Indian weddings are not events; they are festivals. The preparations begin months in advance. The house fills with relatives, the phone never stops ringing, and the house smells of fenugreek and cardamom. It is a time when the entire family becomes a corporate entity—someone handles accounts, someone handles logistics, and someone’s sole job is to make the bride/groom cry during the bidaai .
5:00 AM — Grandfather and father milk buffaloes. Mother lights the clay stove ( chulha ) and makes fresh butter. 8:00 AM — Breakfast: makki di roti with sarson ka saag and lassi. Children walk 2 km to school. 12:00 PM — Women fetch water from hand pump, mend clothes, and chat under a tree. Men irrigate wheat fields. 4:00 PM — School returns. Kids do homework on a charpai (cot). Mother feeds leftover roti to cows. 8:00 PM — Entire family eats dinner together in the courtyard. Grandmother tells folk tales. 9:30 PM — All sleep in two large rooms. No TV, but a transistor radio plays old film songs. EXCLUSIVE-- Free Savita Bhabhi Sex Comics In Hindi