This paper explores the deeply conditioned interpretation of familial relationships, particularly the assumption that children owe a lifelong debt to their parents. It questions whether existence itself can be treated as something “given” and therefore repayable. Moving beyond moral and cultural constructs, the inquiry reframes parents as expressions within the continuity of life rather than independent creators. By dismantling the illusion of psychological debt, the paper reveals that what remains is not emptiness but an undeniable existential connection. It further investigates the possibility of love free from obligation—where relationship is not governed by hierarchy, duty, or expectation, but emerges naturally in the absence of imposed meaning. Ultimately, the work invites a transition from transactional thinking to direct perception of relationship as a continuation of being.
Mayank Singh (Thu,) studied this question.