Concept
The story is based on the life of a young girl, 21-years old Rimjhim who is pretty, elegant, and soft-spoken but quick-witted and full of fun. Like any ordinary girl, Rimjhim also has some dreams, a dream to get married to a charming guy who will love her more than anything else. Rimjhim sees her dream in her childhood’s friend Avinash. Since Avinash’s family knows Rimjhim, in accordance to this their respective families close and bonded had engaged Rimjhim and Avinash. But one day Avi's family had subsequently shifted away from that small laid -back town. But memories remained. Years of separation lay between Rimjhim and Avinash. Today, Rimjhim has come to Mumbai, to claim Avinash - her only bond with life and love. She is a stranger in this house. Even Avinash does not recognize and remember her. The dilemma is: will Rimjhim give up and return to her native place? Would she abandon Avi? Or is she going to lay her claim? Silently strive for her love?
Read more about this topic: Piya Ka Ghar (TV Series)
Famous quotes containing the word concept:
“Modern man, if he dared to be articulate about his concept of heaven, would describe a vision which would look like the biggest department store in the world, showing new things and gadgets, and himself having plenty of money with which to buy them. He would wander around open-mouthed in this heaven of gadgets and commodities, provided only that there were ever more and newer things to buy, and perhaps that his neighbors were just a little less privileged than he.”
—Erich Fromm (19001980)
“The heritage of the American Revolution is forgotten, and the American government, for better and for worse, has entered into the heritage of Europe as though it were its patrimonyunaware, alas, of the fact that Europes declining power was preceded and accompanied by political bankruptcy, the bankruptcy of the nation-state and its concept of sovereignty.”
—Hannah Arendt (19061975)
“The concept of a person is logically prior to that of an individual consciousness. The concept of a person is not to be analysed as that of an animated body or an embodied anima.”
—Sir Peter Frederick Strawson (b. 1919)