Hi, I'm Aadarsh, and my life has taken a bizarre, unexpected turn. Until recently, I was just a regular guy in my late 20s, stuck in the daily grind of a 9-to-5 corporate job, dealing with the pressure of marriage that comes with being part of a middle-class Indian family. My family didn't know my secret: I was attracted to men, not women.
Keeping my sexuality hidden, I would occasionally visit underground LGBT clubs, hoping to find someone who understood me. But even there, my luck failed. Despite my 6'2" muscular frame, I was a bottom, and every guy who approached me assumed I was a top. The moment they realized I wasn't, they'd lose interest. Even when friends tried to set me up, things would fall apart. I felt like I was cursed, destined to remain untouched and unseen.
One morning, my frustration boiled over. My mom had set up yet another blind date, oblivious to my reality, and I was dreading it. I hopped on my bike, trying to clear my mind on the way to work, but fate had other plans. Out of nowhere, a massive truck veered out of control and crashed into me. I thought it was the end, bracing myself for darkness.
But then, I woke up. Not in a hospital or on a stretcher, but in a different room, in a different body. Memories that weren't mine flooded my mind, blurring my reality. I was now in another universe, inhabiting the body of a 19-year-old named Aadarsh.
Here's where things get even stranger. In this world, I'm shorter—just 5'7" compared to my previous 6'2"—with a more modest build. The most striking difference? This body has wide hips, something people often comment on, convinced it makes me perfect for motherhood. It felt like I'd been transported to a version of the 90s, with everything slightly out of sync.
In this new reality, the original Aadarsh was the third youngest in a family where height, strength, and dominance were a birthright. His family was full of tall, imposing figures—all alphas, except for him. He had an eldest brother, Samarth Khurana, a towering 6'7" alpha, and an elder sister, Sharanaya, a 5'7" sub-alpha with a quiet grace.
Aadarsh's father, Amarjeet Khurana, was a 6'5" alpha, the strong, authoritative patriarch of the family. His mother, Suman, was a 5'6" sub-alpha, who commanded respect with her poise. Together, they had built a dynasty of tall, well-built alphas, almost like a symbol of strength and pride.
Then, there was Aadarsh—the 19-year-old middle sibling, an omega in a family of alphas. But not just any omega; he was a dominant one, which meant he was unlike the typical, submissive omegas people expected. His younger brothers, Karan and Arjun, were 16-year-old twins who were already 5'7", destined to grow even taller like their elder brother and father.
If Aadarsh had been another alpha, life might have been simpler, fitting neatly into the family's mold. But as a dominant omega, he defied expectations and disrupted the usual dynamics. Despite the love and care his family showed him, he still stood out as an oddity.
The irony was not lost on me. In my previous life, I was constantly trying to fit in, but my reality kept me on the fringes, misunderstood and out of place. Now, I found myself in a new existence, but still grappling with the same feeling of not quite belonging. It was as if the universe was playing a cruel joke, giving me a fresh start but with familiar complications.
And that's how I found myself waking up two days ago, realizing that I wasn't dead—but neither was I the same person anymore. I was Aadarsh Khurana, a young man in a world that was completely new to me, yet eerily similar to my past struggles.
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Hi! Author here
The first 2 chapters are all about OG Aadarsh and why/how the new Aadarsh occupied his place and his life, family all of that. so if you want to read from the present after transmigration of new Aadarsh it's starting from chapter 3.
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Let's follow Aadarsh in his journey of love and daily life drama :)
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Transmigration to the 90's
General FictionLet's follow Aadarsh in his journey of love and eveday drama:) "I did not wish to have a wife like you" "Well that's where you are wrong, first we are husband's and second feelings are mutual" "Then why did you ask your father to marry you off to m...