✏️ One line from you — who she is to you.
A celebration of everything that makes you, you.
Not just what happened. Who she became.
You came into this world in India, the first grandchild in both families — adored from day one, quiet, always wanting to play. And almost before you'd settled, life moved you. Qatar first. Then Saudi Arabia. Then Oman. Then back to Qatar. A new country, a new school, new friends to make — and you just made them. Every time.
Most people find constant change unsettling. You found it normal. That adaptability — the ability to walk into a room full of strangers and feel at home — that was forged early. It never left you.
At two and a half, your mum was sick and alone at home. You 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 — to notice, to show up, to take care — it was already there. It has never left.
You also drove her gently mad at mealtimes. Slim, particular, never interested in eating unless it was curd rice. Or plain dosa. Always. Non-negotiable, regardless of the weather or the hour.
Chinky and Minky. Whatever country you were in, whatever school you'd just started, Achu was the constant. Growing up together meant a childhood of laughter, arguments, and the kind of closeness that doesn't need explaining. "I don't think I could ever survive a family outing without her," Achu says. "She is truly just a ball of joy."
You had a voice that could stop people cold. Your mum still melts when she thinks of hearing you hum "Pal Pal Yeh Pal" around the house. You were also, in class 2, very fond of Tushar Kapoor — before upgrading to Shahid Kapoor. Your taste has always been entirely your own.
Dance classes, fancy dress, Bharatanatyam — you just went. And you were always, effortlessly, brilliant at it. The grace that started in those early dance classes never left you. Neither did the instinct to hold a room.
The principal asked questions. You said nothing — not even when bribed with chocolate. Your mum took you outside, asked if you'd try again. You agreed. You walked back in alone. You spoke beautifully. You got it.
This is a pattern that would repeat, in different forms, for the rest of your life: you get knocked back, you take a breath, and then you walk back in.
When a group of classmates turned against you in class 7, you stood your ground without running to anyone. You just handled it. "That is something I am proud of," your mum says. "You were brave." That quiet, unshakeable steadiness — it has never left you.
"Those were the best shoes I have ever worn," she says — bought with so much care and attention. This is who you are when no one is watching: warm, quietly generous, paying attention in ways people don't even notice until they're already feeling it.
"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 the team leader."
— MumAfter years of moving — Qatar, Saudi, Oman, back again — you went to India for your bachelor's degree in engineering. A new chapter. And then Australia for your master's. A whole new continent, a whole new city, and the same instinct you've always had: walk in, figure it out, make it yours.
ANU. A new university, a new lockdown, a new world. And yet — you organised events, walks, dinners, meetups. You pulled introverts out of their apartments. You made people feel like they belonged before they even knew your name. That is a particular kind of gift.
It was here that Deepthi met you at a CMA cultural event, introduced as "Meet Vaishnavi, a Tamilian Mallu." It was here that Mal became one of your closest friends. It was here, in the middle of a pandemic, that you built a community out of nothing, simply because you refused to let people feel alone.
She used to force you to paint. Every time, without trying particularly hard, you made a masterpiece. You were reluctant to try new things and brilliant at them anyway. It is one of the most enduring things about you.
"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."
AchuThat's the thing about you that people underestimate. You don't let rejection define the story — you just start the next chapter of it. Your first job came through resilience, not luck. Your second and third did too. Each one harder won than the last.
Eventually you landed at Allianz, where you stayed for a couple of years. And then Commonwealth Bank of Australia. Not handed to you. Built by you, step by step, every single time.
When Deepthi graduated, she moved to Sydney — not just for opportunities, but because you were there and she had someone she could trust. That is not a small thing. People rearrange their lives around you because you make wherever you are feel like somewhere worth being.
Your citizenship ceremony. A milestone that meant something real — at the end of a long journey that started in India, wound through the Middle East, and landed here. Suhas was there. Aishu was there. It was, as it should have been, emotional.
You balanced work, your personal life, your people, yourself — without collapsing, without making it about you. "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, things settled. You found your home in Sydney. Everyone around you felt it. You were more at peace, more yourself, happier than anyone had seen you. The version of you that had always been there, finally given the space to just be.
"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."
— DeepthiAishu found you through Bumble BFF. She was in a new country, a low point, badly in need of genuine friends. She found one. "Every time we meet, no matter how many things are weighing on my mind, I always go home feeling lighter," she says. "Just talking to you makes everything feel a little easier."
Game nights that turned into long conversations. Evening walks. Saravana Bhavan. Making sure first birthdays in a new country were properly celebrated. You are the person who makes plans happen — and without you, half of them would stay in the group chat forever.
✏️ Suhas — add your lines here about who she is and what this decade looked like. This is the last beat before the people speak.
Now everyone else speaks.
"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 the team leader. She was a happy-go-lucky, cheerful girl. And she still is."

✏️ Achu's message — coming soon

✏️ Dad's message — coming soon

"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 in Canberra has been one of the most memorable things about my time in Australia."

✏️ Mal's message — coming soon
"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 🌸"

"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, 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 lighter. 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."
✏️ More birthday wishes coming — duplicate the template above to add each one with their photo
After everything we've just seen... yes. That's exactly who she is.
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 know how to 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, and move with you and for you.
✏️ Add more here, Suhas. This is your proper letter. Something she'd probably cry reading.