ABSTRACT: Background and Aim: The globalised world economy has reshaped the family structures in India, as working professionals travel outside the state and Country, leaving their ageing parents behind. Such changes percolate down to the affective and psychological states, especially of the older women who outlive their husbands and are now navigating these changes in their later years. The current study understands the physical and psycho-social challenges older women (above the age of 60) face as an aftermath of their children's migration and changed family structure. However, instead of focusing on negative affects, it focuses on their adjustments and their cultivation of resilience through the practice of rest and comfort. Method: As a part of an ongoing ethnographic fieldwork in Delhi-NCR, the study draws from interviews, observations and field visits to places like parks, Satsangs and daycare, central to the idea of comfort. Results: These spaces become alternative sites of care, as women practice hope, satisfaction and patience while finding belonging and support to give rise to a different "living structure". Conclusion: The study critiques previous frameworks of "successful" and "productive ageing" to propose an alternative concept of "comfortable ageing," grounded in collective care and rest, which is now essential as a strategy for resilience in the new standards of globalised living.