Kadakkal Mother Son Scandal - -users Choice- Kollam

But she never made him delete them.

Tonight, Suresh washed his face and plopped onto the old teakwood easy chair. Amma emerged from the kitchen with two steel tumblers—his with strong, dark tea, hers with light, milky chaya .

Their lifestyle was simple, almost rhythmic. Suresh worked as an accounts officer at a cooperative bank in Kollam town, commuting forty-five minutes each way. Amma ran the home like a precise engine—waking at 5 AM for tea and newspaper, tending to her small vegetable patch of padavalanga and payaru , and by 8 AM, having puttu and kadala curry ready for Suresh. -Users choice- kollam kadakkal mother son scandal

On weekends, they upgraded. Saturday was "music night." Amma would take out her old harmonium—a dusty relic from her youth when she learned Hindustani for two years before marriage. Suresh would hum along tunelessly while she played, her fingers still surprisingly nimble. He’d record short videos on his phone, and she’d scold, "Delete that! I look like a frightened frog!"

At 7 PM sharp, Amma would declare, "Kai kazhuki," and they'd wash up. Then came the sacred act: Amma switching on the 24-inch LG TV. Their entertainment wasn't multiplex movies or mall trips. It was Mounaragam serial on Asianet. But she never made him delete them

Sunday was their adventure day. Suresh would tie a lungi , put Amma on the pillion of his bike—she insisted on sitting sideways like a dignified lady—and they'd ride to nearby spots: the for fresh elaneer (tender coconut), the Thenmala dam for a quiet walk, or simply to Kollam beach where Amma would buy roasted peanuts and watch the sunset, saying, "Your father loved this view."

"Amma!" he called out, pulling off his helmet. "I'm back." Their lifestyle was simple, almost rhythmic

She laughed—a full, generous sound that Suresh had missed during his two years working in Chennai. He’d returned last year, unable to stand the sight of her eating alone in front of the TV. Now, their evenings were a ritual.