I recently came across a news story that has stayed with me. It wasn’t a major global event, just a small, uneventful headline about a wedding. The entire Hindu ceremony had been completed, every ritual, every vow. But, just before the bidaai, right when the bride was supposed to leave for her new home, she fled with her lover. The news showed a picture of the groom sitting there in his wedding finery, a look of complete, hollow sadness on his face.
We hear about marriages breaking during the ceremony quite often now. Sometimes, it’s a sudden dispute over dowry; other times, it's because someone was involved with another person and couldn't bring themselves to commit. Years ago, this hit close to home for me. A distant relative of mine actually eloped with a bride-to-be, just two days before her scheduled wedding.
When people read these stories, they usually focus on the gossip, the drama, or the sheer shock of it. But, I find myself thinking about something else entirely: the emotional destruction left behind.
What was the fault of that person who was left sitting at the altar? What did they do wrong? They showed up with an open heart, ready to build a life, and in a single moment, their entire future was wiped out. The pain of that kind of betrayal is hard to put into words. Every dream you built just shatters like a water bubble. It’s moments like these that make people bitterly say that emotions have no value.
In a monetary sense, of course they don’t. You can't put a price tag on a feeling. But, if we strip emotion out of a long-term relationship, what is actually left? Just a cold, empty transaction.
It feels like these incidents are on the rise. Part of it is because we are so hyper-connected now; every local incident gets reported and shared online, whereas in the past, it would have stayed private. But it’s more than just the news cycle. It feels like the emotional climate around us is shifting, just like the weather. People’s words and actions are becoming harsher, and we hurt each other so easily.
The most painful part of this dynamic is how unfair it is. The person who causes the damage,the one who runs away often moves on quickly, maybe completely unaware of the depth of the ruin they’ve left in their wake. Meanwhile, the person on the receiving end is left trapped in a useless, unprovoked pain that takes months, or even years, to overcome.
Traditional wisdom tells us to forgive and move on, but human nature doesn't work that easily. When you are wronged that deeply, it’s completely natural to wish that the person who hurt you could experience a fraction of the misery they caused. Not out of pure malice, but just for a sense of balance. Maybe if the people who recklessly break hearts were forced to see the real consequences of their actions, it would bring some kind of relief, or at least a sense of closure, to the innocent people left behind.