Yet, technology has also resurrected the family. The "Family Group" on WhatsApp is the new baithak (community sitting area). It is where recipes are fixed, where political arguments rage, and where elders send good morning memes that make no sense to the grandchildren.
Take the Sharmas of Delhi, for example. They live in a three-bedroom apartment in Noida (just parents and two kids), but every Sunday, the "satellite joint family" converges. The grandmother sends pickles via courier. The uncle in Bangalore joins the evening aarti (prayer) via video call. Daily life stories are shared on a WhatsApp group named "Sharma Sweets & Emotions." Yet, technology has also resurrected the family
A child moving to Canada for a job isn't just moving for money; they are moving carrying the silent burden of "family honor." The mother misses the son, but tells the neighbors, "He is doing well." The son sends money, not because they need it, but because sending money is the SMS for "I love you." Perhaps the most powerful shift in the Indian family lifestyle is the role of the bahu (daughter-in-law). The older stories featured subservience and secrecy. The new stories feature negotiation and partnership. Take the Sharmas of Delhi, for example