Originally posted by: aekiel
Anshvi, that's true, but practically everyone who does a wrong thing has a justification for doing it. It may be a split second decision in their mind, but it happens.
A thief might shoot the police guy who is chasing him- in the mind of the thief, he needs to provide for family and if the guy catches him, he's behind bars.So he weighs the pros and cons, and makes a quick decision- shoot the guy and save himself. He might know it is wrong, but there is an inner justification.
However there are boundaries to even justifications- a moral code or conscience if you have to call it. Maya just happens to breach those boundaries too freely.
See if a person murders someone that he knows what he did is wrong and he himself is wrong...Maya lacks that realization and that conscience
Arjun thought that she killed Maya and hence deep down felt that what he was wrong and he did a wrong thing...he has a realization and a conscience...He also gave a justification that Maya instigated her and he was not wrong but since he has a conscience he felt guilty
She doesn't think that she is wrong...She gives a justification of how she does a wrong thing but herself is not wrong...She doesn't feel guilty for her actions...as i said she thinks 'Ki galti ki but galat nahi hoon'
She doesn't think anything is wrong with her and thus she doesn't want to change.
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