
In-laws or out-laws?
“When you marry someone, you marry his family.” Would you give the same advice to your children?

“When you marry someone, you marry his family.” Would you give the same advice to your children?

Her mother-in-law would accuse her of doing things she hadn’t done, while siding with her own daughters. The response she expected was silence.
What Bollywood song would your yoni sing? What is your yoni’s matrimonial bio-data? Because–news flash –sometimes sex is pretty funny!
It’s vile, sick, gory, and brutal. To an untrained ear, it’s just noise. Then again, music ahead of its time is generally misunderstood.

The hardest truth is no parent ever plans for an autistic child in the way most parents prepare to change diapers and teach their child to ride a bike.
My family hadn’t raised me to talk about feelings. My mother, who came from a stoic military family, kept hers in a jar on top of the refrigerator.

It’s not always fist fights and elbows shoved in stomachs. We are even at risk of words typed through a 2-inch screen.

I’ve seen many South Asian kids disassociate themselves from their families and culture in what I call a ‘pre-emptive strike’.

Vikrant Lal provides advice and tips for South Asian families to better cope with the gay issue.
Who wants to talk to their parents about sex? Nobody. But a wispy moustache is emerging.

Raksha Bandhan translates to “a bond of protection” and perhaps nowhere else was this more evident than in the families present that rainy day.