HeARTful Living
Indian Mental Health Care: Strides and Stigma
India has made remarkable progress in mental health care, yet stigma remains a challenge. How do we move forward?
Mental health in India has long been shrouded in stigma, yet recent years have seen significant progress in awareness, accessibility, and acceptance. As the country modernises, conversations about mental health are breaking through traditional barriers, influenced by advocacy, media, and policy changes. However, deep-seated cultural beliefs and systemic gaps still hinder widespread acceptance. Bridging the divide between tradition and progress is crucial for the nation’s well-being.
Progress in Indian Mental Health Care
India has taken crucial steps to improve mental health awareness and treatment. Some of the most notable strides include:
1. Legal and Policy Developments
• The Mental Healthcare Act 2017 decriminalised suicide and emphasised the rights of individuals with mental illness, mandating access to care and consent-based treatment.
• The National Mental Health Programme (NMHP) was launched to integrate mental health services into primary healthcare.
• Government initiatives like the Tele Mental Health Assistance and Networking Across States (Tele-MANAS) aim to provide mental health support through digital platforms.
2. Increased Awareness and Advocacy
• Celebrities like Deepika Padukone and Virat Kohli have spoken openly about their mental health struggles, reducing stigma.
• Social media and online platforms have amplified conversations, with NGOs and mental health professionals driving awareness campaigns.
3. Expanding Accessibility
• Online therapy platforms like MindPeers, YourDOST, and Wysa offer affordable mental health care.
• More educational institutions and workplaces are incorporating mental health programs, providing counselling services and stress management resources.
• Rural outreach programs, though still in their infancy, are beginning to address gaps in mental health care accessibility.
The Stigma: Cultural Barriers to Mental Health
Despite these strides, mental health remains a taboo topic in many parts of India. Some of the cultural barriers include:
1. Societal Perceptions and Shame
• Mental illness is often viewed as a sign of weakness or a character flaw rather than a medical condition.
• Families may fear social ostracisation if a member seeks psychiatric help.
• Terms like “paagal” (mad) are casually used, reinforcing negative stereotypes.
2. Religious and Superstitious Beliefs
• Many still believe mental illnesses are caused by karma, black magic, or spirit possession.
• Faith healers and rituals are often sought before professional psychiatric care.
3. Lack of Mental Health Literacy
• Misconceptions about therapy, psychiatric medication, and mental disorders persist.
• Many people assume mental health issues are temporary and can be overcome by willpower alone.
4. Gender and Generational Gaps
• Men are expected to suppress emotions due to societal expectations of masculinity.
• Women’s mental health issues are often dismissed as mood swings or hormonal changes.
• The older generation may resist acknowledging mental health struggles, considering them Western concepts.
The Indian Lens: How Culture Shapes Mental Health Conversations
India’s collectivist culture significantly influences how mental health is perceived and discussed.
Positives:
• Strong Family Support: Families often play a vital role in emotional well-being, offering support during crises.
• Spiritual and Holistic Approaches: Yoga, meditation, and Ayurvedic practices promote mental well-being and have gained scientific validation.
• Community and Social Bonds: Close-knit communities provide emotional support and reduce loneliness.
Negatives:
• Lack of Privacy: Discussing mental health openly within families can lead to breaches of confidentiality.
• Pressure to Conform: Societal expectations around education, marriage, and career often lead to stress and anxiety.
• Denial of Professional Help: Many families prefer to handle issues privately rather than seeking therapy or psychiatric care.
How Can We Move Forward?
To bridge the gap between cultural beliefs and modern mental health care, we must:
1. Promote Mental Health Education: Schools and workplaces should integrate mental health awareness programs.
2. Leverage Digital Platforms: Teletherapy, chat-based counselling, and AI-driven mental health tools can reach rural and underserved areas.
3. Encourage Open Conversations: Normalizing discussions about mental health in families and communities can help reduce stigma.
4. Train Religious and Community Leaders: Many people turn to spiritual leaders for guidance; equipping them with mental health knowledge can facilitate better interventions.
5. Strengthen Mental Health Infrastructure: Increasing the number of psychiatrists, counsellors, and community health workers can address accessibility issues.
A Path to Change
India is at a pivotal moment in its mental health journey. While awareness is growing, deeply rooted stigma remains a challenge. The way forward lies in education, policy enforcement, and cultural sensitivity. By combining traditional values with modern mental health care, India can create a society where seeking help is seen as a strength, not a weakness.
HeARTful Living
Why Indians are Facing Burnout and Don’t Know It
We call it dedication. Our bodies call it a breakdown. Here is why we’re hitting a wall called burnout we can’t even see.
Burnout has become the epidemic of our time. People around the world (especially in urban areas) are currently undergoing emotional depletion due to the high levels of job and family pressures from long work hours. Several studies show that burnout is related to poor mental health, so anything that contributes to high levels of daily stress will eventually lead to burnout, especially if people don’t know how to recognise and deal with it. Additionally, many people have experienced difficulty concentrating or staying focused on tasks due to these feelings. The word “burnout” is not recognised in many cultures; therefore, the symptoms and consequences of burnout will continue to go unrecognised and unacknowledged.
Why We’re Blind to the Burn
Since we were raised in a society where hustling and working hard have been instilled in us since kindergarten, and we are taught not to take time to rest because it is seen as a sign of laziness, it creates a mode of being hyper-vigilant. Our minds are always on the lookout for something that will threaten us – an angry boss, a missed EMI payment, or a disappointed parent. Because of this way of living for so long, we do not realise how burnt out we really are. Instead, we take being exceptionally tired as a regular part of adulthood in India.
Being constantly connected to everyone through WhatsApp. In many countries, your house is usually a place of comfort and rest. In India, however, you are connected to everyone through the same medium of WhatsApp: your work, your bosses, your aunts and uncles, your friends from school, everyone! There is no escape from this digital world where everyone is trying to reach you.
The Science of Why You’re “Glitching”
Fatigue is not just a state of mind but the result of the body’s physiological condition. Constant stress causes an interruption in the production of serotonin (the “happy” chemical) and results in cortisol being released into your brain.
This can cause the brain’s prefrontal cortex (the area in charge of decision making) to fail, leading to “decision fatigue.” Do you remember times when making even a simple decision, like whether to order daal or sabzi, made you emotional? It is not that you were overreacting; instead, your brain had reached its limit in terms of decision-making ability.
Minor Fixes for a Heavy Life
You don’t need a three-week vacation in Bali to fix this (though that would be nice). You need “micro-interventions.”
1. The “Nothing” Minute
Set a timer for 60 seconds. Sit. Don’t check your phone. Don’t plan dinner. Just feel your feet on the floor. This tiny “buffer” tells your nervous system that, for one minute, you are safe.
2. Sunday Night Reality Check
Instead of scrolling through reels until 1:00 AM, ask yourself: What drained my battery this week? If it was a specific meeting or a particular person, plan a “protection” for next week. Perhaps that means keeping your camera off during the meeting or refraining from checking your phone for an hour after the call.
3. The Digital Sunset
We are the only generation in history that takes its “stressors” (phones) to bed. Try a “Digital Sunset” at 9:30 PM. Put the phone in a drawer. Read a physical book or talk to your family. It sounds old-school because it works.
The Bottom Line
Rest isn’t a reward for hard work. It’s the fuel that makes the work possible. We need to stop acting like being “exhausted” is a badge of honour. It’s okay to say, “I’m burnt out.” Once you name it, you can actually start to fix it.
HeARTful Living
Why Being a Creative in India is Emotionally Expensive
Understand the struggles and depths of being a creative, especially in India!
Being a creative in India is often romanticised: the imagined life of a free-spirited artist, the joy of self-expression and the thrill of “doing what you love.” But behind evocative art, soulful music, thoughtful writing and innovative design lies a less discussed reality— the emotional cost of choosing creativity as a vocation or identity in a society that still prizes conventional security over artistic exploration.
In this article, we unpack the emotional terrain that creatives in India must navigate— examining pressures, sacrifices, internal conflicts and societal expectations that shape a deeply personal yet collective experience.
The Pressure to Conform: Tradition v/s Passion
In India’s social fabric, careers in engineering, medicine, law and business are so often considered the safest routes to stability, respect and familial pride. Creative fields like writing, painting, filmmaking, dance, theatre, music are still frequently seen as hobbies rather than viable professions.
This societal lens creates early pressure for many:
- Dismissal of creative pursuits as impractical.
- Family expectations of “real jobs”
- Comments like “art won’t pay bills” or “do it as a side thing.”
Such attitudes can erode self-belief and make creatives constantly feel they must justify their choices emotionally and financially.
Emotional Labour Beyond Art
Creativity demands vulnerability, dredging up feelings, experiences, fears and contradictions to create something meaningful. But emotional labour isn’t confined to artistic process, it extends to:
- Selling and promoting your work.
- Networking in socially competitive spaces.
- Facing constant comparison.
- Managing criticism, feedback and rejection.
Every creative endeavour comes with self-doubt and in an environment where practical success narrowly defined, this self-doubt can deepen into anxiety, burnout or even identity crisis.
Financial Instability: Anxiety in the Unknown
Financial insecurity is a tangible stressor:
- Irregular income streams.
- Freelancing without safeguards.
- Low pay for creative work in early stages.
- Reluctance of brands and institutions to fairly value artistic labour.
Unlike structured jobs with fixed pay, creatives often juggle multiple gigs, side hustles and uncertain project fees. This uncertainty not only affects lifestyle but also emotional well-being, leading to chronic stress and exhaustion.
Loneliness and the Myth of the “Struggling Artist”
Creatives, especially writers, painters and digital artists can find themselves working in isolation. While solitude can be productive, prolonged social disconnection may lead to:
- Feelings of inadequacy.
- Lack of peer support.
- Difficulty separating self-worth from output.
This stereotype of the “solitary creative genius” compounds these emotions, making it harder to seek connection or support when stress intensifies.
Recognition and Validation: The Waiting Game
In a populous nation with rising access to digital platforms, the competition for attention is fierce. Even high-quality work can go unnoticed amid noise. Creatives often grapple with:
- Waiting years for recognition.
- Algorithm visibility dictating worth.
- Comparisons with peers who “made it” faster.
This emotional rollercoaster can lead to imposter syndrome, chronic impatience or identity loss— feeling that if success doesn’t arrive, the work somehow lacks value.
Navigating Family, Society and Identity
India’s closely knit family systems are both a support and a pressure point. Families may love and encourage creative expression but still push for safety nets:
- “Do your art but finish your degree first”
- “Get a job and then think of art”
- We’ll support your creativity if you’re financially secure.”
This conditional encouragement can leave creatives stuck between love and obligation, leading to guilt, internal conflict or a sense of divided identity.
Coping Strategies: How Creatives Stay Grounded
Despite these emotional costs, many creatives find ways to sustain themselves, both artistically and mentally:
Community and Connection
Finding peers, collaborators or mentors who understand the emotional load helps us reduce isolation.
Structured routines
Balancing creative work with daily stable routines builds psychological safety.
Reframing Failure
Seeking rejection as a part of growth, not a verdict on worth, helps preserve resilience.
Emotional Awareness
Being mindful of emotional highs and lows and seeking therapy, support groups or creative circles when needed, builds emotional strength.
Redefining Success in India’s Creative Landscape
Success for a creative person in India can no longer be measured solely by fame or financial reward. Instead, meaningful measures include:
- Sustainable creative practices
- Emotional well-being.
- A community that values work over stereotypes.
- Authentic self-expression.
As India’s cultural industries evolve, through digital platforms, indie publishing, online galleries, film festivals and art residencies, there’s an expanding space to honor creative work and emotional integrity.
Being a creative in India is emotionally demanding, marked by societal expectation, financial uncertainty, persistent self-evaluation and the pain and joy of translating inner life into outer expression. Yet for many, the emotional cost is interwoven with profound fulfilment, an identity rooted in truth, purpose and connection.
Amid challenges, the growing community of Indian creatives is reshaping narratives, carving spaces and redefining what it means to live and thrive as an artist.
HeARTful Living
The Anxious Child: When Worry Becomes a Way of Life
In this articlen you can understand the depths of anxiety in children, especially in India, and how you can effectively help them
Some children worry loudly. They ask many questions, seek reassurance and cling to adults when they feel unsure. Others worry quietly. They follow rules, stay alert, avoid trouble and appear “mature for their age”
In Indian homes, anxious children are often praised.
“She’s so responsible.”
“He thinks too much— very intelligent.”
“She never creates problems.”
But beneath this calm exterior, many children are carrying worries far bigger than their age. Anxiety doesn’t always look like fear or panic. Sometimes, it looks like obedience, perfection and silence.
This article explores childhood anxiety in everyday Indian settings, how it forms, how it hides and how adults can gently respond before worry becomes a lifelong burden.
Anaya’s Story
Anaya was eight years old and rarely complained. She woke up on time, completed her homework without reminders and never argued with adults. Teachers admired her. Relatives praised her.
But every night, Anaya struggled to sleep. She worried about forgetting her books, disappointing her parents or making mistakes at school. If her mother seemed tired or upset, Anaya immediately assumed it was her fault.
One afternoon, when her mother was late picking her up from school, Anaya sat on the steps holding back her tears. “What if something happened because of me?” she thought.
In counselling sessions, Anaya said softly:
“I just want everything to be okay. I don’t want anyone to be upset because of me.”
Her anxiety wasn’t about one incident. It was about carrying too much responsibility too early.
Why Anxiety is Rising in Children
Childhood anxiety today isn’t caused by one big event. It grows quietly through daily experiences.
In Indian families, several factors contribute:
High expectations– Children feel pressure to perform academically, socially and behaviourally.
Emotional sensitivity to adults– Children often absorb parental stress, even when it’s unspoken.
Fear-based discipline– Warnings like “Something bad will happen” teach children to expect danger.
Early exposure to adult worries– Conversations about finances, family conflict or societal fears are often overheard.
Children learn to stay alert, careful and prepared for the worst— not because they want to, but because they feel they must.
How Anxiety Shows Up in Children
Anxiety doesn’t always look like crying or refusal. Often, it hides behind “good behaviour.”
You may notice a child who:
- Overthinks simple decisions.
- Seeks constant reassurance.
- Apologies excessively.
- Struggles with sleep or stomach aches.
- Fears making mistakes
- Feels responsible for adult emotions
- Avoids new situations
These children are not weak. They are hyper-aware.
The Psychology Behind Childhood Anxiety
Children’s brains are still developing their emotional regulation systems. When they sense instability or high expectations, their nervous system stays in a constant state of alert.
Psychologically:
- The amygdala (fear centre) becomes overactive.
- The child’s sense of safety depends upon external approval.
- Mistakes feel dangerous rather than normal.
Anxious children often grow into anxious adults because they learned early that the world is unpredictable and their role is to manage it.
What Doesn’t Help (Even Though It Sounds Reassuring)
Well-meaning adults often say:
“Don’t worry.”
“It’s nothing.”
“You’re thinking too much.”
When Helps an Anxious Child Feel Safe
Not a checklist, just gentle shifts:
- Predictability: Clear routines help children stay grounded.
- Emotional permission: Let children say, “I’m scared” without correcting them.
- Modeling calm: Children borrow emotional cues from adults.
- Separating responsibility: Remind children that adult problems are not theirs to solve.
- Celebrating effort rather than outcomes: Reduce fear of failure.
Most importantly, children need to hear:
“You don’t have to hold everything together.”
Helping Children Name Their Worries
When children can name what they’re feeling, anxiety loses some of its power.
Instead of asking:
“Why are you like this?”
Try:
“It sounds like you’re worried.”
“That must feel heavy”
“I’m here. You don’t have to hold it alone.”
Language creates safety
When to Seek Support
Occasional worry is normal. But support may be needed if anxiety:
- Interferes with sleep or appetite
- Affects school attendance
- Causes frequent physical complaints
- Leads to withdrawal or constant fear
Seeking help is an act of care.
Anaya needed assurance that she wasn’t responsible for everything around her. Anxious children are responding to a world that feels too demanding, too uncertain or too heavy, rather than “overreacting”. When adults slow down, soften expectations and create emotional safety, children learn a powerful truth:
The world doesn’t need them to be perfect. It just needs them to be children.
HeARTful Living
The Chemical Brain: Vitamin D And Mental Health
How low vitamin D quietly affects mood, mind, and body—and why awareness, testing, and care matter more than we think.
When considering matters of mental health, stress, trauma, hormones, and/or serotonin and dopamine may come into focus. However, an essential but often overlooked element in maintaining good mental function is vitamin D, which is surprisingly vital regarding how our brains function—the “sunshine vitamin,” which acts more like a hormone than a vitamin in our bodies. In adults, a deficiency in this vitamin can have a subtle impact on our mental health.
This is where the role of a chemical brain comes into play. Our thinking, emotions, sleep cycles, and levels of energy are all fueled by chemical messages. Vitamin D is a nutrient in our bodies that, when lacking sufficient vitamin D, can affect brain function.
What Is Vitamin D and Why Is It Important?
Vitamin D is a critical factor in calcium absorption, but this vitamin does more than support bone health. Here are some other functions of vitamin D in the human body:
Brain function and regulation of mood
Immune system balance
Muscular strength and energy
Hormonal regulation
Receptors of vitamin D have been discovered in a variety of regions in the brain associated with emotions, such as regions related to both depression and anxiety. Therefore, deficiency can have a direct impact on our feelings.
Vitamin D Deficiency and Mental Health in Adults
For adults, vitamin D deficiency has been associated with:
Depression: Feeling sad, not being motivated, not feeling emotions
Anxiety: Feeling anxious, agitated, and easily startled
Brain fog, which can include symptoms such as difficulty focusing and forgetting
Sleep Problems: Poor Sleep Quality and Daytime Fatigue
However, this does not mean a deficiency of vitamin D can cause mental illness. Still, it can aggravate an existing condition and delay recovery if people have existing mental health issues.
One major challenge is that symptoms can be relatively non-specific. Some adults may attribute fatigue, a poor mood, or irritable symptoms to work overload, ageing, or lifestyle factors, especially if they live in an urban setting where life is fast-paced.
The Reasons Behind Vitamin D Deficiency
Ironically, vitamin D deficiency is prevalent in countries with abundant sunshine, such as India. Some such reasons include:
Long hours inside or in front of screens or working night shifts
Air pollution is impeding adequate exposure to sunlight
Use of sunscreen without supplements
Dietary styles with less vitamin D-rich food
Due to the slow onset of symptoms, a deficiency can go unnoticed for years in people affected by it.
Other Health Outcomes Excluded in Mental Health
A deficiency in vitamin D affects not only the brain. A vitamin D deficiency can also lead to:
Bone pain, Back pain, Frequent fractures
Muscle weakness or cramping
Poor Immunity & Repeated Infection
Chronic Inflammation (or chronic bodily stress)
Higher chances of developing diabetes and cardiovascular diseases
Inflammation
Inflammation remains a consideration in this context. Chronic or persistent inflammation can impact both physiological and psychological well-being, leading to a predisposition to feelings of depression, tiredness, or struggles in focusing.
Sunlight: Useful, but not One-Size
Sunlight is considered the most natural source available for producing vitamin D. For people who can tolerate exposure to sunlight, brief exposure to early morning sunlight, preferably on the arms or legs, can be very beneficial.
However, not everyone reacts well to exposure to the sun.
For people who:
Suffer from migraines precipitated by bright light
Have skin sensitivity or medical conditions
To be advised to avoid sun exposure, one must consult a physician for treatment instead of relying on sun exposure.
Measures may include:
Oral vitamin D supplements
Dosages adjusted based on Blood Levels
Sunscreen, sun hats, sunglasses, and shaded areas
Using sunscreens and taking vitamin D supplements can coexist safely if they are used correctly.
Foods rich in vitamin D include:
While diet alone can never compensate for a deficiency, it can be an essential supplementary tool. Foods high in vitamin D include:
Egg yolks
Fatty Fish (Salmon, Sardines, Mackerel, Tuna)
Cod liver oil
Vegetables like palak ( spinach), kale, broccoli, bhindi, pumpkin, turnip greens, bok choy, and collard greens are rich in calcium and magnesium, which support bone health and vitamin D function, but not vitamin D sources
Mushrooms that are UV-treated or Sun Exposed
Fortified milk, curd, and plant-based milk
Fortified cereals and oils
In India, dietary practices include a lot of vegetarians in their population, making supplements a necessity when they are in low amounts.
The Importance of Blood Tests and Medical Advice
One of these steps is testing. A simple blood test called 25-hydroxy vitamin D can accurately check your levels. Taking self-supplements without prior tests is not advised. Excessive intake of vitamin D can also be poisonous. A doctor can assist in interpreting your levels correctly, prescribe the correct dosage and duration of treatment, and develop a treatment plan tailored to your health needs. Finding a way to address a possible deficiency in vitamin D can be a good ancillary treatment when dealing with depression, anxiety, or chronic fatigue in adults.
Closing Thoughts: Small Molecule, Big Impact
A deficiency in vitamin D brings to mind how our mental health is not simply an emotional or mental state but a very biological and chemical process inextricably linked with our bodies. A problem such as a nutritional imbalance can quietly affect our thinking, feeling, and coping. Awareness, screening, medical advice, and sound lifestyle decisions can make a big difference. In taking care of your chemical brain, sometimes it’s necessary to focus on the smallest molecules.
HeARTful Living
When Children Grow Up Compared
Understand the depths of what a small phrase can do–“Look at him”, “She did better” and more and how it impacts the children.
In countless Indian living rooms, small conversations create big wounds. “Look at your cousin, so responsible”, “Your friend scored more than you”, “Why can’t you be more like them?”
Parents rarely intend harm. For them, comparison is motivation, a push toward discipline, or simply a habit inherited from their own upbringing. But for a child, comparison isn’t encouragement, it’s erasure. It teaches them that who they are is never enough, and who someone else is always better.
In this article, we explore how comparison shapes a child’s mind, why is it so deeply embedded in Indian culture and the emotional impact it leaves behind, often lasting well into adulthood.
Zoya’s Story
Zoya was 12 when she began silently dropping her test sheets into her school bag. She wasn’t failing, she was doing well in most subjects, but every time she brought her marks home, her parents compared her score to her brother’s or her cousin’s.
One day, when her mother asked, “Only 92? Aisha got 97”, Zoya felt something break inside her. “I don’t know why I even try,” she whispered to her friend later. It wasn’t the marks that bothered her, it was the message: someone else’s success was more valuable than her effort.
Her teacher noticed Zoya becoming quieter, avoiding group activities and refusing to participate in competitions. In counselling sessions, Zoya admitted: “I’m scared to try anything now. Because no matter what I do, someone will be better.”
Why Comparison Is So Common in Indian Homes
Indian culture is deeply collective, families share resources, pride and reputation. I’m such systems, a child’s achievement reflects on the family, often making comparison feel natural.
Three cultural forces quietly fuel in it:
Inter-generational habits
Parents compare because they were compared.
“Look at your brother,” becomes an echo of “Look at your neighbour’s son,” heard decades earlier.
Fear of Failure
Parents believe comparison will push children to do better, not realising it usually creates pressure instead of progress.
Social Storytelling
A child’s achievements are shared proudly in WhatsApp groups, apartment communities and family gatherings.
This keeps the “race” alive.
Comparison becomes so normal that children start comparing themselves even when no adults are watching.
How Comparison Affects Children Emotionally
The psychological impact isn’t loud, it’s quiet. It shows up subtly, slowly and deeply.
- Low Self-Worth: Children begin equating their values with numbers, ranks or applause.
- Fear of Taking Risks: They avoid new activities because failure feels dangerous.
- Resentment Toward Peers or Siblings: Children may develop silent anger toward the ones they are compared to.
- Chronic Stress and Perfectionism: They push themselves to exhaustion trying to meet ever-shifting standards.
- Loss of Identity: Children stop asking, “What do I like?” and start asking, “What will people say?”
Comparison doesn’t build excellence, it builds insecurity.
The Psychology Behind It
Human beings naturally seek belonging and approval. When children receive affection only when they perform well, their brains learn a painful rule:
“Love must be earned.”
This keeps them in the lifelong cycle of seeking validation— through marks, achievements, relationships or careers.
From a psychological lens:
- Self-Determination Theory shows that autonomy (freedom), competence and belonging are key to motivation. Comparison suppresses all three.
- Social Comparison Theory explains that constant upward comparison harms self-esteem and increases anxiety.
- Attachment Theory indicates that conditional praise leads to insecure attachment styles.
Children raised in comparison often grow into adults who fear judgement, struggle with confidence and define themselves through others’ opinions.
Signs a Child Has Internalised Comparison
Few reflections a parent can observe:
A child who hesitates before showing their work.
A child who apologises for small mistakes.
A child who hides their interests because they “aren’t good like others.”
A child who stops competing because someone “will always be better.”
A child who overachieves but smiles less and less.
These are not signs of laziness or attitude, they are signs of emotional suffocation.
What Helps a Child Break Free?
Healing from comparison doesn’t mean eliminating standards or expectations. It means changing the language of motivation.
Here are a few gentle shifts:
- Replace “look at them” with “Look at how far you’ve come.”
- Replace “be like him” with “Be the best version of you.”
- Replace “Why can’t you?” with “How can I help you?”
- Replace ranking with celebratory effort.
- Replace competition with curiosity
Children blossom where they feel seen, not measured.
Rebuilding what Comparison Damages
Parents can repair emotional safety by creating an environment where:
- Mistakes are normal.
- Effort is valued.
- Each child’s personality is nurtured.
- Siblings are not benchmarks
- Talents beyond academics are respected.
- Preferences aren’t dismissed as “useless”
Children who feel safe to be themselves don’t grow up entitled. They grow up confident and emotionally grounded.
Zoya did not stop trying because she lacked potential. She stopped because she was tired of living someone else’s version of success.
Comparison is not the language of love, it is the language of pressure. Indian households don’t need less ambition, they need gentler ambition, one where children rise not out of fear but out of self-belief.
When a child learns they are enough, not better than someone, not worse than someone, but enough, they begin to grow without limits.
Because the goal of childhood is not to win a race. It is to discover who they are.
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