This conflict looks simple on the surface – Hamna vs Sara Aapi – but once you really look at it, it’s a layered family system where control, gratitude, independence, and ego are all mixed together. The biggest force in the story is still Sara Aapi, because everything in the family is built around her decisions, her sacrifices, and also her control.

Sara Aapi’s Side
Sara Aapi is not just “controlling” in a casual sense. Her position in the family is almost like a replacement parent. She didn’t grow up only as a sister – she grew into someone who became responsible for three brothers, their stability, their finances, and their direction in life. That kind of role changes a person’s mindset completely. From her point of view, the family did not just “grow up and become independent.” They grew up because she managed them. So in her mind, stepping back doesn’t feel like freedom – it feels like risk. If she lets go, she feels everything might collapse again: financial mistakes, wrong decisions, instability, and emotional chaos.
That is why she has learnt to create a system that relies on centralized decision-making, ruling with an iron hand, rewarding obedience and punishing any action that oversteps the boundaries of a carefully constructed world that works because, well, everyone follows the rules – the rules made by her. Sara Aapi therefore, interferes in money matters, work decisions, and even personal life choices. It’s not just control for power – it is control built from a deep belief that she is the only reason things are stable. But over time, this responsibility has become an identity. Sara Aapi is no longer just a sister who helps; she becomes the system itself. So when someone like Hamna challenges her, it doesn’t feel like disagreement – it feels like her entire life role is being questioned.
That is perhaps why her reactions become extreme at times. She doesn’t just guide the brothers; she micromanages them. She doesn’t just advise; she decides. And she doesn’t just protect; she prevents and even punishes independence, because independence feels like loss of control over the family structure she built. Even emotionally, Sara Aapi sees dependency as “love and respect.” If the brothers listen, she feels valued. If they don’t, she feels rejected after everything she sacrificed. That emotional attachment makes it very difficult for her to loosen her grip.
Team Hamna
Hamna represents the argument that the brothers are grown men and should have full control over their financial and personal decisions. On paper, her point is valid – adults should not be financially or emotionally dependent in a way that limits their autonomy. Burhan and Usman align with her because they feel that gap very clearly. They earn, but they do not fully decide. They are promised independence, but still feel managed within Sara Aapi’s system. Over time, this creates frustration that turns into resistance.
But Hamna’s way of doing things is where the conflict deepens.
She does not just explain independence – she actively highlights their dependency in a way that makes them feel small or exposed. Moments like Hamna stepping in to pay for Burhan’s purchase are used as proof that they are not truly independent. Instead of letting them process this privately, Hamna brings attention to it in a way that forces realisation through discomfort. This is why the intention feels complicated. She is not merely trying to help the brothers grow out of dependency in a calm, positive way. Her approach often feels like she wants them to feel controlled so they realise it, and also wants Sara Aapi to feel questioned, challenged, and emotionally exposed in front of them.
So yes – what she is saying is not entirely wrong, but how she is doing it creates tension. Her push is not just about freedom; it also becomes a challenge to Sara Aapi’s authority and emotional position in the family. That is why Burhan and Usman’s shift towards rebellion is not fully calm either. They are no longer just negotiating independence – they are reacting to years of built-up frustration and now willing to go against Sara Aapi even at the cost of breaking family balance.
Team Adnan
Adnan stands with Sara Aapi very strongly, almost completely. For him, she is not just an elder sister but the foundation of everything the family has today. He sees her sacrifices so clearly that it becomes difficult for him to question her decisions, even when they feel extreme or emotionally difficult.
Even in situations where Sara Aapi makes a very controversial or uncomfortable decision – like asking Adnan to take Narmeen to her parents’ house and leave her there – Adnan still follows through. This moment especially makes the audience question Sara Aapi’s intentions, because it feels harsh and emotionally heavy, and raises the question of why she would take such a decision in the first place. But for Adnan, the reasoning is not about questioning her motives in the moment. He trusts her judgment fully, believing that she is seeing something bigger that others might not understand. That is why, even when the decision feels wrong emotionally difficult, he still does it without openly opposing her.
Adnan’s support for Sara Aapi is not conditional or selective. He does not pick and choose which of her decisions to agree with based on comfort or convenience. Instead, he supports her as a whole authority in the family, even when her decisions feel uncomfortable, confusing, or emotionally heavy for others and so does Hania.
If you look at it emotionally, Sara Aapi is right about care, protection, and keeping the family together. Hamna is right about independence, respect, and treating adults like adults. Adnan is right about loyalty and not forgetting sacrifices. But the problem is that everyone’s actions and perspectives represent extremes. Sara Aapi is holding on too tightly, Hamna is pushing too aggressively, and Adnan is staying loyal even when things become uncomfortable.
And it has the audience divided too – which side are you on?
Drop us a comment and tell us what you think. Sara Aapi airs every Monday and Tuesday at 8 PM on GEO Entertainment, so don’t forget to tune in!
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Sara Aapi is written by Saqlain Abbas and directed by Asad Jabal. It is produced by Abdullah Kadwani and Asad Qureshi under the banner of 7th Sky Entertainment. The drama stars Savera Nadeem, Sami Khan, Adeel Chaudhry, Sidra Niazi, Nimra Khan, Khaqan Shahnawaz, Ammara Malik, Mahmood Aslam, Salma Hasan, Syed Mohsin Gillani, Humaira Bano, Seemi Pashah, and Adnan Jaffar.
