From a 23-year-old Bollywood-loving Punjabi girl who believed that taking off her red bangles or choora before a year of marriage was a sign of bad luck to the woman who believes if nothing works out, divorce should be seen as an option.
From a 23-year-old Bollywood-loving Punjabi girl who believed that taking off her red bangles or choora before a year of marriage was a sign of bad luck to the woman who believes if nothing works out, divorce should be seen as an option.
₹299
If she wasn't beaten up, her partner was not lying or cheating, why does a woman want divorce?
For more than a decade, Sarita Salwan häs stayed loyal to her clients, committed to finding the quickest and most relevant solution whenever they need. For more than a decade, Sarita has also stayed committed to her family, ensuring her daughter has a room of her own, and the best of opportunities. That's Sarita, a 43-year-old divorced woman, who decided to separate from her partner after almost 10 years of being married. So,
'Does she live alone now?'
'Her husband did not pay alimony?'
'Who pays all the bills?'
In this atypical memoir, Sarita Salwan, travel agent-cum-DJ, born and brought up in India and Norway, will tell you not what led to the divorce but how she came of age. From a 23-year-old Bollywood loving Punjabi girl who believed that taking off her red bangles or choora before a year of marriage was a sign of bad luck, to the woman who believes if nothing works out, divorce should be seen as an option.
Although she is not a cold-hearted person, she certainly feels good about doing things her way, and doesn't feel guilty afterwards.
© 2023 | A Product of OakBridge
Designed & Developed By AMITKK