Housework is NOT a woman’s job, her choice or her dharma
It’s a travesty of justice when tasks that no one would opt for are thrust on one section of the population who are gaslighted into believing it is their ‘duty’.
Aekta Kapoor’s monthly column
It’s a travesty of justice when tasks that no one would opt for are thrust on one section of the population who are gaslighted into believing it is their ‘duty’.
The coronavirus lockdown led Aekta Kapoor to confront the psychological demons from her past.
A time for babies.
It could be a scene anywhere in India – in swish gated neighbourhoods in Delhi or Mumbai, or a palatial bungalow in Bhopal or Lucknow.
It’s a day to love myself a little bit – a day to say ‘I love you’ to myself a hundred times.
The greatest gift we can give our kids is to be happy ourselves, writes Aekta Kapoor.
Give women education and political empowerment, instead.
Majoritarianism is unjust and inhumane.
The true bhakta does not need an identity card, a religion, a caste, a place of birth, a parent, weapons of lathis and tear gas, or a cancerous government that devours its own citizens.
Babies have unquestioning faith in the mother’s milk, animals have faith in their own instinct – they do not judge or over-analyse.
Aekta Kapoor suddenly found herself living her dream, except it didn’t really happen the way she expected.
Why is it called a women’s festival?
An unending, infinite love story.
What’s the definition of heaven? Having the TV remote all to yourself and being able to walk around the house naked.















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