India to Get a Sanskari Ministry for Sex
Before you get any cheeky ideas for the festive season, please be informed that a Ministry of Sex is underway, says our cheeky columnist Unsanskari Stree.
Before you get any cheeky ideas for the festive season, please be informed that a Ministry of Sex is underway, says our cheeky columnist Unsanskari Stree.
Unsanskari Stree is sick of jokes doing the rounds on WhatsApp groups, portraying Indian men as battered, helpless victims, whose nagging, irritable spouses make life miserable for them.
Our catty columnist Unsanskari Stree has given up on New Year Resolutions. Instead, she suggests a list of lifelong resolutions for single women. Trigger warning: love, sex and real-life truths ahead!
In a new column, ‘Unsanskari Stree’ shares her post-divorce experiences of dating older Indian men. Ahem.
These were the most-read stories on eShe in our second year.
The one thing that undermined and unravelled my marriage was not domestic violence, or another woman. It was something simpler – yet more important.
Someone I have been politely pulling the disappearing act on, told me, when I finally picked up his phone, that I am more of a man than him. This open letter’s for you, mister.
Why is it called a women’s festival?
The #MeToo movement in India has shifted the blame and shame from victims to the sexual predators, and it’s about time. Here are five things we all – men, women, organizations and societies – can learn from this social-media outpouring.