The independent woman is a familiar figure in modern India. She appears in brochures, panel discussions on TV channels and in advertising campaigns. She is praised for “managing it all” and celebrated for “having it all.” Remember the familiar image of a woman with multiple arms, each stretched thin doing everything at once?The image feels aspirational. It, however, also reveals something else: exhaustion, disguised as empowerment.

When comedian Sharon Verma once introduced herself on stage as a “weak, independent woman”, the audience laughed. The joke landed easily and stuck with many women.But beneath the laughter lies a harder truth. For many women, independence is not a victory lap. It is a daily negotiation. A weight carried quietly, often without language, sometimes without permission to put it down.
