01-03-2026, 06:54 AM
(This post was last modified: 01-03-2026, 07:22 AM by Rocky@handsome. Edited 1 time in total. Edited 1 time in total.)
(01-03-2026, 01:05 AM)Rocky@handsome Wrote: No ,No not all my dear Bro!!— I think you completely misunderstood Mirnaa true emotions/nature!!
I have to respectfully disagree with your assessment. Mirnaa is a far more nuanced character than the 'type' you are implying; I believe there has been a fundamental misunderstanding of her true motivations/ character and the psychological depth the author has provided.( Author has already provided the hints for her every encounter, if you read closely)
—Actually that's where the author has proven his true talent!!)
If you analyze the subtext closely, it becomes clear that her actions aren’t driven by lust, but by a desperate hunger for love and genuine trust. The nuances are woven into the narrative:
The First Instance: This wasn't a casual choice, but the result of a specific set of vulnerabilities and circumstances that led to that initial lapse in judgment.
The Inner Conflict: During the second encounter, the author dropped clear hints regarding her psychological turmoil. There was a violent clash between her mental resistance and the conflicting thoughts racing through her mind.
The Evolution: Her eventual cooperation with Bharat wasn't a reflection of her character, but rather a complex 'emotional phase' where involuntary biological reactions often override what the mind truly desires.
The author has been incredibly intentional with these details. Every emotion has a phase, and every action has a psychological 'why' behind it. I’d suggest re-reading those chapters with a focus on her internal state—you will see that she doesn’t 'need' two men for the sake of it; she is navigating human frailty.
Vikram, being the perceptive husband he is, understands this better than anyone. That is exactly why he was able to step in and ground her before she lost herself completely. It’s a story about timing and emotional complexity, not just a simple betrayal.
I am happy to provide a deep-dive analysis of the first, second, or third encounter if you’d like to see the specific textual evidence for this.(Let me know if you want me to do that)
Regards
Rocky ❤️
Yes, if your comments are referring to after she came back from Goa—then yes, she betrayed her husband, Vikram! Mirnaa’s betrayal upon returning from Goa was the ultimate violation of trust. Daring to ask her husband to let her be with Bharat wasn't just a mistake—it was a brutal strike at the heart of their marriage. —For this, she must face the full weight of her consequences.
However, she is not a lost cause, nor has she become a promiscuous woman who belongs to the world; she is still Vikram’s. Her true penance should be the crushing weight of her own guilt. The only way to balance the scales is through a total transformation: she must shower Vikram with a love so intense and a devotion so absolute that it heals the very wounds she caused.
Regards
Rocky ❤️



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