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“My mother warned me about this one red flag”: Shweta Tiwari's honest advice on what women should look for in a man before marriage

“My mother warned me about this one red flag”: Shweta Tiwari's honest advice on what women should look for in a man before marriage
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“My mother warned me about this one red flag”: Shweta Tiwari's honest advice on what women should look for in a man before marriage

When we are young, love feels like the only thing that matters. That if two people genuinely care for each other, everything else will somehow work itself out. The late-night conversations, the shared dreams, the feeling of being completely understood, all of it makes everything else seem less important. But actor Shweta Tiwari says that one of the biggest lessons life taught her is that love alone cannot hold a marriage together. In a recent candid conversation, the television star looked back at the advice her mother once gave her about picking a life partner. One that she completely dismissed at the time but deeply understands today. Her message to women is straightforward: before you marry someone, make sure they can stand beside you as a partner and not lean on you like a dependent.
Image Courtesy: Instagram/@shweta.tiwari

The warning her mother gave her at 19
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The warning her mother gave her at 19

Shweta recalled that her mother had a very no-nonsense view of marriage. “My mother had said that the person who wants to get married before earning will never earn in his entire life. So don't do that. Let him settle down.” She clarified that the advice was never about ending things. “I'm not saying don't get married to the man. You get married to him, but let him work a little. Let him do something in life. Let him earn money. Let him be capable,” Shweta shared. At 19, though, none of her mother’s words made sense to her. Like many young women who start earning early, she was confident she could handle things on her own.

“Why? I'm there to earn”
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“Why? I'm there to earn”

Shweta admitted that her thinking back then was completely different. “But I was like, why? I'm there to earn. I will keep earning.” Shweta said it's a thought many financially independent women will agree with. When you are building your own career and taking care of your own expenses, you stop thinking of a partner as someone who needs to provide for you. “That time you don't understand when you're 19 years old. You don't know that you can't keep working all your life.” When we are young, what we don't always see is that marriage is not just about money. It is about sharing a life, and that means a lot more than splitting a bill.

Marriage is a partnership, not a responsibility
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Marriage is a partnership, not a responsibility

One of the most striking things Shweta said was about what marriage should actually look like. “You need a partner. You're not adopting a child,” she said. The line resonates with so many women because it feels something real. Sometimes, in the name of love, women quietly end up becoming the caretaker, the problem-solver, the financial provider, and the emotional support system- all rolled into one. A partner, she explained, is someone who contributes. “A partner means everything is half. Happiness, sorrow, house bills, mobile bills, everything is half.”
It is a simple idea but one that often gets lost. A healthy marriage is not built on one person doing all the heavy lifting while the other simply shows up. Whether it is finances, household work or emotional support, both people need to bring something to the table.

Why many independent women miss these signs
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Why many independent women miss these signs

Shweta then said something surprisingly honest about her younger self. “Girls who are stupid like me, they think we earn. Because when they become independent, they have everything they want. They earn enough to take care of themselves and people around them and family and everybody.” Once a woman can afford her own life, her priorities in a relationship shift. She stops looking for financial support. She stops needing someone to fix things for her.

The emotional support trap
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The emotional support trap

For Shweta, emotional support became the one thing she truly wanted from a partner. “What financially independent women mostly look for is emotional support. I was looking for that as well because I never needed anything from them. It was only emotional.” But Shweta says this is exactly where things can go wrong. When emotional support is the only thing you are seeking, it becomes easy to overlook everything else, whether the person is responsible, ambitious, or mature enough to handle real life.

When emotional dependence becomes a problem
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When emotional dependence becomes a problem

Shweta also shared one of the harder lessons she learned. “So, when you emotionally get dependent on someone, they start taking you for granted.” It is something many women have quietly lived through. Emotional support cannot flow only one way. A strong relationship needs two people who are emotionally available for each other, not one person constantly giving while the other keeps taking.
Shweta Tiwari's advice has nothing to do with finding a rich man. It is about finding a capable one. Someone who is willing to work, mature enough to own his responsibilities, and ready to contribute equally to a shared life. Because as Shweta puts it, marriage means sharing everything. And no matter how independent a woman is, she deserves someone who is willing to carry the other half.

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