
Hyderabad Dad Redefines Parenthood After Corporate Exit
When Nishant Chaturvedi lost his pharmaceutical role during restructuring, he became his son's primary caregiver while his wife's career flourished. His journey is reshaping what modern fatherhood looks like in India.
A six-year-old boy laughs after missing a badminton shot and demands another game with his dad, who serves as equal parts coach, playmate, and cheerleader. This is Nishant Chaturvedi's new normal, and he wouldn't trade it for anything.
The Hyderabad father spent over a decade leading teams at global pharmaceutical companies like Novartis and Sandoz. In early 2025, organizational restructuring eliminated his role and his team's positions overnight.
What could have been a crisis became an opportunity. Around the same time, his wife Vibhuti stepped into a demanding new position that required long hours and weekend work.
Without a formal discussion or written plan, their household naturally adjusted. Nishant gradually became the one managing school runs, homework sessions, and swimming lessons while Vibhuti focused on her career.
"Parenthood is not a role you support from the sidelines," Nishant tells The Better India. "It's something you live, fully and equally, every single day."
The transition surprised him in unexpected ways. The challenge wasn't the volume of work but its constantly shifting nature.

"You're switching roles every hour," he explains. "Teacher, planner, caregiver, and none of it follows a fixed timeline."
Homework alone taught him patience he didn't know he needed. Tiny hands spreading butter on bread became moments of connection he'd previously missed.
For Vibhuti, watching her husband embrace this role felt natural despite the shock of his job loss. "I knew this wouldn't define him," she shares. "I've seen his journey, his capability."
Their story reflects a quiet shift happening across Indian households. When life circumstances change, rigid gender roles give way to practical partnership.
Sunny's Take
Nishant's story reminds us that meaningful leadership doesn't always happen in boardrooms. Sometimes the most important work we do is measured in shared sandwiches, patient explanations of math homework, and unhurried conversations on the walk home from badminton practice.
His days now revolve around moments that often go unnoticed but mean everything. From school gate pickups to vegetable slicing in the kitchen, he's building memories that will outlast any corporate title.
The couple from small towns in Chhattisgarh and Haryana who met sharing a cab ride in Delhi have created something remarkable. They've proven that families can adapt, that roles can shift, and that love shows up however it's needed most.
Nishant continues mentoring professionals while being fully present for his son. His journey shows that stepping back from one path can mean stepping into something equally valuable.
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Based on reporting by The Better India
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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