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The Soft War Inside the Kashmiri Home
Kashmir Observer
|NOVEMBER 15, 2025 ISSUE
The emotional map of the Kashmiri home shifts after marriage, and the sister must face the fault lines alone.
Kashmiri families work like small constellations. Several generations often live under one roof, sharing food, laughter, and the small disagreements that come and go like weather.
The home becomes a space where emotions move around freely, where loyalty and love are constantly weighed and rearranged.
At the center of this everyday universe stand three figures: the son, his wife, and his sister.
The sister, the Zaam, is the groom's closest companion. Her role grows out of years of care. Her presence shapes rituals, family gatherings, and all the small, unspoken understandings that hold a home together.
She supports her brother, steadies her parents, plans celebrations, and eases tension before it turns into trouble. She becomes the glue that keeps the family balanced.
Marriage changes this balance. The son steps into his new life as a husband. A bride arrives, confident and hopeful, and slowly becomes the new center of the home.
The son shifts his focus toward her. He grows attentive, thoughtful, and eager to match her needs. He opens doors, buys small gifts, and shapes his days around her comfort.
His mother looks at him differently, and his sister's words no longer carry the same weight. Only the bride rises in importance.
The Zaam starts to fade into the background. She speaks, and people hear something else. She smiles, and someone reads it the wrong way. She moves around the house carefully, knowing her presence can be twisted into a problem.
Whispers turn her into someone she isn’t: Jealous, selfish, and difficult.
Meanwhile, her work does not change. She still cares for everyone, handles the small details, and helps keep peace, even as her efforts go unnoticed.
This story is from the NOVEMBER 15, 2025 ISSUE edition of Kashmir Observer.
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