If anything goes wrong in a marriage,
She can go back to her parents’ house.
She can ask for alimony and get a financial refund for the years spent in the marriage.
But what about the man?
Where should he go after losing his family, his home, his peace, and what he spent his entire life building?
Why is he penalised for a marriage that failed?
If marriage is a partnership, then why are only one person’s sacrifices counted and compensated?
A failed marriage impacts both.
Yet the system often treats one as a victim and the other as a wallet.
@plot_twistttt Who will do the work of unpaid bodyguard, unpaid driver, unpaid coolie, who lifts luggage at airports or railway stations, unpaid therapist, who listen to nonstop nonsense, unpaid paramedic and unpaid repairsperson, who fixes things?
Wife or husband?
Please answer.
#Bandar trailer shook me. Men too can be emotionally manipulated, mentally broken, socially isolated. Their suffering rarely becomes mainstream conversation. Finally someone made film reflecting this reality! #nikhildwivedi@thedeol https://t.co/DwQJ10SDwI
Just watched #Bandar trailer and I'm shaken. Women's oppression discussed publicly for years, but what men silently go through? False accusations, emotional torture, public humiliation destroy lives. Men expected to suffer quietly because society assumes they're guilty anyway. #lordbobby @thedeol https://t.co/eSKRoWuX7X
To every Indian man who wants to see a vile and devilish character of women around you. Watch #bandar. Women are psychopaths too and can destroy any mans life.
@kamaalrkhan Padhe likhe logo ka topic hain Sir. Aap kaha se aa gaye iske beech main bolne.. jaha apka dimag khatam hota ha waha yeh film shuru.hoti hain
"I did, however, watch the entire credits roll in Bandar, and was glad I stuck around. Tucked away towards the end, there’s a research credit and special thanks for Deepika Narayan Bhardwaj, a prominent men’s rights activist"
https://t.co/7kXwe9l1nH