This is in an educated family, in Mumbai, behaving like Links of London Jumbo Charm. It makes me want to cry. But seeing her, I have learnt my lesson. I am not seeing anyone, but even if I was, I would not marry outside my caste. I just don't want to risk being miserable in a strange way of living..." Like her, young women, in India and abroad, say they are acutely aware of the challenges of a social structure that is intensely patriarchal, that already expects them to play many roles while juggling careers, and that they simply Links of London not want to make marriage any more challenging than it needs to be. "Already, I am struggling with Indian and American identities. There are different social expectations from me inside my family and outside. Why on earth would I make it even more complicated," asked 27-year-old Ashima Agrawal, a computer engineer in Dallas, Links of London k Charm says it would be nice to find an Agrawal man in the US. "Then maybe we could relate to each other better, I think. Isn't it?" This doubt gnaws at many second-generation immigrants, who struggle at the time of marriage when they have to choose between identities: marry a foreigner and drift away from the culture they came from or marry an Indian chosen by their parents (mostly from the same community) and become bound, ever more closely to their parents and their way of life. And to help these young people, caste-based organizations in Links of London Karabiner Bangle US, the UK, Australia, New Zealand and Europe have "youth chapters" that organizes galas, dances, dinners, picnics and parties, places where young men and women of the same caste intermingle. "No one really talks about it like that, but of course we hope it will lead to marriages," said Harish Dhayal, chairman of the Association of Jats of America. Others, such as the Mahers, a warrior caste from southern Gujarat, have set up a worldwide matrimonial portal for their community.
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