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Meera’s phone buzzed with a work message. She silenced it.

"Today is Ganesh Chaturthi," Aaji said, setting down her cup. It wasn't a reminder; it was a declaration of war.

And just like that, the day was no longer Meera's. It belonged to the household. Meera’s phone buzzed with a work message

At 10 PM, the last guest left. The flat was a mess of paper plates and sticky fingerprints. Meera’s back ached, and her kurti had a grease stain on it. She flopped down next to Aaji, exhausted.

For Meera, sitting there in the ruins of a perfect day, the deadline didn't matter. The stock market didn't matter. What mattered was the weight of her grandmother's head on her shoulder and the deep, resonant silence that follows a family prayer. It wasn't a reminder; it was a declaration of war

The evening was a crescendo. The aarti began as the sun set. Meera rang the brass bell, the sharp tring cutting through the rhythmic chanting. Her father lit the camphor, the flame flaring bright and pure. They placed the modaks as an offering, and as they sang, the lines between the mundane and the sacred blurred.

This was the ritual. While the rest of the city slept, the two of them sat cross-legged on the cool stone floor, sipping the sweet, spicy tea from small glass cups. The first sip was a scalding, fragrant punch to the senses—the true alarm clock of an Indian home. At 10 PM, the last guest left

The scent of cardamom and cloves was the first thing that pulled Meera out of bed. It was 5:30 AM, the Mumbai sky still a bruised purple, but the kitchen downstairs was already humming with a life of its own. Her grandmother, Aaji, stood over the ancient, greasy stove, stirring a giant pot of chai with a ladle that had seen three generations.