3 hours ago
(This post was last modified: 2 hours ago by amzad2004. Edited 1 time in total. Edited 1 time in total.)
(4 hours ago)robertnow Wrote: I felt the same. Helping and rescuing someone alone isn't love, right?As per Haygi's narration there is only one true love in this story and that is between Jay and Nikita. As per the story that heygi is narrating actually here is nothing to choose. Their love bond is rooted deep inside in their hearts. It is impossible to uprooted by anyone. As per Heygi's narration Nikita has been taking all her decision upon pure rage and hurted emotions. She does not love tharun and never will. Now the matter is Heygi is always tend to walk through illusion about his charackters and wants to readers also ride the rolercoaster through illusion and enjoy the illogical sequences. In this story Nikita character never in the position to choose. Logically it never will be. But author wants to show us there is a choosing drama going on. I do not want to say much becuse then heygi blames me for his drained nerves and some readers acussing me as a enemy of heygi. Heygi loves to creat tweist and emotional drama in his story to engage the readers to dwell with it. He is improving by the way. He wants us to believe there is a choosing game going on so be it, I won't argue. Author wish is my command.
Jay's mobile phone is actually a strong piece of evidence. When Sharmi searched for photos, the only picture of Jay and Nikitha together was their temple wedding photo. Okay, let's assume they intentionally avoided taking pictures together to safeguard their relationship. Even then, why was the only photo the marriage picture?
That simple scene tells us a lot about the kind of relationship they shared. I genuinely believe both Jay and Nikitha had taken each other for granted all these years. Not even one casual photo together, yet they had a regular physical relationship? That contrast says a lot.
I strongly feel they both became too comfortable and stopped making an effort to cherish their relationship. It was only after Tharun entered their lives—only after Jay felt challenged—that things started changing. Suddenly, he wanted to prove how much he loved her.
Similarly, Nikitha was upset when Anjali entered the picture, but deep down she knew Anjali was never a real threat. Anjali was already married, and Nikitha understood she wasn't going to affect her marriage with Jay. So she never truly felt challenged.
Tharun was different. His presence challenged Jay emotionally, making him realize what he could lose. In the same way, when Sharmi entered Jay's life, Nikitha finally felt that same insecurity. That's when she was no longer willing to simply let things go.
But the real challenge begins now. Unlike Sharmi, whose relationship with Jay was largely a misunderstanding and whose marital status is still unknown to Nikitha, Tharun's relationship with Nikitha is real and fully acknowledged by her. She accepted his love and experienced it herself.
What Tharun said in the last chapter really stood out to me: he told her to take her chance and said that if, after seeing Jay's true love, she still wanted to go back to him, she could. That moment showed what kind of person Tharun is. He isn't trying to force her or manipulate her; he's giving her the freedom to make her own choice.
I think that's what makes the upcoming chapters so difficult. If Nikitha reaches a clear decision, she will inevitably have to hurt one of them. There is no painless outcome anymore, because both relationships have become real in different ways.
To me, that's one of the most interesting aspects of the story—both Jay and Nikitha only seemed to fully recognize the value of their relationship when they genuinely feared losing each other. Now, however, Nikitha isn't choosing between an illusion and reality; she's choosing between two genuine relationships, and that is what makes her decision so heartbreaking and make readers panic. Personally readers may root for both Jay and Tharun, in way that they don't get affected much and get happiness in a fitting way.


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