Why the Indian Saas and Bahu Are Structurally Set Up to Fail Each Other in Marriage
Aishwarya Kapoor | Times Life Bureau | Jul 05, 2026, 07:22 IST
Why the Indian Saas and Bahu Are Structurally Set Up to Fail Each Other in Marriage
Image credit : Times Life Bureau
The saas-bahu conflict in Indian family life is not a personality problem. It is an architecture problem. Two women are placed inside the same marriage with opposing mandates, no language for their grief, and no exit that doesn't cost them everything. What they feel about each other is almost beside the point.
The house was never designed for both of them
The saas did not invent this arrangement. She inherited it. She was once a bahu herself, which means she knows exactly how much she surrendered when she entered her husband's family, her name, her habits, her mother's cooking, her sense of what home smelled like. She rebuilt herself inside someone else's walls. Now her son has brought home a woman who has not yet done that work, and some part of her reads it as refusal. The bahu's ease, her confidence, her different way of doing things, these don't register as personality. They register as a verdict on the years the saas spent conforming.
Her son is the currency they are both trading in
The man at the centre of this rarely names what is happening. Indian sons are raised to love their mothers with a devotion that is considered sacred, and to love their wives with a tenderness that is considered private. The two loves are supposed to coexist without negotiation. They almost never do. When he refuses to choose, both women feel abandoned. When he does choose, one of them is confirmed in her worst fear. The conflict between saas and bahu is often, at its root, a conversation the son will not have.
Expectations arrive without a contract
The bahu who doesn't touch her mother-in-law's kitchen without asking is being respectful in one grammar. The bahu who walks in and cooks without asking is being warm and at home in another. The saas who corrects her bahu's cooking is maintaining standards in one grammar. In another, she is refusing to let the younger woman belong. Both women are speaking fluently. Neither is being heard. The failure is not in the women. The failure is that no one built a shared language before they were asked to live inside one.
What neither of them is allowed to say
The daughter-in-law is not allowed to be tired. She is not allowed to say that she is performing belonging in a house that does not fully feel like hers, that she misses her own family with a longing that has no socially acceptable outlet, that she sometimes looks at her mother-in-law and sees not a person but a set of requirements she can never fully satisfy. These feelings exist too. If she names them, she is ungrateful. She is not a good bahu. So she also goes quiet, and the silence between the two women fills up with everything they cannot say to each other.
The love that gets lost in the architecture
But the structure doesn't offer them the chance to find it. It places them in opposition before they've had a conversation. It assigns them roles that require the other's diminishment to function. It gives them a man as the medium of their relationship instead of a direct line between them.
The saas-bahu conflict persists across generations, across class, across education levels, because it is not produced by the women inside it. It is produced by a marriage structure that was designed for a household where one woman held authority and the other learned to earn it, and that structure has not changed at the same pace as the women it contains. What you feel about your mother-in-law, and what she feels about you, is real. But it is also, in large part, the architecture speaking.