u/Willing-Tackle-5753

Tbh that was totally unnecessary kaira what you have done in yesterday’s episode.

It’s looks like kaira apni bikinis layi thi jo usko show me pehenke dikhani hai. Bcz show is about to end toh usne room me hi pehen li

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u/Willing-Tackle-5753 — 2 months ago

I don’t know why they take urfi and nia in the show.

Nia is toh mostly absent and urfi doesn’t have anything to say instead “Ab Tumhe mujhse kon bachaega”🙄

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u/Willing-Tackle-5753 — 2 months ago

It honestly feels unfair watching someone like Akansha get so much hate for simply reacting to something that would hurt anyone. In a show like Splitsvilla, emotions are already heightened—connections feel real, expectations build up, and when things break, they break publicly.

What happened with akansha clearly affected her. And for a moment, she allowed herself to feel that hurt. She cried, she was vulnerable—but she didn’t stay there. Very quickly, she gathered herself, spoke about moving forward, and tried to show a stronger version of herself. That doesn’t look like someone milking sympathy; it looks like someone processing pain and choosing to rise from it.

Calling it a “sympathy card” almost dismisses the fact that the situation itself was real. If anyone else were in her place, expressing that same hurt, people might have supported them instead of akansha .The truth is, showing emotion doesn’t automatically mean manipulation. Sometimes, it just means you cared—and you got hurt.

The problem is how quickly narratives form. Once people decide someone is “playing a victim,” every tear starts looking strategic, every word starts sounding calculated. But that says more about the audience’s bias than the person’s reality.

In the end, what she showed wasn’t weakness or a tactic—it was a very human moment, followed by strength. And that balance is something people often overlook.

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u/Willing-Tackle-5753 — 2 months ago