Visiting my stepmother and seeing her New Year’s meal, I made a decision with tears in my eyes.
My father had passed away. On the occasion of the New Year, my husband and I brought gifts to visit my stepmother.

When I was in my third year of university, my biological mother suddenly passed away. After her death, my father was overwhelmed with grief. Seeing him like that, my heart ached. Because of my studies, I couldn’t be with him often, only able to comfort him by phone.

After graduating and starting work, my father gradually recovered. Through a friend’s introduction, he met Aunt Meera, a widow living in Bangalore with two married sons. Her sons weren’t keen on taking care of their mother, forcing her to work to make a living.

After six months of acquaintance, they understood each other and developed feelings. When my father proposed marriage to Aunt Meera, I strongly objected. I didn’t object to them living together, but I didn’t accept the idea of ​​marriage. Under my pressure, my father and Aunt Meera lived together without being legally married. Initially, I thought I wouldn’t be able to accept another woman replacing my mother, but the reality was different. Every time I returned home to Hyderabad, Aunt Meera always prepared lavish meals with fragrant curries and hot chapati bread. She took excellent care of my father, which made him healthier and happier.

However, I still felt a little jealous seeing my mother’s position replaced, and it felt like my father had been “stolen.” From then on, I visited less often, only returning for festivals like Diwali or Holi, because I didn’t want to witness my father and Aunt Meera being intimate. My attitude only changed after I got married. My mother-in-law in Mumbai treated me very harshly, even neglecting me during my postpartum period. Upon learning of the situation, Aunt Meera and my father immediately came to help, taking on everything from shopping at the local market to cooking nutritious traditional Indian meals.

I gave her 1.5 lakh rupees each month, 1 lakh for expenses and 50,000 rupees as her wages. But she only accepted 1 lakh, returning the rest and saying, “You’ve just given birth, you need to save for your baby’s future.”

When my child started kindergarten, Aunt Meera was still worried and stayed to help for a while longer. That unconditional help made me feel the maternal love I hadn’t experienced in a long time. If my mother were still alive, she would surely have cared for my child in the same way.

Since then, I have frequently visited home, occasionally bringing food, traditional clothing like sarees or salwar kameez for my father and Aunt Meera, or giving them extra money during holidays. I thought our little family would be happy forever, but unexpectedly, after 10 years with Aunt Meera, my father suddenly passed away from heart disease.

After my father’s death, Aunt Meera didn’t stay any longer but packed her belongings and returned to her children and grandchildren. I wanted to keep her, but I thought she probably wanted to be reunited with her family, so I didn’t stop her.

At the beginning of the new year, my husband and I brought gifts to Aunt Meera’s eldest son’s house in Bangalore, but we couldn’t find her. He said she had gone to live with her youngest son in Chennai. We went there again, but we didn’t find her there either. Her youngest daughter-in-law said she wasn’t used to city life and had returned to her hometown in a small village in Kerala.

After asking the neighbors… I learned that Aunt Meera had severe diabetes, which cost her two sons a lot of money for treatment. Her two daughters-in-law didn’t want to take care of their mother-in-law, pushing the responsibility onto each other, so in the end, she had to return to her hometown alone.

Hearing this, my heart ached. Without hesitation, my husband and I immediately drove to my aunt’s village in Kerala. Seeing her dilapidated house, the peeling plaster, and the simple bowl of white rice in her hand, I couldn’t hold back my tears.

In that moment, I made a decision: to bring Aunt Meera home to Mumbai and care for her for the rest of her life. My husband fully supported me. Aunt Meera was about to refuse, but I said:

“Maa (Mother), you’ve taken care of my father, me, and my grandchildren for so many years. I’ve long considered you my own mother. If your sons don’t take care of you, then my husband and I will.”

Hearing the word “Maa” from my lips, Aunt Meera choked up, for it was the first time in years I had called her that. My stepmother used her wrinkled hands to wipe away the tears from my cheeks and softly asked:

“Would that be a bother for you?”

My husband and I exchanged smiles and replied,

“Not at all, Maa. We’re very happy to be living with you. From now on, you can rest assured and stay here with us.”

I don’t know what the future holds, but no matter how difficult things get, I will stand by my stepmother – the woman who has given me unconditional love, like the Ganges River flowing endlessly, gentle yet enduring.