Categories: BollywoodLifestyle

⁠LAT It Be: The Relationship Model That’s Quietly Thriving

LAT, or Living Apart Together, is quietly redefining love—balancing closeness with personal space. Bollywood’s Randhir Kapoor and Babita exemplify this model, showing commitment without cohabitation. As Kareena Kapoor notes, sometimes love thrives best when partners choose peace and freedom together.

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Published by Reha Vohra
Last updated: July 7, 2025 11:11:11 IST

Not all love live under the same roof. Some of it thrives across city lines or just down the street. Quietly, gently, Living Apart Together or LAT has become one of the most intimate, least spoken-about relationship models of our time.

It’s not a rebellion. It’s a choice.

LAT Relationships: The Quiet Rise of Love That Lives Separately

For some couples, the old script date, move in, marry, repeat feels a little too tight. LAT offers breathing room. Emotional closeness, yes. But also: space. Time to think, to grow, to be. Togetherness, without the everyday logistics of cohabitation.

It’s not about avoiding commitment. If anything, it demands more of it. Because when you’re not under the same roof, trust isn’t just important it’s essential. You talk more. Listen better. And when you do come together, you show up fully.

Randhir and Babita: A Bollywood LAT Love Story That Defies Convention

It’s not new either. Decades before Gen Z gave it a name, Randhir Kapoor and Babita were quietly living it. Married in 1971, separated in the ’80s, and yet never fully apart. They raised daughters Karisma and Kareena from separate homes, living distinct lives but never cutting the cord.

And then, years later, they came back. No spectacle. Just returned to each other after taking the time they both knew they required. Slowly, on their own terms.

Kareena Kapoor has spoken about it with rare tenderness. About how her parents’ love didn’t follow the rules, but somehow lasted anyway. “They chose their peace,” she once said, hinting at a quiet strength that ran deeper than proximity.

A notable study by Wendy Sigle-Rushton and Jane L. R. Manning, published in Demographic Research in 2012, explores the phenomenon of Living Apart Together (LAT) relationships in the UK. Their research highlights how many couples are choosing to live separately while maintaining committed bonds, valuing personal space and independence without sacrificing emotional intimacy. The study challenges traditional ideas that cohabitation is the only true marker of commitment, emphasizing trust and communication as the foundation of these modern relationships.

LAT isn’t for everyone. But for those it fits, it’s freedom and closeness, both held in balance. It’s love that doesn’t need to shout its communicative, It just, stays.

Also Read:  Matrimonial Apps or Dating Platforms? For Gen Z, the Lines Are No Longer Clear

Published by Reha Vohra
Last updated: July 7, 2025 11:11:11 IST

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