<p>Hectic work and fast-paced lifestyle may be pushing people to adopt easy-to-cook menus and fast food items like Maggi. After all, who doesn't like Maggi? This assumption, however, fails to hold water in the "Maggi case" adjudicated by Principal District and Sessions Court judge in Mysuru, M L Raghunath.</p>.<p>Talking about matrimonial cases where people file for divorce over the pettiest of issues, Raghunath recounts a bizarre, and quite humorous, case from when he was a district judge in Ballari. </p>.<p><strong>Also Read — <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/north-and-central/uttar-pradesh-bride-refuses-to-marry-as-groom-fails-to-get-photographer-1113678.html" target="_blank">Uttar Pradesh bride refuses to marry as groom fails to get photographer</a></strong></p>.<p>“The husband said his wife did not know how to prepare any food other than Maggi noodles. It was noodles for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. He complained that his wife went to the provision store and brought only instant noodles,” Raghunath <a href="https://www.newindianexpress.com/states/karnataka/2022/may/28/maggi-for-breakfast-lunch-dinner-insta-divorce-over-insta-noodles-2458873.html" target="_blank">told </a><em>The New Indian Express</em>. He added that later the couple mutually consented to a divorce.</p>.<p>The judge went on to say that resolving divorce conflicts is tough and that most reunions take place because couples are concerned for their children's future. He also stated that trivial disagreements frequently result in divorce cases. Judge Raghunath noted, interestingly so, that some couples seek divorce within a day after getting married because they put salt on the wrong side of the dish or didn't get the colour of the wedding suit right.</p>.<p>The judge remarked that divorce petitions from urban regions are more common. "In rural areas, village panchayats intervene and settle the problems. Women have no independence and their fear of society and family sentiments force them to cope with the situation. But in cities, women are educated and financially independent,” he was quoted as saying in the report.</p>
<p>Hectic work and fast-paced lifestyle may be pushing people to adopt easy-to-cook menus and fast food items like Maggi. After all, who doesn't like Maggi? This assumption, however, fails to hold water in the "Maggi case" adjudicated by Principal District and Sessions Court judge in Mysuru, M L Raghunath.</p>.<p>Talking about matrimonial cases where people file for divorce over the pettiest of issues, Raghunath recounts a bizarre, and quite humorous, case from when he was a district judge in Ballari. </p>.<p><strong>Also Read — <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/north-and-central/uttar-pradesh-bride-refuses-to-marry-as-groom-fails-to-get-photographer-1113678.html" target="_blank">Uttar Pradesh bride refuses to marry as groom fails to get photographer</a></strong></p>.<p>“The husband said his wife did not know how to prepare any food other than Maggi noodles. It was noodles for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. He complained that his wife went to the provision store and brought only instant noodles,” Raghunath <a href="https://www.newindianexpress.com/states/karnataka/2022/may/28/maggi-for-breakfast-lunch-dinner-insta-divorce-over-insta-noodles-2458873.html" target="_blank">told </a><em>The New Indian Express</em>. He added that later the couple mutually consented to a divorce.</p>.<p>The judge went on to say that resolving divorce conflicts is tough and that most reunions take place because couples are concerned for their children's future. He also stated that trivial disagreements frequently result in divorce cases. Judge Raghunath noted, interestingly so, that some couples seek divorce within a day after getting married because they put salt on the wrong side of the dish or didn't get the colour of the wedding suit right.</p>.<p>The judge remarked that divorce petitions from urban regions are more common. "In rural areas, village panchayats intervene and settle the problems. Women have no independence and their fear of society and family sentiments force them to cope with the situation. But in cities, women are educated and financially independent,” he was quoted as saying in the report.</p>