Facebook Pixel Love is Winter | Reader's Digest India – lifestyle – Lesen Sie diese Geschichte auf Magzter.com

Versuchen GOLD - Frei

Love is Winter

Reader's Digest India

|

February 2024

Fairytale marriages do not exist. But is a lifelong commitment to show up for each other still possible?

- Selma Carvalho

Love is Winter

If I think of marriage, I think of winter, a heavy northern winter, snow-blinded windows, hard frosts, dead leaves, skies so sullen, the grey bleeds into rooftops and trees. This seems contradictory, love is the coming of spring, bringing us its red-rosed promise of newness and hope, but to me it is winter's cold breath, its muffled sounds, its calm silences, its prolonged incarceration, the endurance of living things hidden underground.

This is the image my mind retains, because three months after we tie the knot, my husband and I arrive in Minnesota, in deep winter. Not a soul stirs in the pale light of lamp posts outside sparse and solitary houses buried in snow. Within the barren walls of our unfurnished apartment, within its cold and damp rooms, I discover I really don't know my husband. I am living with a stranger. Our year-long courtship has revealed only an illusion. Now that illusion is unravelling. Here in the small galley kitchen where I learn to cook, in the water-stained bathtub where I bathe, in the living room where I watch American news on the one thing we can afford to buy, a television set, I discover my husband is going to let me down, horribly and repeatedly, that I am going to spend many nights crying, and hating the man sleeping next to me. What is this stifling lifelong contract I have signed up to? Who devised this hobbling institution into which I have committed myself?

WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Reader's Digest India

Reader's Digest India

Reader's Digest India

EXTRAORDINARY INDIANS

Six ordinary people who turned concern into action, fixed what was broken—and made life fairer, safer, and kinder for all

time to read

16 mins

February 2026

Reader's Digest India

Reader's Digest India

STUDIO

Untitled (Native Man from Chotanagpur drawing Bow and Arrow)

time to read

1 min

February 2026

Reader's Digest India

Learning to FLY

A small act of rebellion on a cold Oxford night creates a moment of spontaneous joy

time to read

4 mins

February 2026

Reader's Digest India

Reader's Digest India

MY (RELUCTANT) TRIP TO THE TITANIC

In 2023, the submersible Titan imploded on its way to view the famous sunken ocean liner. A year earlier, our author—a sitcom writer— took the same trip. Here's what he saw

time to read

9 mins

February 2026

Reader's Digest India

Reader's Digest India

She Carried HOME the Blues

Tipriti Kharbangar has spent two decades carrying a music that refuses spectacle and chases truth. Now the blues singer is asking a deeper question: what does it mean to know your roots—and protect them?

time to read

9 mins

February 2026

Reader's Digest India

Reader's Digest India

A Year in France

My time in Aix-en-Provence as a student changed my outlook on life

time to read

3 mins

February 2026

Reader's Digest India

Reader's Digest India

A SISTERHOOD IN THE WILD

COMMUNITY In a city better known for traffic snarls than bird calls, a small but growing initiative is helping women slow down and look closer at the wild spaces around them.

time to read

3 mins

February 2026

Reader's Digest India

Reader's Digest India

How Famine and History Rewired Our Genes

What if India's current diabetes crisis began generations ago? Science reveals that food scarcity, colonial history, and epigenetics quietly shaped South Asia's metabolic fate

time to read

4 mins

February 2026

Reader's Digest India

Reader's Digest India

Tracing the Birth of Nations

In his latest book, Sam Dalrymple interlaces high political history with intimate human stories to examine the complex, often violent, foundations of modern west and south Asian countries

time to read

4 mins

February 2026

Reader's Digest India

Reader's Digest India

The Case for Curiosity

Two trivia enthusiasts explore how wonder fades with age— and why asking questions might be the key to finding it again

time to read

3 mins

February 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size