Millennial and Gen Z women don’t have simple dating lives. Arohi’s confusion between the "bad boy" (Kabir), the "nice guy" (Rohan), and the "broken genius" (Veer) mirrors real-life dating app paralysis.
: Their romance began under false pretenses when Deep married Millennial and Gen Z women don’t have simple dating lives
Post-marriage, Arohi’s story took a revolutionary turn. When Neil betrayed her trust (due to a misunderstanding involving another woman), Arohi did not wait for the male lead to rescue her. She filed for divorce. In the conservative landscape of daily soaps, a female lead initiating separation was radical. When Neil betrayed her trust (due to a
Finally, the mature Arohi enters a phase where romantic storylines are redefined by agency and integration. Her relationships are no longer the central plot, but a meaningful subplot that supports a larger narrative of her career, friendships, and personal passions. She meets a partner who is neither a fantasy nor a project, but a companion—someone with their own fully realized life. Their conflicts are mundane (schedules, chores, family obligations) rather than melodramatic (jealousy, grand betrayals). The romance here is quieter but deeper: it lives in reliability, in shared humor, in the ability to argue without fear of abandonment. This storyline suggests that the ultimate romantic achievement is not a wedding or a grand declaration, but the creation of a sustainable, mutual space where two people can grow without shrinking. Finally, the mature Arohi enters a phase where