card (found in the fridge, next to the pickle jar), and Anupam’s reminder: "Meena, don’t forget. Today is Saawan Monday. I’ll try to leave early. We should go to the temple in the evening."
"Anaya, it's not ruined, it's... abstract," Kavya sighed, picking up her little sister. "Maa, did the internet guy come? The Wi-Fi is blinking."