sherKuch Alfaaz

kuchh to majburiyan rahi hongi yun koi bewafa nahin hota she would have had compulsions surely faithless without cause no one can be in this couplet, the speaker softens a painful truth: if someone became unfaithful or left, there must have been some compulsion or helpless circumstance behind it. the line “yun koi bewafa nahin hota” is not a factual claim so much as an emotional stance — refusing to reduce a complex human act to sheer cruelty. it carries empathy and self-protection at once: the lover tries to preserve the beloved’s dignity (and their own love) by imagining unavoidable pressures rather than deliberate betrayal.

Similar Writers

View All ›

Our suggestions based on Bashir Badr.

Similar Moods

View All ›

More moods that pair well with Bashir Badr's sher.