Write passion. Write longing. Write age-gap, write forbidden love between in-laws or step-relatives with clear separation. But leave the "baap beti" fantasy in the dark where it belongs. Some stories should never be romanticized. If you meant something else—for example, you are looking for a that critiques or deconstructs this genre, or you want a romantic story that explicitly excludes this dynamic—please clarify and I will happily rewrite.
Romanticizing a baap-beti relationship normalizes grooming. It tells young readers that a father's "special attention" or jealousy has a sexual undertone. It erases the parent's role as a safe, non-sexual anchor in a daughter's life. For survivors of familial abuse, stumbling upon such stories can be deeply retraumatizing. Write passion
In the vast, often unregulated world of online desi fiction—especially on platforms like Wattpad, Pratilipi, and various Urdu blogs—a disturbing niche has quietly grown: "baap beti" romantic stories. But leave the "baap beti" fantasy in the
Yet, these stories exist, often disguised under the garb of "forbidden love," "age-gap romance," or "guardian-ward dynamics." Writers sometimes soften the premise by making the male lead a de facto father figure (an adoptive parent, an older boss who "raised" her, or a close uncle). But when the title explicitly says "baap beti," the intent is clear. Romanticizing a baap-beti relationship normalizes grooming
Let’s call it what it is. A romantic or sexual relationship between a father and his daughter is not a subversion of tropes or a dark romance. It is incest. It is abuse of trust, power, and nature.
There is no "romance" in incest. As storytellers, we have a responsibility. The line between exploring taboo and endorsing abuse is thick and bright. Do not cross it.