2 July 2026
🌸

Happy
Birthday,
Vaish.

✏️ One line from you — who she is to you.

A celebration of everything that makes you, you.

Your story
Day one

From the very beginning, you were someone people gathered around.

Ammu — as the family have always called you — you were the first grandchild in both families. A tiny baby, very pavam, quietly adored. You were the kind of child who always wanted to play, always wanted to be out and about, regardless of whether school was the next morning. Some things never change.

Six or seven months old, and already the most adored person in any room.

Eight months. Quiet, sweet, taking it all in.

Mama carrying you. The first grandchild. Everyone wanted a turn.

First birthday at the temple. One year in, already unstoppable.

Climbed up all alone at one year old. The beginning of a very long pattern.

Two years old. The whole family, gathered because of you.

At two and a half, you were already looking after people. One day your mum was sick and alone at home. You — barely old enough to reach the counter — walked over, placed a banana in her hands, brought water, and sat with her. "I can't forget that loving gesture," she says. That instinct was there before you had words for it.

You drove your mum gently mad at mealtimes. Slim, particular, never really interested in eating — unless it was curd rice. Always. Some loves are non-negotiable. (Plain dosa also qualifies. You would have it in torrential rain, sweltering heat, any time of day. There are no conditions.)

Curd rice lover. Then. Now. Always. Non-negotiable.

More curd rice. Two photos in your mum's album. Neither is a coincidence.

Diwali snacks. You were selective about food. Not about this.

Helping make the bed. You were always a helper, even when nobody asked.

Helping clean, enthusiastically. We're not sure this energy lasted into adulthood.

Responsibly returning a glass. Your mum's exact caption. We agree completely.

You became someone's whole world before you even knew what that meant.

Chinky and Minky. Growing up together meant a childhood of laughter, arguments, looking out for each other, and a lovingly refined art form of sibling annoyance. "I don't think I could ever survive a family outing without her," Achu says. "She is truly just a ball of joy and the cure to my boredom."

Young Vaish, baby Achu. Day one of a lifelong partnership.

Chinky aur Minky, Rajasthan. The nicknames that stuck forever.

Always wanting to be out and about, regardless of school tomorrow.

Happy. Cheerful. Always.

A family outing is never the same without you in it.

Family adventure, somewhere deep in a cave. Probably your idea.

You also had a beautiful singing voice. Your mum still melts when she thinks of hearing you hum "Pal Pal Yeh Pal" by Shreya Ghoshal around the house. And in class 2, you were very fond of Tushar Kapoor. You later upgraded to Shahid Kapoor. Your taste has always been entirely your own.

You became someone who walked into rooms and made them shift.

Dance classes, fancy dress, Bharatanatyam — the stage was never somewhere you needed to be told to go. You just went. And you were always, effortlessly, brilliant at it.

KG1 fancy dress. A performer before you were anything else.

Bharatanatyam dancer. The grace that started here never left you.

After dance class, with Dad.

Posing in someone else's glasses. You have always known exactly what you can pull off.

Posing. Entirely at ease. Always.

Badass sunglass lover. Your mum's exact caption. She was right.

You became someone who figures it out — quietly, alone, without fanfare.

The principal asked questions. You said nothing — not even when bribed with chocolate. Your mum took you outside and asked if you'd try again. You agreed, walked back in, spoke beautifully, and got it.

By your teens, you were talking to everyone with total ease — boys, girls, strangers, all of it. "It's a quality," your mum says, "that only a few people truly possess."

First day of school. The silence before the storm.

First day at DPS Qatar. New school. Same you.

Your solo trip in grade 1. Already adventuring independently.

After the solo trip — "some weight loss, some teeth gone." The teeth grew back. The adventuring never stopped.

Passport photos. Ready to go everywhere. You always were.

When a group of classmates turned against you, you stood your ground without running to anyone or falling apart. You just handled it. "That is something I am proud of," your mum says. "You were brave." That quiet, unshakeable steadiness has never left you.

You became the person who loves people in ways they don't even see coming.

No occasion. No reason. You just saw something you thought she'd love, and you bought it. "Those were the best shoes I have ever worn," she says — bought with so much love and care. This is who you are when no one is watching.

"She behaves with an 'I don't care' attitude. But beneath that, she is really an understanding, caring, problem-solving girl. She is resilient and has great mental strength. She is my best friend. We are brutally honest with each other. She is the problem solver of our house. She keeps the family together. She is our team leader."

— Mum
Out in the world

Her
twenties.

Adventures, friendships, and a decade entirely your own.

You became someone who is brilliant at things she never tried to be brilliant at.

She used to force you to paint with her. And every time — without particularly trying — you made a masterpiece. Reluctant to try things. Brilliant at them anyway. It is one of the most Vaish things about you.

Forced to paint. Made a masterpiece. Every single time.

Dancing. The grace from those early classes never left you.

You have always known exactly how to show up.

The red sharara. Every outfit you wear becomes the outfit.

"Annoying her is my favourite pastime." A skill refined over nearly thirty years.

The face of someone who has had enough. And yet she never leaves.

You cannot pass a photo being taken without intervening. It is truly a gift.

Your neck was hurting all day. You still looked incredible.

Suffering in the wind. Expressively. Achu documents everything.

Airport suffering. Whatever happened here, your face says it all.

A love language in yarn

"She is the only person I would ever crochet clothes for. It takes so much time and effort that you would only do something like this for a very special someone."

Achu

And then there's the way you show up to work. "Her office pics are the best," Achu says. "She has so much style and grace." Whether in a boardroom or stranded at a deserted train station in rural NSW, you do it with the same effortless flair.

Showing up to work like it's an occasion. Because it always is.

Style. Grace. Every time.

The trilogy is complete.

You became the kind of person friendships are built around.

The first time Deepthi met you, you were performing. You were introduced as: "Meet Vaishnavi, a Tamilian Mallu." The world was in lockdown — and you, who genuinely cannot sit still, responded by organising events, walks, dinners and meetups, preferring a café full of people to staying at home, despite a global health crisis.

"You pushed me — an introvert — to interact with others," Deepthi says. "I'm extremely grateful I got to spend that time with you."

Canberra, where it all started. You refused to let anyone feel alone or bored.

Sydney. Uni, a new city, a new life. Also: the toe incident. The doctor was baffled.

The Gold Coast trip. 2,000 photos. Three or four posted. Complained about the Thai massage all week. Booked another session anyway.

Weekend adventures. Getting stranded. Filming reels while stranded.

Windy Ridge Garden. You got there — via a wall-mounted phone, a stopped train, and a very brave taxi driver.

"I trust my life with these girls." — earned through genuine evidence.

Uluru. A hard year, and a strong one. You balanced everything without making a show of it.

"You were happier than I had ever seen you. More at peace. You found your home."

A brief note on navigation. On Deepthi's first day in Sydney, you offered to escort her to the station — taking her through a shady underground car park, across The Rocks, under the Harbour Bridge, into a dead end, in the rain, with no cabs in sight. You walked all the way to Town Hall station. Deepthi now double-checks routes.

When Deepthi graduated, she decided to move to Sydney — not just for opportunities, but because you were there and she had someone she could trust, rely on, and spend time with. That says everything.

You became someone who carries hard things without letting them define her.

You balanced everything — work, your people, yourself — without making it about you. Without collapsing. "I recognised your strength, your persistence, and the work you would put in to get to your goal," Deepthi says. "I truly admire you."

And then you found your home. Everyone felt the difference.

Everyone around you felt it. You were more at peace, more settled, happier than anyone had seen you. Even after Deepthi moved back to India, you kept showing up — staying in touch, making the effort across the distance the way you always do for the people you love.

"It has been about 7 years since I've known her, though it feels more like I've known her forever. She is more like a sister than a random stranger I met in a random city on a random continent. Meeting her in Canberra has been one of the most memorable things about my time in Australia."

— Deepthi

You became the person who makes everyone feel like they belong.

You organised game nights that somehow turned into long conversations. You made sure first birthdays were celebrated. You included people in the moments that mattered — like inviting Aishu to your citizenship ceremony when she least expected it, making her feel like she belonged. "I never imagined I would find my best friend here," she says. "But I did."

You met at Saravana Bhavan. You took evening walks. And every time, no matter how much was weighing on her mind, she went home feeling lighter. "Just talking to you makes everything feel a little easier."

✏️ Suhas — 2–3 sentences here. What did this decade look like for her? Keep it alive and forward-looking.

⏳ Mal's stories arriving soon
In their words

Through
their eyes.

What the people who love you want you to know.

"She behaves with an 'I don't care' attitude. But beneath that, she is really an understanding, caring, problem-solving girl. She is resilient and has great mental strength. She is my best friend — we are brutally honest with each other. She is the problem solver of our house. She keeps the family together. She is our team leader. Overall, she was a happy-go-lucky, cheerful girl. And she still is."

Mum

✏️ Achu's message — coming soon

Achu

✏️ Dad's message — coming soon

Dad

"I'm looking forward to all the major milestones in her life — and for her to get outrageously rich so I can piggyback on her success and live a chill, stress-free life 😄 She is more like a sister than a random stranger I met in a random city on a random continent. Meeting her has been one of the most memorable things about my time in Australia."

Deepthi

"If I ever think of my first few days at ANU, or how I've met any of our friends at university, it always goes back to you. You're Himesh Reshamiya singing, always making room for me, making sure my first birthday here was celebrated — moments I'll always treasure. Happy 30th — welcome to the club 🌸"

Neerisha

"I'm honestly so glad I installed Bumble BFF. That one swipe changed everything. When I met you, I was going through a really low phase — new country, new environment, badly in need of genuine friends. I never imagined I would find my best friend here. But I did. Every time we meet, no matter how many things are weighing on my mind, I always go home feeling so much lighter. Just talking to you makes everything feel a little easier. Thank you for including me in your citizenship ceremony — I never expected to be there, and I'm so grateful I got to celebrate that with you."

💫
Aishu

✏️ Mal's message — coming soon

🌟
Mal

✏️ More birthday wishes — add here as they come in

🎂
And more...
Thirty things

What makes
you, you.

Not a ranked list. Just the truth.

As a little girl... You looked after your mum.
As a teenager... You stood up for yourself.
As a friend... You made people belong.
As a sister... You became someone's safe place.
As a performer... You walked into rooms and made them shift.
As my girlfriend... You made me want to become a better person.
✏️ Your photo together goes here
Everyone has spent today telling you who you are.

I still remember our first date — your flawless beauty, the incredible honesty, the great sense of humour (including the moment you said you could murder me and no one would find out). I left with a glee, and little did I know it would extend so far that my whole day is now brighter with you in my life.

There is an innocence to you that I want to protect with all my heart. And a goofiness — the way you do the most playful, random things and I can just stand there watching, because being part of it brings me more joy than I can explain.

I have watched you grow over this past year into an even more formidable version of yourself. Not that you couldn't get more perfect — but you really did. You are not afraid of anything. And the people you care for, you care for them so deeply it makes them want to grow, be empowered, move with you and for you.

✏️ Add more here — this is your proper letter. Not three paragraphs. Something she'd probably cry reading.

Thirty years made you who you are.
I just feel unbelievably lucky that I get to be part of what comes next.