Originally posted by: Rahm
During the chili scene (ouch, poor baby--that must've burned!!), Pratigya thought to herself that if Krishna wants to make her do this then she will do it and that she will do anything he wants to make him happy.
No doubt Pratigya eating the food has left some sort of an impact within Krishna. We saw so many emotions on his face--shock, disbelief (that she's actually eating it), regretful and in the end hurt--he couldn't bear to watch her eat it so he had to look away.
Onto my point, why did Pratigya not say those words out loud before eating the food? Yes, the action itself was astounding, but the words are needed. Krishna needs to hear the I love you and that she'd be willing to do anything he wants for his happiness.
I totally get that Pratigya is probably scared of Krishna not believing that she loves him, however, she has repeatedly told him that she's not acting so she can repeatedly tell him she loves him, etc. When is this confession going to happen? What are the cts waiting for? By the preview, we came to know that SS and Amma are returning. I was hoping this confession and them growing close would happen before they got back home.
Krishna has been bitter and resentful ever since the secret came out and he was humiliated. True he couldn't bear to watch her eat it, so he looked away, but if he truly couldn't bear it why didnt he take the plate away altogether? Why didn't he stop her? Why didn't he have a glass of water? Because he needed proof.
Why didn't Prats say the words "I love you?" Maybe she is waiting for her moment, and then saying it. She is allowing him to let off steam. All she was doing was treating him like a child, acting the wife but really playing his mom. She thinks by going along with his wishes, that she is proving herself.
One thing more, if Krishna is so angry that he won't even listen to her, then he won't believe her words. If he is still so blinded by his own distrust of her, then he won't listen. If Pratigya is patient, she probably feels that the time for her confession will come on its own. When she sees the storm has passed, then she will say what needs to be said.