Cherreads

Unworthy in His Own Home

Yogesh_Choudhary_9928
7
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The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
In a family where honor is everything and every man is expected to serve the nation, Aarav was born as the youngest son — the “pride” of a strict army household. But unlike his father and brothers, he was never strong in studies, nor disciplined enough for the uniform they worshipped. To his family, success meant wearing the army badge. Anything less meant shame. Aarav tried again and again, but failure became his identity. With every exam he failed, with every expectation he broke, the love in his home slowly turned into disappointment… and disappointment turned into rejection. When his elder brothers earned medals and his father earned respect, Aarav only earned silence. Soon, he realized something painful — in his own home, he was already treated like someone who no longer existed. But what happens when the “failed son” decides to rewrite his destiny in a world that has already buried him? A story of rejection, pressure, self-worth, and the fight to prove that even a broken boy can rise — not to earn love, but to finally earn himself.
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Chapter 1 - Unworthy in His Own Home

Aarav was born in a proud army family where discipline was not just expected—it was worshipped. His father was a respected officer, and his elder brothers were already walking the same path, earning medals and honor for the family.

From childhood, Aarav was expected to follow the same destiny. But he was never like them. Studies never felt easy, discipline never came naturally, and the dream of the uniform his family loved… never felt like his own.

Still, in his home, there was only one definition of success—serve the nation. Anything else was failure.

And slowly, Aarav became that failure.

At first, it was small things—a failed exam, a missed expectation. But in his house, even small failures carried big weight. His father stopped speaking much. Not out of anger, but disappointment. And that silence hurt Aarav more than any punishment.

His brothers moved forward, while Aarav stayed behind, invisible in his own home.

At family dinners, he was present but unnoticed. In conversations, his name slowly disappeared.

He tried to change himself. He studied harder, forced discipline, and tried to become what his family wanted. But every attempt only brought more failure… and more distance.

Slowly, Aarav realized something painful—he was still living in the same house, but he no longer existed in its expectations.

One day, after another failure, he saw it clearly in his father's eyes—not anger, not shouting… just emptiness.

That night, Aarav understood something he could not ignore anymore. No matter how hard he tried, he would never be enough for the version of him his family wanted.

So he left.

Quietly.

No fight. No words. Just silence.

Outside, the world was different. It did not care about his family name or his failures. At first, life was hard. He struggled, failed again, and felt completely alone.

But this failure was different. It did not shame him—it taught him.

Slowly, Aarav began rebuilding himself. Away from expectations, he learned his own value. He understood that failure is not identity, but experience.

Years passed.

The boy who once felt unworthy in his own home became a man who no longer needed anyone's approval to exist.

Then one day, he returned to the same house.

Everything was the same… but Aarav was not.

He stood there not as a broken son, but as someone who had already accepted himself.

And in that moment, he realized the truth:

Sometimes, being unworthy in your own home is not the end… it is the beginning of becoming yourself.