India, April 11 -- Beyond consent and marital rape, 'Chiraiya' holds up a mirror to uncomfortable truths. What lingers isn't just what is said-but what is quietly absorbed, normalised, and left unquestioned. It doesn't just tell a story; it exposes patterns we've learned to live with. While the internet is busy discussing consent and marital rape, the series quietly shifts the lens to something deeper: the silences we inherit, the behaviours we excuse, and the power we fail to recognise. It's uncomfortable for everyone, because it feels familiar. Long after it ends, you're left thinking-not about the obvious, but about the silences, the pauses, the moments we let pass.

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