Adultery Love Sex And War Part 1 : Age Of Darkness
(02-10-2025, 03:38 PM)Harry Jordan Wrote: I get your point but I disagree with it.


To me the biggest looser and quiet literally the worst victim here is Sonarika. Because first and foremost , her relationship with Vikram was not at all genuine, it was being manipulated and orchestrated by her enemy who she is still quiet unaware off. Another part is she doesn't know she has an existential threat to not just her family, but even for her life by a force she still haven't noticed or being aware about. Even if they separate , Meghna will forever stay as a shadow that will find new ways to torture Sonarika. With Hemant's arc he is atleast fighting back , returning to his old glory again. While Sonarika is simply loosing her way to the point she might just become unrecognisable by her own son , her own sister. That is the downfall she is going onto. 


Only pluspoint in Vikram and Sonarika's relationship is their sex. Other than that , Vikram doesn't know to cook , to support , to motivate her , he behaves like a millionaire and his characteristics are completely different to that of Hemant. So for Sonarika who was used to Hemant's tender care , comfort and support. It will be a different experience because she will have to do things on her own. Vikram isn't Hemant , and he can never be.


And most importantly , the bridge Sonarika has burned with Hemant. It will take a lifetime of work for her to build it back , but she has awareness enough to realize she has screwed something. And due to her mental condition and her state , even if there is a permanent separation , no matter how much time passes , Sonarika will never be able to escape her mistakes as long as Karan will exist to remind her. Hence , her betrayal to Hemant will forever stay as a scar that will never heal. And Vikram will be stuck loving a partial heart of Sonarika as she will be emotionally and mentally traumatised by her own sins to Hemant.
Harry Bro!! I deeply hear and understand your points, yet some heavy thoughts keep lingering and troubling my heart. I hope you don’t mind me sharing them, because I truly trust your insight to help me find peace and clarity.

As per the recent update, it’s painfully clear that Sonarika has chosen Vikram over Hemant—whatever the reason or excuse may be. Hemant has also seen their pictures at Vikram’s flat and has completely understood that they have created their own little happy world already. 

So it’s obvious that Hemant and Sonarika’s separation is inevitable—whether permanent or temporary—and Sonarika will be with Vikram —the wild lover she longed for. But what about the devastating betrayal Hemant suffered, the wounds burned into his soul that may never fully heal? What price will she pay? How will justice be served for breaking a family apart so cruelly?

The most painful truth is that Sonarika shows only sympathy for Hemant—I’ve never seen her truly crave his love. Hell Forget yearning for Hemant’s love—she didn’t even fight or make sincere efforts to get him back.Her guilt feels shallow, limited to hurting a kind, devoted man so deeply.

When she sees Hemant moving forward, happy and healing, maybe her guilt will fade, and she’ll live guilt-free with Vikram—while Hemant's heart still bleeds in silence.

But where is the real justice? When will her sins catch up to her? True justice will only come when Sonarika wakes up to the mistake she made choosing Vikram over Hemant. When she can’t find happiness without him. When she craves Hemant desperately, begging for his love again.

What haunts me is that in almost every story, the cheating wife thrives, while the husband suffers, powerless as he watches his wife’s wild side with another man.

Why can’t this story show Sonarika shattered—watching Hemant’s passionate and wild love making with another woman, losing what she thought was hers, breaking inside? (Maybe then she’d fight to win him back.)

Such a scene would show both her regret for what she lost and finally reveal Hemant’s true strength—the husband who won’t quietly suffer anymore.

I’ve never seen a story where a wife, after leaving a loving husband for her lover, ever regrets it. Maybe because husbands are usually shown weak, this pain is never explored.

But your story carries this powerful potential, having already shown Hemant’s strength. It can easily paint Sonarika powerless and broken—watching the man she once had with someone else.

I’ve hoped for so long that someone breaks this old pattern and comes up with something different— this time showing a cheating wife vulnerable, suffering, haunted by the man she left behind. 


Regards 


Rocky ❤️
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Messages In This Thread
Expressing my views - by INDIANMAVERICK - 23-08-2025, 11:22 AM
Cinema Pure Cinema - by INDIANMAVERICK - 25-08-2025, 01:22 PM
RE: Cinema Pure Cinema - by Harry Jordan - 25-08-2025, 04:47 PM
RE: Cinema Pure Cinema - by EPLOVER4U - 25-08-2025, 09:31 PM
RE: Cinema Pure Cinema - by DeanWinchester00007 - 26-08-2025, 05:23 AM
RE: Love Sex And War Part 1 : Age Of Darkness - by Rocky@handsome - 02-10-2025, 06:24 PM



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