Fashion and Style

First, Dating Websites, Then an Assist From Destiny


Khushboo Chaudhary was just stopping by a friend’s party in the East Village in March 2019 when she spotted Param Gupta, the man she had been talking with on Hinge.

They had first matched on Coffee Meets Bagel in January 2019, and shortly after, on Hinge. After they matched for the second time, he reached out to her and they started chatting — if you could call it that, since each would take “a business day,” he said, to respond. Additionally, they never had the chance to meet in person because, at the time, he was traveling a lot for work as a consultant at Deloitte.

A good conversation at the party was the push they needed, so they made brunch plans for the following week at Citizens of Gramercy.

“She loves to brunch,” Mr. Gupta said. “It was really close to her place, so she was like, ‘If I don’t like the guy, I can just go back to my apartment really quick.’”

They quickly realized that they had a lot in common — including that they both graduated from the University of Delhi in 2014 with bachelor’s degrees in commerce, though they attended different colleges under the umbrella institution.

They also realized that they were both supposed to go on a trip to South Africa in December 2013 through the university. Ms. Chaudhary opted out last minute to attend her sister’s wedding. But Mr. Gupta went on the trip and met her close friends there.

“Destiny made us meet in New York” six years later, Ms. Chaudhary said.

Together, they watched Bollywood films and spent time with their friend groups, which have “become one big common group in the last three years,” she said.

“We just really connected because of the shared upbringing,” in addition to their experiences as two people immigrating from Delhi to New York in 2016, Mr. Gupta said: Ms. Chaudhary for a master’s degree in public relations and corporate communications at New York University, and Mr. Gupta for his role at Deloitte.

The couple had a relatively small ceremony for an Indian wedding, with 50 guests. They also did not have the various events that traditionally surround an Indian wedding, like a mehendi (henna night) or sangeet (music party). They decided to only have the wedding ceremony, followed by two receptions — one held in Karnal for Ms. Chaudary’s relatives, and one in Delhi for Mr. Gupta’s relatives.

“We didn’t want a big affair for three to four days,” which is also typical of Indian weddings, and what they were planning to do in Dubai, he said.

“Doing it in a backyard with the people we care about most was the most brilliant thing about it,” Mr. Gupta said.



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