A controversial take among critics is that Doctor Hasham Daraz doesn’t love people; he loves the idea of fixing them. As a surgeon, his job is to find a problem and solve it. In his romantic storylines, he consistently chooses partners who are "broken" in some way—the traumatized intern, the struggling single mother, the betrayed wife.
Psychologically, this suggests a man who cannot handle an equal. He needs to be the savior. When a partner (like the journalist Saba) is wholly self-sufficient and doesn’t need saving, Hasham becomes distant and eventually sabotages the relationship. doctor hasham daraz in waziristan pakistan sex clips fixed
This flaw makes him human. It also leaves the door open for a future season where Hasham finally goes to therapy to learn how to love without a scalpel. A controversial take among critics is that Doctor
Dr. Fahad is the "nice guy" who also loves Mehwish. He is the emotional, available, guitar-playing pediatrician. Hasham despises him not because he is a bad doctor, but because Fahad makes Mehwish laugh. The rivalry is not about punches; it is about who remembers her coffee order. (Spoiler: Hasham eventually learns it, and it becomes a major plot point). Psychologically, this suggests a man who cannot handle
In a departure from typical youthful romance, one major season focused on Hasham’s relationship with Ayesha Mir, a physiotherapist and single mother. This storyline is lauded for its maturity.