
Mumbai Sisters Buy Penthouse for Parents After 'Liability' Slurs
Three successful sisters purchased a three-story Mumbai penthouse filled with 400 plants for their parents, responding to relatives who called daughters "liabilities." The luxurious 29th-floor home worth crores ensures their parents never miss having a son.
When relatives kept calling them liabilities for being daughters, sisters Neeti, Shakti, and Mukti Mohan decided to respond with love instead of anger. They bought their parents a stunning three-story penthouse in Mumbai, proving that daughters can be the greatest gift.
The Mohan sisters grew up hearing the painful message that daughters were burdens. Their parents endured constant reminders from family members about not having a son, making them feel inadequate despite raising four talented, successful daughters.
Singer Neeti and dancers Shakti and Mukti transformed that hurt into action. They purchased a sprawling apartment on the 29th floor of a Kandivali highrise, designed specifically to make their parents feel cherished and comfortable.
The penthouse feels nothing like a typical Mumbai apartment. The sisters recreated the open, airy feeling of their childhood Delhi home, complete with spaces to watch sunrise and sunset and an expansive terrace with 360-degree views where you can see the stars.
The home's most striking feature is its greenery. Nearly 400 plants fill every corner, a living testament to the abundance their parents created by raising four daughters instead of the sons society expected.

"We wanted to give them a huge house where they would never feel like they're living in a cramped apartment," Shakti explained during a recent home tour. The family has enjoyed the space for nearly ten years now, though the sisters have since married and moved out.
Why This Inspires
The Mohan sisters didn't just buy their parents an expensive gift. They challenged a deeply harmful cultural belief with tangible proof that daughters bring immeasurable value to families.
Their choice to pamper their parents speaks to a broader shift happening across India. Young women are increasingly pushing back against traditions that devalue them, using their success and independence to rewrite old narratives about worth and family.
Shakti, who remains happily single despite wedding pressure, embodies this new confidence. "I feel freedom and bliss being alone and independent," she says, unbothered by relatives' sympathetic comments about her unmarried status.
The property, worth an estimated 3 to 14.8 crore rupees depending on size, represents more than financial success. It's a home filled with light, plants, homemade Rajasthani gatte ki sabzi, and the undeniable proof that daughters are anything but liabilities.
The Mohan sisters transformed painful words into a beautiful sanctuary where their parents will never doubt their daughters' love.
Based on reporting by Indian Express
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
Spread the positivity!
Share this good news with someone who needs it


