Originally posted by: srini18
Wow!!! Absolutely staggering write up ššš.. I concur with your notion of how Ishita's disability propelled her into becoming a warm and selfless person...
By virtue of her disability, she was a victim of selfishness of highest degree.. Her fiance with whom she dreamt of a fairytale, left her to rot, abandoned her because she wasn't a fertile womb. Adding to the misery, the society which she was part of, included humans such as Subbu's Mom who was relentless in her attack against Ishita, never missed a chance to condescend her for the disability. She was stigmatized and such avalanche of inconsideration made Ishita immune to self-centeredness and in the process she became selfless and considerate...
She could easily empathize with people who were in pain, the only reason for her to forge a bond instantly with Ruhi who was a grieving soul as well..She knew the pain of Rejection and Abandonment.. And for the same, she was desperate to make a nonchalant Raman aware of Ruhi's tadap for love... Yes, disability was the worst thing that happened to Ishita but the silver lining was, she evolved as a better and brave human being...
@bold - Irrevocably true and forms the basis of YHM.. It's the choices and the reasons for those choices that make or break people...
Ishita chose love instead of hate. Inability to conceive children was her Achilles' heel and was deserted by Subbu for the same.. It's a human proclivity to detest the source of distress as Raman did. He started loathing most of the women post Shagun's infidelity..As a result, he was in a self inflicted mess and transformed himself into vengeful RKB from a Happy Puttar ā¹ļø
Contrastingly, Ishita instead of drowning in the sea of sadness, or exacting vendetta, started loving children. Her love for children increased by bounds and leaps, she devoted most of her time in treating kids which embalmed her and kept her emotions at bay. Her quantum of love towards children is so unfathomable that she couldn't even despise Subbu's child, focal point of her sufferings..
Thank you once again for this brilliant piece and apologies for fidgeting with your write up...