Every night, my daughter called me crying, begging me to come for her. The next

had succumbed to the unrelenting pressure and anguish that haunted her in those early postpartum days. The weight of her suffering was more than she could bear alone, and without warning, the world had become too heavy a burden for her. Alongside her, in the second coffin, lay her newborn son, Avi, whose life ended before it had truly begun. The news shattered our existence, rendering us hollow shadows of our former selves.

In the days following their deaths, an unbearable heaviness settled over us, like a suffocating fog that refused to lift. I replayed the calls in my mind over and over, my daughter’s voice etched into my memory like a haunting refrain. Her cries for help echoed relentlessly, a constant reminder of my inaction, and the what-ifs tormented me relentlessly. What if I had acted sooner? What if I had defied tradition and rescued her from the silent torment she endured?

As a mother, I failed her, trapped in a web of societal expectations and the fear of judgment. The regret gnawed at my heart, leaving raw wounds that refused to heal. My husband, too, wore the anguish on his face, his eyes vacant, his spirit crushed under the weight of shared guilt. The loss of our daughter and grandson left us adrift in an ocean of sorrow, struggling to find meaning in the overwhelming grief.

In the village of Bhawanipur, the whispers began, as they often do, with speculation and judgment spreading like wildfire. They spoke of postpartum depression, a term that felt foreign in a community unaccustomed to discussing mental health. They spoke of a young woman overwhelmed by the transition into motherhood, facing expectations that left no room for vulnerability.

Amidst the whispers, we found little solace in understanding. Instead, we clung to each other in our shared grief, forced to navigate a world forever altered. Our daughter and grandson were gone, leaving behind memories, echoes of laughter, and the unfulfilled potential of a life cut tragically short.

In the aftermath of their loss, I vowed to honor Kavya and Avi by sharing their story, hoping to spark conversations about the silent struggles that many endure. I wanted to challenge the norms that silenced my daughter, advocating for a world where reaching out for help was seen as strength rather than weakness.

As I stood by their graves, surrounded by marigolds and the scent of incense lingering in the air, I whispered a promise to them—a promise to fight for change, to speak when others couldn’t, and to ensure that their memory became a beacon of hope for those trapped in similar despair.

Though their absence left an indelible void, their legacy ignited a flame within me, a relentless determination to transform our grief into action. And as the sun set over the village of Bhawanipur, casting long shadows across the courtyard, I knew that their story, though one of sorrow, was also a story of resilience—a testament to the enduring power of love and the unyielding strength of a mother’s promise.

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