In a home in Jaipur, the mother gave her daughter-in-law a set of gold bangles for a wedding. The daughter-in-law loved them. Two days later, the mother-in-law asked for them back. Why? Because her sister’s daughter needed them for her wedding. The bangles traveled across three cities, worn by four women, in one month. In India, jewelry is not an accessory; it is a liquid asset and a shared wardrobe.

There is no loneliness in an Indian home. There is always a cousin to annoy you, a grandmother to overfeed you, and a father who will pretend he isn't crying at your wedding.

Because when the world outside is chaotic—when the boss yells at you, when the taxi overcharges you, when inflation makes your wallet cry—you come home to a place where someone is always awake.

In a 1 BHK (one-bedroom, hall, kitchen) in Dharavi, a family of five lives. The son is studying for the IIT entrance exam. There is no study room. So, the family creates one. From 8 PM to 12 AM, the television is off. The father sits on the bed reading a newspaper in silence. The mother cooks in the kitchen with the fan on low to hide the noise. The grandfather sits on the balcony, even if it is raining, to give the boy space. Everyone sacrifices for the one who is "studying."

The day begins with the first sound of a chai boiling. Mother-in-law, Usha ji, is up. She fills the copper vessel with water while her daughter-in-law, Priya, pretends to be asleep for seven more minutes. The bathroom queue is sacred. Father needs a shave. Son needs to get ready for school. The rule is: five minutes maximum, or you face the "knock." The knock is not polite; it is a frantic, urgent tapping that sounds like a woodpecker in distress.

If you have ever peeked through the half-open door of an Indian home at 6:00 AM, you would not find silence. You would find a symphony of sounds: the high-pressure whistle of a stainless steel pressure cooker, the distant ringing of a temple bell, the swish of a jhadu (broom) on a marble floor, and a grandmother yelling at the ceiling fan to be turned off because "the electricity bill doesn't grow on trees."