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Will you marry me? How young Indian couples are embracing western culture of marriage proposals

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Updated on: 03 October,2023 08:00 AM IST  |  Mumbai
Aakanksha Ahire | aakanksha.ahire@mid-day.com

Gradually, more and more young Indian couples have begun to celebrate love and embrace it wholeheartedly. Finding newer ways to make marriage proposals have become a trend and social media is a testament to this

Will you marry me? How young Indian couples are embracing western culture of marriage proposals

In India, it is believed that marriage is not just a union between two individuals but two families. Photo Courtesy: iStock

Key Highlights

  1. A marriage counsellor shares the influence of western culture on young Indian couples
  2. Media is encouraging couples to celebrate their love online
  3. Keeping the marriage proposal true to the personal tastes is what matters

Happy tears rolled down our eyes when Schitt’s Creek Patrick went down on one knee and proposed to David at a serene location. We were also beyond happy when Monica from Friends did the same for Chandler in her own apartment leaving him feeling mushy. These scenes from western media have had a profound effect on our hearts – so much so, that we long for a marriage proposal equally heartwarming.  
 
Our longing has further intensified all thanks to Instagram which is waiting to break to us the news of someone getting engaged and flaunting their marriage proposal through reels whenever we visit it. 
 
These proposals look grand on social media and have made it look like a necessary gesture. While many endorse it to celebrate love and bond, some also do it for social media. We tapped a marriage counsellor and a to-be bride to understand the influence of this Western culture on young Indian couples. 
 
The Indian scenario
In a typical Indian setting, the union of marriage is sealed by a roka or engagement ceremony where the to-be bride and groom exchange rings in the presence of their families and relatives. This is in the case of both arranged and love marriages. In India, it is believed that marriage is not just a union between two individuals but two families, unlike in the west where families have very little involvement in a couple’s decision to get married.  
 
“This is changing now. Young Indian couples are taking charge of their own romantic relationships independent of familial influence,” says Ishmeet Minhas, founder and couples therapist at Minhas and Associates. “The proposals are an expression of their independence,” adds Minhas. 
 
According to her, the choice of young Indians going down on one knee and asking for their partner’s hand in marriage is much more than just a romantic gesture. She says, “I am observing young Indian couples having progressive ideas about romantic partnerships. They recognise their expectations in a relationship and live by it regardless of what their families say. This indicates a drastic shift from the traditional ways in which the decision of marriages was made.” 

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