Key Points

Divya Dutta shares her journey from being marriage-focused to embracing singlehood with grace. She highlights the importance of self-peace over societal expectations. The actress reflects on the challenges of finding a secure partner in a demanding industry. Currently, she stars in the political drama "Mayasabha: The Rise of the Titans."

Key Points: Divya Dutta on Choosing Single Life Over Toxic Relationships

  • Divya Dutta reveals she was once marriage-oriented but evolved naturally into singlehood
  • She emphasizes the need for a secure partner in a demanding career
  • The actress values self-peace over societal pressures
  • Divya stars in the political drama "Mayasabha: The Rise of the Titans"
2 min read

Divya Dutta: I was someone who was very marriage-oriented

Actress Divya Dutta opens up about embracing singlehood, prioritizing peace over societal expectations of marriage.

"Rather than being in a toxic relationship, it is better to live a beautiful life with yourself at peace. – Divya Dutta"

Mumbai, Aug 9

Actress Divya Dutta has talked about how her path to a single life unfolded organically and said that it's better to live a peaceful, self-focused life than to be in a toxic relationship.

Asked if there was a moment when she consciously chose the path to singlehood, or did it unfold naturally with her evolving priorities in life, Divya Dutta told IANS: “Absolutely.. It just happened organically over time.”

The actress said that she initially did envision a traditional, movie-like marriage but realised that a demanding career requires a very understanding and secure partner.

“I was someone who was very marriage-oriented. I was totally into all the films that I had grown up on—the Yashji films, Karan Johar films—where, you know, you do all those rituals and you feel nice, happy, married.”

“But you do realize that it's very important in a profession which is very demanding that you have a partner who kind of understands the complexities of being in a profession like this, has to be very secure in his own skin, and has to be a very, very sensitive and understanding partner. So, sometimes you find it, sometimes you don't.”

Divya feels it’s better to have a beautiful life alone than being in a “toxic relationship.”

“And I feel, rather than being in a toxic relationship, it is better that you live a beautiful life with yourself at peace, concentrating on where the focus needs to be.”

“And of course, I mean, I do realize I come with a very strong image, and even now, if somebody approaches me, they are a little enamored before they become, you know, comfortable. But I think I like it this way, that I live my life on my terms. And it is very apparent to everyone," she said.

The actress’ latest is “Mayasabha: The Rise of the Titans,” a political drama web series directed by Deva Katta and Kiran Jay Kumar.

It stars Aadhi Pinisetty and Chaitanya Rao in the lead roles, with Divya, Sai Kumar, Srikanth Iyengar and Nassar. Set in the volatile political landscape of 1990s Andhra Pradesh, the series dramatises the evolving relationship between two prominent political figures—Nara Chandrababu Naidu and Y. S. Rajasekhar Reddy—portraying their journey from close friendship to political rivalry.

The show started streaming on Sony LIV from August 7.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
While I respect her choice, I hope young girls don't take this as "marriage is bad". It's about finding the right partner - my wife supports my demanding IT job completely. Balance is possible!
A
Ananya R
As a 30-year-old unmarried woman in Delhi, this resonates so much! The constant "shaadi kab karogi?" questions from relatives are exhausting. Why can't people accept that some of us are happy being single? 😤
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Vikram M
Interesting perspective, but let's not forget Indian society still values family structure. Maybe the problem isn't marriage itself, but our unrealistic Bollywood expectations of romance?
K
Kavya N
Divya is so right about toxic relationships! My cousin got pressured into marriage and is miserable now. Better to wait for the right person than rush into things just because society says so.
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Siddharth J
As a man, I appreciate her honesty about needing a secure partner. Many Indian men still can't handle successful women. Times are changing though - my wife earns more than me and we're perfectly happy!

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