HeARTful Living
Scroll. Pause. Reflect.
In a world of endless content, your mind needs space to breathe. Learn how daily journaling helps you process this everyday!
Every day, we’re exposed to a flood of content — hot takes, highlight reels, breaking news and endless opinions. The internet, especially social media, isn’t just a tool, it’s an emotional environment. And often, we scroll through it on autopilot, unaware of how much it’s shaping our inner world.
We might feel anxious after seeing someone else’s success, angry after reading a headline or drained after doomscrolling, but rarely do we pause to ask: “Why did that affect me?”
This is where journaling becomes powerful.
More than just a notebook of things, journaling helps us slow down, clarify emotions and process what the digital world stirs up in us. In this article, we explore how journaling can become your emotional compass and mental declutter too, especially while navigating today’s overstimulating internet.
The Internet: A Cognitive and Emotional Overload
Before diving into journaling, it’s worth understanding what we’re up against:
- Information Overload: We’re consuming more content in a day than people used to in a week. This taxes our focus and decision-making ability.
- Comparison Culture: Seeing curated glimpses of others’ lives can create a sense of inadequacy or pressure.
- Emotional Hijacking: Viral content is often emotionally charged— outrage, fear, heartbreak, which keeps us engaged and unsettled.
- Shortened Attention Spans: The constant jump from post to post, reel to reel, reduces our capacity to sit with a single thought for long.
All of this fragments our thinking and numbs our emotional awareness. Journaling does the opposite, it grounds, organises and clarifies.
How Journaling Helps:
Journaling gives you space to:
- Identify your emotional reactions (before they become unconscious moods)
- Reflect instead of react.
- Understand cognitive distortions (like black-and-white thinking or catastrophising)
- Spot behavioural patterns triggered by content.
- Regulate your nervous system by slowing down the mind.
Practical Ways to Use Journaling with Internet Consumption
Journaling to Process an Online Trigger
You come across a post where someone your age just launched a successful business. You feel a pang of jealousy, followed by self-criticism: “I’m so behind”
Journal Prompt:
- What exactly triggered me in that post?
- Is this highlighting a value or desire I haven’t acknowledged?
- Am I calling into comparison or catastrophising?
Outcome:
You might discover that what’s bothering you isn’t envy, it’s that you’ve put off starting your own creative project out of fear. The emotion becomes fuel for aligned action.
Journaling after Doomscrolling
You spend 45 minutes on Twitter reading upsetting news. You feel anxious, helpless and a bit numb.
Journal Prompt:
- What am I feeling right now in my body?
- Did I feel this before I started scrolling or did the content shape this?
- What can I do that reconnects me with agency or calm?
Outcome:
You become aware of how passive consumption is impacting your nervous system. You may decide to pause news consumption tomorrow and go for a walk instead.
Journaling after Social Comparison
You see back-to-back posts of people on vacation, working out or thriving in their relationships. You feel “not enough”
Journal Prompt:
- What belief did I just attach to what I saw?
- Where does that belief come from?
- What do I value that might not be visible online?
Outcome:
You shift from external validation to internal anchoring. Instead of spiraling, you reconnect with your own path and values.
Journaling to Sort Thoughts after Content Overload
You watched multiple self-help reels and now you feel inspired, but also overwhelmed.
Journal Prompt:
- What ideas actually resonated with me?
- What’s one small action I can take today?
- Am I consuming to avoid both?
Outcome:
You regain clarity. Instead of trying 10 things, you can focus on one habit that fits your life and let go of that noise.
Types of Journaling That Work Well
- Stream of Consciousness Writing: Just write what’s in your head, no edits, no structure. It’s like a mental detox.
- Emotion Labeling Pages: After browsing, note your emotional state— jealous, inspired, numb, irritated. Track patterns.
- Media Reaction Logs: Choose a reel, news post or tweet that impacted you and reflect on it. Why did it hit you the way it did?
- “Reel to Real” Reframes: Pick a curated post and reframe it.
Post: Someone’s perfect relationship story.
Reframe: I don’t know the whole picture. What do I value in my relationships right now?
- Gratitude Lists (Post-Scroll): After 10 minutes of scrolling, close your phone and list 3 things you’re grateful for in real life. This rewrites your focus.
Why It Works (Psychologically)
- Cognitive Clarity: Writing activates the prefrontal cortex, helping you process and organise thoughts more logically.
- Emotional Regulation: Naming emotions reduces amygdala activity (the fear centre), which calms the age of fast content.
- Meta-Cognition: Journaling builds the ability to think about your thinking, a skill crucial in the age of fast content.
- Embodiment: Slowing down to write reconnects the mind and body, essential when screens pull us out of presence.
We often underestimate how much mental clutter and emotional residue we carry from our phones. Journaling offers an antidote, a sacred space that’s quiet, personal and slow.
In a world that profits off your distractions, journaling is a radical act of clarity.
So next time you catch yourself spiraling after a scroll, pause. Open your notebook. Ask yourself:
What did this stir up in me?— and why?
You might be surprised at what you find when you start listening inward again.
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.
HeARTful Living
The Chemical Brain :The Adrenaline Conundrum
How adrenal disorders disrupt the body’s chemical balance, influencing mood, stress, cognition, and overall mental wellbeing.
The brain and body are constantly communicating with each other via hormones and chemical signals. Some of the most impactful messengers are those produced by the adrenal glands, two small, triangular shapes on top of the kidneys, which have a huge impact on our thoughts, feelings, and response. When these two glands malfunction, their effect can lead to not merely physical symptoms, but also major mental and emotional ramifications. Cushing’s Syndrome and Addison’s Disease demonstrate the depth of impact that adrenal hormones have on mental health, particularly when it comes to synthetic hormones such as cortisol and adrenaline.
This article will outline the effects adrenal function disorders have on mood, anxiety, cognition, and psychological wellbeing in plain language for all audiences, while still being research-based.
A Look at the Chemical Messengers: Cortisol and Adrenaline
The adrenal glands produce several hormones, with two of the most significant and influential on mental processes being:
1. Cortisol
Commonly associated with stress, cortisol is involved in:
• Metabolism
• Immune function
• Cycles of sleep-wake
• Blood pressure
• Stress response
Cortisol naturally increases during stress and decreases after the stressor has subsided, but functional imbalance (too much or too little) can greatly impact emotional regulation.
2. Adrenaline (Epinephrine)
Adrenaline is the hormone responsible for the “fight-or-flight” response. It leads to increased alertness, heart rate, and available energy. Shorter and infrequent exposures are healthy, but chronic over-arousal or under-arousal can lead to increased anxiety, a loss of concentration, and difficulty managing one’s emotions.
When the System Malfunctions: Cushing’s Syndrome & Excess Cortisol
Cushing’s Syndrome occurs when the body experiences long-term exposure to high levels of cortisol. This occurs due to tumors, long-term use of steroids, or irregularities in the adrenal and/or pituitary glands that create cortisol in excess of the body’s needs.
Mental Health Effects of Excess Cortisol
High levels of cortisol have been associated with:
• Severe depression
• Anxiety disorders
• Irritability and lability
• Reduced memory and focus
• Insomnia
• Cognitive slowing
High levels of cortisol impair the hippocampus that is responsible for memory and also the prefrontal cortex responsible for decision making and emotional control. A study published in 2015 in Psychoneuroendocrinology concluded that prolonged hypercortisolism physically shrinks parts of the hippocampus, contributing to memory dysfunction and depressive symptoms.
Patients with Cushing’s Syndrome often say that they feel mentally “slowed down,” that they feel stressed without a real reason, or that their emotions feel overwhelming. When cortisol remains elevated, the body can no longer reset itself from stress, creating a biochemical loop that reinforces anxiety and depression.
Addison’s Disease: When Cortisol Levels Drop Too Low
On the other side is Addison’s Disease. This is a rare but serious illness in which the adrenal glands produce insufficient cortisol, and oftentimes insufficient aldosterone. If left untreated, it can be fatal.
Mental Health Impact of Low Cortisol
Low cortisol is related to:
• Chronic fatigue
• Low mood or depression
• Loss of motivation
• Apathetic or flat affect
• Heightened sensitivity to stress
• “Brain fog” and cognitive fatigue
Since cortisol is one of the hormones that helps the body manage stress, patients with Addison’s often feel overwhelmed by situations that are more manageable for other people. In a 2014 review published in The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, it was noted that Addisons patients had higher rates of mood disorders than patients with other types of adrenal cortical insufficiency and experienced “reduced stress tolerance,” which was significantly correlated with their quality of life.
Many patients describe experiencing constant mental fatigue, difficulty focusing, and feeling “blunted” emotionally. They may find that even mild, normal stressors such as being late to an appointment or having to make decisions can cause lightheadedness, anxiety, and/or irritability.
Adrenaline Factor: Anxiety, Panic, and Mental Effort
Adrenaline imbalances also lead to mental health conditions, but often in combination with cortisol changes.
Adrenaline Too High
Adrenaline can remain chronically elevated, resulting in symptoms of anxiety disorder; including:
• Accelerated heart rate
• Trembling
• Restlessness
• On edge
• Difficulty concentrating
• constant panic-attack.
People with Cushing’s Syndrome or pheochromocytoma (rare adrenal tumors producing adrenaline too much) can feel “trapped” in a constant alert state. The body acts like there is something dangerous even when there is nothing dangerous happening.
Adrenaline Too Low
Low levels of adrenaline ( adrenalin is a hormone that the brain uses to create attention and excitement) are often found in Addison’s Disease or adrenal insufficiency:
• Low energy levels
• Difficulty staying alert
• Problems responding to stressful situations
• Lack of wanting to do something (stational response).
When the adrenaline level is low, it often feels like the mind is in a constant “slow motion” state.
The Mood-Adrenal Connection: Understanding Hormones and Emotions
The limbic system—the emotional center of the brain—has a high sensitivity to cortisol and adrenaline. These hormones affect neurotransmitters, such as serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine.
An imbalance of these hormones may cause:
• Mood swings
• Feelings of anxiety or panic
• Depressive symptoms
• Emotional numbing
• A decrease in the ability to feel pleasure
As an example, high levels of cortisol lead to a decrease in levels of serotonin, which may contribute to depressive symptoms. Low levels of cortisol reduce dopamine activity, which means decreased motivation and focus.
Changes in hormonal levels due to physical and emotional stress examples will also cause increases in adrenaline, hormones that lead to activation of the amygdala, the fear center of the brain, or where this system stays activated and anxiety becomes the primary way of being.
Cognitive Impairment: When Your Thinking Is Effected
Both high and low levels of adrenal hormones affect cognition; there are experience of within cognition that are compromised, such as:
• Memory loss (particularly short-term memory)
• Inability to concentrate
• Slow processing
• Problem-solving gains difficulty
• Executive function
A 2016 review in Frontiers in Neuroscience concluded cortisol levels affect levels of synaptic plasticity traditionally calculated by a brain’s ability to create access, use, or strengthen neuronal connections. Excessively high levels of cortisol lead to neuronal damage, and excessively low levels of cortisol also decompose an already active brain’s ability to respond well to stress or new information.
Treatment and Recovery in Mental Health
Correct diagnosis and treatment of adrenal gland dysfunctions can lead to improved mental health. Treatment may involve hormone replacement therapy, drug therapies to lower cortisol levels, behavioral methods to reduce stress, and psychosocial treatments.
Therapy in general will play an important role in helping the patient regulate emotional instability, establish new coping strategies, and learn to cope with the physical and psychological aspects of the disorder.
Conclusions
They may be small, but the adrenal glands are mighty architects of our mental health. When the hormonal output of the adrenal glands is altered, as in Cushing’s Syndrome or Addison’s Disease, there will be biochemical changes in the brain. Changes in mood, anxiety, depression, confused thinking and change in stress tolerance are not merely emotional responses to disorders like Cushing’s Syndrome or Addison’s Disease, but directly contingent on biochemical changes in states of disorder.
Understanding and acknowledging this link will not only support a reduction of stigma associated with mental health, but also allows individuals to seek intervention, understanding that mental health is related to the physiological chemical milieu of the body.
References
- Bornstein et al. (2014). Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.
- Starkman et al. (2015). Psychoneuroendocrinology.
- Lupien et al. (2009). Nature Reviews Neuroscience.
- Henley & Lightman (2014). Endocrinology & Metabolism Clinics.
- Sousa & Almeida (2012). Frontiers in Neuroscience.
HeARTful Living
Too Much Care, Too Little Freedom
Overprotection becomes a token of a few families. Understand the depths of it and how it affects the child.
In Indian households, love is often expressed through protection. Parents walk their children to school even when they’re old enough to go alone, carry their bags, choose their hobbies, settle their conflicts and sometimes even speak on their behalf. This care comes from tenderness, not control. But there is a fine line between protecting a child and shielding them from life.
Overprotection— often called helicopter parenting, is rooted in fear: fear of failure, fear of danger, fear of judgment, fear that the world will hurt the child. But ironically, the more parents guard their children from challenges, the more children struggle later— with confidence, independence, emotional resilience and problem-solving.
This article explores how overprotection develops, its impact on children’s mental health and what families can do to raise children who feel both loved and capable.
Kabir’s Story
Kabir was 11 years old, smart, affectionate and deeply dependent on his mother. She did everything for him—tied his shoelaces, packed his bag, finished his projects, solved his quarrels. She believed she was “being a good parent”
But at school, Kabir hesitated to ask questions, feared making mistakes and froze when teachers gave independent tasks. One day, during a class activity, Kabir whispered to his teacher:
“Can you tell me the answer? I don’t want to be wrong.”
His teacher suggested counselling. During sessions Kabir admitted: “What if I fail? Mom said I shouldn’t try anything difficult, something bad will happen.” Kabir wasn’t scared of failure. He was scared of disappointing the parent who loved him so much that she never let him try.
Why Indian Parents Overprotect
Overprotection in India isn’t lack of trust, it’s cultural conditioning mixed with love.
Fear as Love Language
Parents equate danger with love:
“Don’t climb, you’ll fall”
“Don’t go alone, someone will hurt you.”
“Don’t try new things, they’re risky.”
Fear becomes a form of care.
Academic Pressure and Reputation.
Parents believe they must prevent failure. If a child struggles, they step in immediately instead of letting the child learn through trial and error.
Generational Trauma
Many parents grew up with harsh criticism or little support. Now, they swing to the opposite extreme:
“I will protect my child from every pain I went through.”
Societal Judgement
Indian parents feel watched— by relatives, parents, teachers. If a child misbehaves or struggles, parents feel responsible and immediately intervene to avoid shame.
The Psychology Behind Overprotection
From a mental health perspective, overprotection disrupts several developmental needs:
Autonomy (Self-Dependence)
According to Self-Determination Theory, children must feel capable of making choices. Overprotection blocks autonomy, leading to dependence and fear of decision-making.
Resilience
Children develop resilience through manageable challenges. If adults remove all difficulty, the child becomes easily overwhelmed.
Self-efficacy (Belief in One’s Abilities)
Albert Bandura’s theory states that confidence builds through doing, not watching. When children don’t try tasks, they don’t learn competence.
Emotion Regulation
Shielded children don’t learn how to handle frustration, rejection or mistakes— leading to anxiety, low tolerance for stress and emotional flooding later.
Signs a Child is Overprotected
Children who grow up overly shielded often show:
- Fear of trying new things.
- Difficulty making decisions.
- Low frustration tolerance.
- Hesitation to speak up
- Excessive clinginess
- Avoidance of challenges
- Anxiety during independence tasks
- Perfectionism or fear of mistakes.
May appear well-behaved, but inside they feel fragile.
Healthy Protection vs Overprotection
Not all protection is harmful. Children need safety, boundaries and supervision.
The difference is simple:
- Protection: “I’ll help you learn to do it.”
- Overprotection: “I’ll do it for you so nothing goes wrong”
Protection prepares the child for the world. Overprotection prepares the world for the child, which is impossible.
How Parents Can Break the Cycle
Let Them Try, Even If They Fail
Failure teaches more than protection ever can. Start with small tasks: tying shoes, packing the bag, ordering food, solving peer conflicts.
Use the “Support, Don’t Shield” Rule
Instead of preventing challenges, be nearby while the child navigates.
Shift From Fear-Based to Trust-Based Parenting
Instead of “Be careful, you’ll fall.”
Try: “I know you can handle it. I’m right here if you need me.”
Encourage Problem-Solving
Ask: “What do you think we should do?”, “What’s your plan?”. This builds confidence.
Normalise Mistakes
Celebrate mistakes as learning.
Say: “Trying is more important than winning.”, “I love how brave you are to learn something new.”
Give Age-appropriate Responsibilities
Small responsibilities build independence and self-esteem.
Reflect on Your Own Fears
Many parents realise the fear isn’t about the child, it’s about their own past or pressure. Awareness creates change.
The intention behind overprotection is pure love but love, without space becomes a cage. Children need warmth and wings. Security and independence. Guidance and freedom.
Kabir didn’t need a mother who solved everything for him. He needed a mother who believed he could solve things too.
When children are allowed to explore, stumble, question, speak up and try independently they don’t become careless, they become capable.
In the end, the greatest gift we give a child is not perfection, safety or ease. It is courage to navigate the world on their own terms, knowing we are always there, not to carry them, but to catch them if they fall.
HeARTful Living
Beyond the Diagnosis: Living with Generalized Anxiety Disorder
Understanding the unseen battles of Generalized Anxiety Disorder — beyond symptoms, into the lived experience.
When individuals hear the term anxiety, they might reflect to times they were nerves before an exam or fidgety before a looming event. But for someone experiencing Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD) — anxiety is no transient feeling — anxiety is an unwelcome and constant extra at the table, usually steering the thinking and feeling or bodily reactions at the table each day with relentless presence.
In layman’s terms, Generalized Anxiety Disorder is the inordinate and uncontrollable worry about the affairs of daily life — work, relationships, health, the playing out of time, or even the minutiae of events. While everyone worries from time to time, someone with GAD is in a cycle of anxious thinking that feels inescapable or insurmountable.
To gather a complete understanding of GAD, we will need to move beyond diagnosis but to the actually lived experience of those that have anxiety.
Inside the Mind of Anxiety
Consider waking up in the morning, but your first thought is not breakfast or your plans for the day; instead, it’s about what bad things could happen today. A friend didn’t text you back? Clearly they are upset with you. Your boss called you in for a meeting? He’s probably mad at you. You have a little headache this morning? It must be something big.
For those who have Generalized Anxiety Disorder, this is a daily struggle – a constant state of “what if.” The mind races ahead, finding the worst-case outcomes of even ordinary situations. This is called catastrophizing, and you don’t choose to do this. An anxious mind is hard-wired to always be prepared for a possible danger, even when it may not be present at all.
Overthinking is not just too many thoughts, it is the inability to make those thoughts stop happening. It is lying awake at night reviewing conversations, re-reviewing decisions, and trying to predict a disaster that may never happen. Overthinking is exhausting mentally, like your brain is stuck on a treadmill and you cannot stop it from running.
When Anxiety Becomes Physical
Anxiety exists beyond one’s mental state; it also has a relationship to the expressions of the body. When a person with generalized anxiety disorder begins worrying, his or her body has a natural response as it were exposed to danger. The heart beats quickly, the breathing is shallow, muscles tense, and finally the stomach tightens.
These phenomena can be overwhelming in the form of sweaty palms, dizziness, nausea, and trembling. All of the the sensations are a form of the body’s natural fight or flight response. Over time, the body can reach complete alertness, resulting in fatigue, digestive issues, and even chronic pain.
To an outsider, it may appear to be “just stress,” but to the person it is losing control of their own body.
The Emotional Toll: Frustration, Irritation, and Helplessness
Living with ongoing anxiety is not only exhausting it can be incredibly frustrating. Individuals with generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) experience these cycles of thoughts often feeling somewhat incapacitated. They are aware that their fears and anxieties may not be rational, yet they can’t seem to stop them. This awareness sometimes leads to self-judgment .
“Why can’t I just stop worrying?” or “Why can’t I just be normal?”, and they become frustrated with themselves.
There can be an irritability that sets in when anxiety levels rise, but it’s not that the person is angry at someone else, they are angry at the mind for not letting go of something and just giving them peace. It’s like someone is trapped inside their thoughts, and they know the thoughts are irrational, but they just can’t escape the thoughts. All this inner turmoil can lead to being tired emotionally or disconnected and sadness.
Is it any wonder that depression usually accompanies anxiety? When someone feels like they are stuck in time loop of fear and helplessness, there is no hope left They may withdraw, not engage in things they have loved in their past, or feel numb. This is not weakness it is the normal reaction of carrying a heavy mental burden for too long.
The Social Reality: When Anxiety Becomes a Punchline
Sadly, anxiety often goes ‘misunderstood’. Friends might joke about their “overthinking” , “You worry too much,” “You’re being overdramatic,” or “Just relax!” While they may not mean harm, it hurts deeply. They’ve been told they’re too much. They’ve been made to feel different. Even well-meaning teasing simply highlights their isolation. What they feel, and what others perceive as overreaction, is often a true and physical sensation of mild discomfort to an overwhelming fear.
For example, if things do not go as planned – a delay, a last-minute change – people within the anxious community can feel a great deal of unease. Their body might feel tight and their chest can feel heavy. It’s not about wanting control; it’s simply about feeling unsafe when the world becomes unpredictable.
Empathy is important. What feels trivial for one may truly feel overwhelming for another.
Supporting Someone with GAD
You don’t need to attempt to “fix” someone dealing with a anxiety you just need to be there. Some suggestions include the following:
Be an open ear without judgement. Sometimes they just need to express their fear or worry without being told they are overreacting.
Provide reassurance, but don’t take it away. Telling them “You’ll be fine,” can feel like minimization and dismissal. Instead, say “I can understand this feels hard for you right now, I’m here with you.”
Support your friend in seeking professional help. A therapist can support an anxious person and can even be life changing. A therapist that does Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) is especially useful.
Be patient; recovery takes time. Some days will be better than others.
Learn about the disorder. GAD is true disorder and learning about it allows you to react with compassion rather than frustration.
A Final Word: Beyond Fear, There is Strength
Individuals suffering from Generalized Anxiety Disorder are neither weak, nor broken they are some of the most strong people you will meet. They wake up everyday facing battles that others do not see. They work, love, laugh and try to build a life despite the noise that is intangible that is constantly playing in their minds. What they need the most is to be understood, not to be pitied, because it is only when we see past the diagnosis and focus on the person, we soon learn that anxiety is not who they are. It’s something they are working to live with and often, overcome.
HeARTful Living
Different Brains, Same Belonging
What is inclusion? Let’s explore the world of neurodiversity and how every child learns and feels differently.
When Aarav first joined a mainstream classroom in Bengaluru, his teacher noticed he didn’t always sit still. He hummed while doing worksheets, spoke out of turn and sometimes stared at the ceiling during lessons. Some classmates whispered that he was “weird”. Others ignored him altogether. But what the teacher didn’t yet understand was that Aarav wasn’t being difficult, he was neurodivergent, meaning his brain processed the world differently.
In India, thousands of children like Aarav live with autism, ADHD, dyslexia or other learning differences. Yet, despite increasing awareness, inclusion often remains a policy on paper rather than a lived reality. This article explores what neurodiversity truly means, how special education can foster belonging and why understanding differences is the first step toward creating emotionally safe, inclusive schools.
What is Neurodiversity?
The term neurodiversity, coined by sociologist Judy Singer, suggests that neurological differences are a natural and valuable part of human diversity, much like ethnicity, gender or personality. Instead of viewing conditions like autism or ADHD as “disorders” to be fixed, neurodiversity encourages acceptance and support for different ways of thinking, learning and experiencing the world.
In this framework,
- A child with dyslexia isn’t “slow” — they process language differently, often excelling in visual and creative thinking.
- A child with autism may struggle with social communication but possess remarkable focus or pattern recognition.
- A child with ADHD may have high energy and creativity but need help regulating attention in structured settings.
Understanding neurodiversity means shifting “What’s wrong with this child?” to “What does this child need to thrive?”
The Indian Context: Progress and Gaps
India has made strikes toward inclusion — laws like the Rights of Person with Disabilities Act (2016) and the National Education Policy (2020) promote access to education to all children. Many schools have begun employing educators, shadow teachers and counsellors.
However, implementation remains uneven
- Many teachers lack training in inclusive strategies.
- Parents of neurodivergent children often face stigma and isolation.
- Classrooms with large student ratios struggle to provide individualised support.
As a result, neurodivergent children often end up being, “present but excluded”— physically in the classroom, but emotionally disconnected.
Meera’s Journey
Meera, a 9-year-old with autism, was often misunderstood in her first school. She found it hard to make eye contact and needed more time to process instructions. Teachers mistook her silence for disobedience and classmates teased her for being “strange”.
Her parents eventually moved her to a more inclusive school where the teacher practiced visual learning strategies, gave her sensory breaks and paired her with an empathetic peer buddy. Within months, Meera began participating in group art activities and even raised her hand in class.
In a conversation with her mother, Meera once said softly, “This school understands my brain.”
Her words highlight what inclusion truly means not forcing neurodivergent children to “fit in”, but reshaping environments so that they can belong.
The Psychology of Belonging
Psychologists have long recognised belongingness as a fundamental human need.
According to Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, belonging comes right after safety and before achievement.
Children who feel accepted are more likely to learn, engage and grow socially.
For neurodivergent children, however, belonging is often conditional, based on how well they “mask” their differences. Constant masking (hiding natural behaviours to appear “normal”) can lead to anxiety, burnout and low self-esteem.
A truly inclusive classroom values authenticity over conformity. It gives every child permission to show up as they are wiggly, quiet, curious, sensitive and still feel loved.
The Role of Teachers and Schools
- Universal Design of Learning (UDL)
- Use of multiple teaching methods— visual, auditory, kinesthetic, to engage all learners.
- Offer flexible seating and sensory-friendly spaces.
- Emotional Literacy
- Teach all students about different brains and behaviours.
- Replace “don’t do that” with “let’s find what helps you feel calm.”
- Peer Sensitisation
- Encourage empathy and inclusion through class discussions or stories about diversity.
- Normalise asking for help or needing support tools.
- Collaboration with Parents and Professionals
- Regular communication between teachers, special educators and parents ensures consistent strategies at home and school.
Cultural Shifts in Understanding
In Indian society, neurodivergence often clashes with cultural ideals of obedience and conformity. Parents may feel judged, teachers overwhelmed and children unseen.
But things are slowly changing.
- More parents are advocating for inclusion.
- Online communities are raising awareness about neuroaffirmative education.
- Counsellors and psychologists are helping schools understand that “different” doesn’t mean defiant.
The shift lies in realising that inclusion benefits everyone. When classrooms becomes flexible and empathetic for neurodivergent students, they also become better spaces for all children — quieter kids, anxious learners or those navigating emotional struggles.
From Awareness to Acceptance
It’s not enough to “allow” special children into the classroom, inclusion must go beyond tolerance to children.
Teachers, peers and parents can use simple, everyday actions:
- Offer choices instead of demands.
- Avoid public comparisons.
- Encourage self-advocacy: “What helps you learn better?”
- Celebrate strengths — memory, imagination, empathy or persistence.
As Meera’s story shows, even one supportive teacher can change the trajectory of a child’s self-worth.
Every child’s brain tells a different story. In India’s evolving classrooms, the challenge isn’t just to “integrate” neurodivergent children— it’s to reshape the idea of normal itself. When inclusion is practised with compassion, schools become more than places of learning, they become communities of understanding.
Because at its heart, inclusion isn’t charity, it’s justice. And the most powerful thing we can tell a child, neurodivergent or not, is this:
You belong exactly as you are
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