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Viral Story Photograph: (X/Ghar Ke Kalesh (screengrab))
Across India, young dreamers leave their hometowns with stuffed backpacks and bigger ambitions. New cities promise careers, college admissions, and independence. To survive soaring rents, many squeeze into shared flats, split bills, and divide chores. Strangers slowly become family - sharing meals, laughter, secrets, and sleepless midnight talks.
In these compact homes, bonds grow stronger than square footage, and friendship becomes the real comfort zone.
A Kitchen Unlike Any Other
Just when shared living seemed all about 'Jo Mera Hai Woh Tera Hai' (What’s mine is yours), a viral clip flipped the script. The video shows a modest kitchen - but with an unusual twist. Three gas cylinders, three stoves and three separate sets of kitchen appliances.
As claimed, three women share the same flat but maintain strictly personal cooking setups, each guarding her own culinary corner. No mixing. No borrowing. No overlap.
For many, it felt surprising. After all, roomies usually share nearly everything, from groceries to gadgets. But this arrangement presented a completely different take on co-living - one built on boundaries instead of blending.
Internet Can’t Keep Calm
Shared online by Ghar Ke Kalesh, the video quickly snowballed into a meme fest. The caption read, "Three female roommates divided gas cylinders like post-marriage arrangements." (sic)
Three female roommates divided gas cylinders like post-marriage arrangements. pic.twitter.com/8lxWQUvRbK
— Ghar Ke Kalesh (@gharkekalesh) February 1, 2026
Soon, the comments section turned into a comedy club.
One user wrote, "And I had to literally request my friends to not to use my towel and undergarments...rest of the things are not even discussed....jo tera hai wo mera hai....." (sic)
Another added, "Can't they just keep one gas cylinder and rotate who pays for the next refill? Maybe it's just women's logic, or perhaps they don't operate on logic at all." (sic)
A third chimed in, "Batao 3 ladki saath me nahi reh paa rahi ladke 10 ek saath reh jate hai." (sic)
While someone else shared, "Women just doesn’t adjust. I know females living together don’t adjust with each other. They fight even for Chindi things." (sic)
And a final voice joked, "I had a roommate who used to mark eggs with his name." (sic)
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Boundaries or Brilliance?
Whether practical, quirky, or over-the-top, the trio’s setup has clearly struck a chord. Some see it as unnecessary division; others call it smart personal space management. Either way, the clip proves one thing - every shared home runs on its own rulebook.
And sometimes, even three stoves can spark one big conversation.
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