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LOVE, NOT INHERITED BUT EARNED

September 2025

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Woman's Era

When the father-in-law steps up in ways your own father didn't.

- Nidhi Raj

LOVE, NOT INHERITED BUT EARNED

It starts with something small. A father-in-law warming your tea because your toddler kept you up all night. A silent gesture of standing by you when voices in the house get too loud. A folded 500-rupee note slipped into your palm when you least expect it, with no strings attached. You're not his daughter. He's not your father. And yet—somewhere between tradition and tenderness, a quiet, redemptive bond is born.

For generations, Indian daughters-in-law have been told to fear their mothers-in-law and tolerate their fathers-in-law. The role of the father-in-law, if acknowledged at all, was distant and formal. But across kitchens, courtyards, and WhatsApp groups, something has changed. Daughters-in-law are discovering father figures not in the men who raised them—but in the men they married into.

Not every woman has grown up with an emotionally available father. Many had fathers who were dutiful but emotionally absent. Some had fathers who were too strict, some too silent, and some, not present at all. But in the emotional afterlife of marriage, unexpected healing is showing up—in the form of a man who was once a stranger.

For Meher, a 34-year-old advertising executive from Chandigarh, her father-in-law became her soft place to land after years of walking on emotional eggshells with her own father. “My dad was proud of me, sure. But he never said it. Never hugged me. Never stood up for me when my extended family mocked my career choices,” she recalls.

“But my FIL? When I got promoted, he baked me a cake. I didn’t even know he knew how to use an oven. He called me beta without fanfare. And it hit me—that sometimes, love comes later in life, but just as pure.”

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