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
Rest Is Not Laziness: An Indian Relearning
Stop apologizing for your stillness: In a world that demands a hustle, choosing to rest is your ultimate power move.
Every afternoon, when naps should bring rest, a shadow lingers – not just fatigue but something heavier. In Mumbai’s crowded lanes, among Bengaluru’s coding clusters, even in distant household rooms, one presence echoes through stillness. It appears during soft Sundays, uninvited. The weight isn’t always loud; often it hums beneath meals, beneath laughter. Parents feel it while their children play. Workers sense it after long days of output. This isn’t worry about bills or sickness. It’s the knowing look across the room – the one that says “enough.” Not regret, exactly. More like standing near broken glass, careful not to shift it.
In India, standing still feels like failing at something deeper. A life without motion gets labeled weak, even if it rests on purpose. Think back – to exam halls packed with young stress, or office blocks where time never slows. Action matters more than silence, shaped early by pressure to perform. What you show others comes down to what you produce, always assumed, never questioned.
Now that exhaustion climbs higher each year, while the grind mentality slowly unravels, one truth must take center – stillness does not equal sloth; it feeds both body and mind.
The Cultural Context of the “Busy” Trap
Start by digging into where the problem began. Long before now, India learned how to survive through endless demand. Over 1.4 billion lives packed into one space – shaped a mindset: move fast or get left behind. Resting felt like falling behind.
That Log Kya Kahenge moment? It hits hard.
Performing isn’t about personal goals alone – family, neighbors watch too. Spot someone relaxing outside at eleven in the morning? That quiet scene speaks volumes. Suddenly, a question echoes: Could they believe I lost my way? The gaze of others becomes a mirror reflecting doubt.
Late nights earn respect in Indian workplaces – being there longer marks dedication, regardless of actual work done. Gazing empty-minded through extended hours still counts as effort. Being seen matters more than results when checking off as busy.
Starting out, people often see downtime as something you get once you’ve worked hard enough – like an earned prize – instead of allowing yourself regular breaks to keep going. This idea sticks around without being questioned.
Reframing the Narrative
Peace isn’t learned by treating minds like broken tools. Machines pause – repair follows. With people, quiet moments hide their deepest labor.
1. Rest as “Productive” Maintenance
When your mind isn’t busy, science shows a network called DMN turns on. That is the time memories get sorted, tough thoughts solve themselves, ideas start flowing. Maybe you once had that sudden light-in-your-head moment That quiet second – say, during a shower, or just gazing blankly – held the weight of pause.
2. The Difference Between Rest and Numbing
A stumbling block shows up when people mix pause for diversion.
Numbing: Staring at a screen for hours, eyes just moving without thinking. After that stretch, energy feels flat, like time slipped away without reason.
A quiet cup of chai in hand, no phone nearby. Instead of rushing, try a twenty-minute break that leaves you feeling fresher. Walk slowly through the garden while listening to sounds around you, not music. Recharge happens when the mind slows down too.
The Indian “Middle Path” to Relearning
What if stopping feels impossible in a world that pushes nonstop? Not by fleeing to distant mountains, but by finding quiet corners amid chaos. Rest shows up where least expected.
| The Old Mindset | The Relearned Mindset |
| “I’ll rest when the work is finished.” | “I rest so I have the energy to do the work well.” |
| Naps are for the “lazy” or the elderly. | Naps are a tool for cognitive clarity. |
| Being busy means I am important. | Being rested means I am in control of my life. |
| Saying ‘No’ is disrespectful. | Saying ‘No’ is setting a boundary for my health. |
Practical Steps for the Modern Indian
Reclaim the afternoon nap The old Indian habit of siesta – also called bhat-ghoom in Bengal – held real value. Taking just twenty minutes to rest after dinner lifts spirits and sharpens focus. It is time to stop saying you are sorry for doing that.
Digital Dinners: Gather round without the glow of a screen lighting the room. Let meals become moments where flavor and face time hold space. Each shared bite, small as it seems, acts like a quiet pause for nerves stretched too thin by constant input.
Try something that doesn’t have to be perfect. Paint when your lines keep drifting off target. Sing even if your pitch wavers every syllable. Join a team sport just to show up each week. Do it all without expecting praise or a viral moment. Joy often hides where skill is weakest.
Language Matters: Instead of saying “I’m being lazy today,” try saying “I am recovering today.”
The Collective Shift
Moving ahead, what counts as success in India must change too. Living well isn’t only about earning more or holding a respected job – it’s shaped by how you feel and whether your spirit rests calm.
Resting isn’t only good for you – it lets everyone else breathe easier too. By slowing down, you show those coming after that they matter beyond productivity numbers.
Quiet defiance lives in rest. That moment when you see clearly – you’re flesh and blood, standing tall just as you are, worthy of air without proof or punishment.
Next time rest calls, go along. No reaching for devices. No shame. Simply be. Slowing down isn’t failure – it’s healing.
Here’s a thought. Maybe we craft a 30-day “Rest Challenge” checklist made for someone living an active Indian routine. This could ease stepping into these concepts without big changes at once. Just thirty days, one idea after another, built around your daily pace. Let me check what fits best.
HeARTful Living
The Chemical Brain: Migraines Are Not “ Just Another Headache ”
More than pain—migraines are a full-body neurological storm shaped by chemistry, sensitivity, and mental health.
People typically believe that they understand what a migraine entails. This is until they actually have experienced one themselves.
While Headaches pmay cause physical discomfort, a Migraine will not only affect you physically but also rob you of all your other senses, such as taste and smell, your thought process, your overall emotional state, and your ability to function as a person. For most individuals suffering from Migraines, these occur on a frequent (recurring) basis and can dictate how an individual lives their daily life, plans for future activities, and interacts with their own bodies.
A Migraine does not occur as a result of failing to show emotional strength or willpower. Instead, a Migraine will occur due to the over-sensitivity and chemical imbalance of your brain in response to external stimuli or environmental factors.
Why Do We Get Migraines?
An abnormality of the nervous system primarily causes migraine headaches. The way a migraine affects a person’s experience with light, sound, and stress is very different compared to someone who doesn’t suffer from migraine. Several things lead to migraines, including:
1. Changes in Brain Chemistry
When serotonin (one of the chemicals that help regulate mood, pain, sleep, and digestion) levels decline, the brain’s pain pathways become more active, and blood vessels in the brain change size, resulting in increased pain.
2. A Hyperactive Nervous System
The brain that experiences migraine can be easily overstimulated (e.g. bright sunlight can be neutral to one person, but an overstimulated person may have a migraine).
3. Your Genetics
Many migraines are genetic in nature and, therefore, if you are suffering from migraines, it is not that you are “too sensitive” but rather that the way your brain works is different from someone who does not have migraines.
4. The Trigeminovascular System and Pain Pathways
The trigeminal nerve system plays a significant role in migraine; it transmits sensory input from the face and head to the brain, and when activated, it releases inflammatory substances that worsen and prolong pain.
The basic explanation is that the migraine process is triggered when the brain’s alarm system becomes overly activated, resulting in a migraine.
What Does a Migraine Feel Like When It Comes On?
Migraine headaches usually don’t just arrive with only pain.
For many people, there is an early warning phase (sometimes hours or even days prior), which could include:
General fatigue
Out-of-character irritability and/or unexplained sadness
Food craving/loss of appetite
Inability to concentrate
A sensation that something isn’t right
Then, the migraine hits.
The pain can be throbbing, pulsating, or like a pressure or squeeze in the head. Movement worsens the pain. Light feels sharp; sounds feel harsh; and (for whatever reason) smells are intolerable. Even a light touch on the head (e.g. hair brushing against skin) can be painful.
Some may experience aura; vision can become blurred and/or fragmented, creating flashes of light or blind spots, while others may experience dizziness, nausea, or a sense of disconnection from reality during a migraine.
During a migraine episode, everything in the world around you becomes overwhelming.
The Lived Experience: Triggers and Sensitivity
Migraines can be very frustrating because of how typical their triggers can be. Some people’s triggers are environmental (e.g., stepping out into the bright sun for too long). In contrast, others’ triggers come from things they eat (like chocolate) or hormones (especially around their monthly period). In addition, emotional or psychological stress of any sort can also trigger migraines. All of these things make the brain super sensitive to stimuli. Therefore, the number and variety of trigger possibilities lead people to monitor their environment, which can be mentally exhausting.
Mood and Emotions During a Migraine
Migraine headaches cause physical pain but can also impact your emotional state.
They can cause people to feel:
Angry or irritable
More anxious
More likely to cry
More numb to their emotions
Wanting to be alone or isolated
You’re not being “weak,” “bad,” or “problematic.” You have changes in your brain’s chemistry that influence how you process your emotions and experience pain. If the system that processes pain is disrupted, the system that processes emotions will be disrupted as well.
Many people feel guilty for needing quiet, darkness and solitude while having a migraine; however, recovering from a migraine isn’t selfish—it’s an absolute physiological requirement for recovery from a migraine.
The Recovery Period: After the Pain Fades
Migraine relief is often not permanent; you may still feel unwell after relief.
“Migraine hangover” is the opposite term to the word “headache”; therefore, when some people have experienced a post-migraine phase (lasting hours to days), there can be feelings such as:
Drained & weak
Emotionally fragile or low
Slow & foggy
Light & sound hypersensitive
You will frequently feel/tell either yourself or those sharing your experience about your sadness or “apparent flatness”, regardless of how much time has passed since the migraine.
Migraines and Mental Health: Deeply Connected
There is a feedback loop between migraines and mental health. Individuals who suffer from migraines tend to also suffer from anxiety and depression, not due to their inability to cope with the pain, but for the reason that:
– The same brain chemicals that affect mood affect pain.
– Chronic pain alters the way the brain recognises and processes threat and safety.
– Unpredictability creates continuous heightened levels of stress.
At the same time, mental health conditions can also worsen migraines. Chronic stress keeps the nervous system in a heightened state of alert. Anxiety causes hypersensitivity to stimuli in the body. Depression results in a reduced pain tolerance. Trauma can sensitise the brain’s alarm systems, further compounding the problem.
Treating migraines alone without addressing mental health is like pulling the fire alarm without actually putting out the fire.
More Than Pain
Headaches that cause migraines often go unrecognised, are not understood, and are perceived as less severe. However, they’re genuine, biological conditions that result from being human (the body speaking to the brain, saying, “I’ve had enough!”).
To understand headaches, we must first gain a basic understanding of chemicals in our brains – this includes understanding what they do on a biological level, as well as an emotional and environmental level.
Headaches that cause migraines do not exist as mere headaches, but are comprised of a full-body neurological event that requires us to treat others with empathy, understanding and compassion; our doctors and health care systems should be held to these same standards!
HeARTful Living
Rethinking ADHD in Childhood
ADHD is not a lack of effort or intelligence. This article explores the depths of rethinking ADHD, its emotional impact on children and awareness!
In many Indian homes and classrooms, there is a familiar child— the one who can’t sit still, forgets instructions, loses things repeatedly, interrupts conversations, and reacts emotionally to small frustrations. Adults often respond with confusion or irritation.
“Why can’t you just focus?”
“You’re smart, so why are you so careless?”
“Sit properly. Pay attention.”
What is often missed is that these children are not refusing to cooperate, they are struggling to regulate. Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is not a behavioural issue or a parenting failure. It is a neurodevelopmental condition that affects how a child manages attention, impulses, emotions and daily organisation.
Without awareness, children with ADHD grow up believing they are lazy, irresponsible or difficult, when in reality, they are overwhelmed.
Arjun’s Story
Arjun was eight years old when school became a daily battle. His teacher complained that he never finished work, constantly left his seat and disrupted the class. At home, his parents were exhausted— Arjun forgot homework, misplaced books and reacted intensely when corrected.
They tried stricter rules, punishments and lectures. Nothing worked.
What they didn’t see was how hard Arjun was already trying. He wanted to do well. He wanted to be praised. But his mind jumped from one thought to another, his body needed movement and his emotions felt bigger than his ability to control them.
When Arjun was finally assessed and diagnosed with ADHD, the label initially scared his parents. But with understanding came relief. They realised Arjun wasn’t careless, he was overloaded. He wasn’t defiant, he was dysregulated.
Most importantly, they stopped asking “Why is he like this?”. And started asking, “What does he need?”
What ADHD really means?
ADHD affects the brain’s executive functioning— the skills responsible for attention, planning, impulse control, working memory and emotional regulation. Children with ADHD often know what they are supposed to do but struggle to execute it consistently.
ADHD does not look the same in every child. Some children are visibly hyperactive. Others appear quiet but mentally restless, lost in constant internal noise. Some struggle primarily with attention, others with impulsivity or emotional regulation.
It is important to understand that ADHD is not about intelligence or motivation. Many children with ADHD are bright, curious and creative. Their difficult lies not in learning but in managing the demands placed on them.
Why ADHD Is Often Misunderstood in Indian Settings.
Indian educational and family systems often value obedience, stillness and academic performance. Children are expected to sit quietly, follow instructions and complete tasks within rigid structures.
For a child with ADHD, these expectations can feel impossible.
When adults interpret ADHD behaviours as lack of effort, children receive constant negative feedback. Over time, this creates shame. A child who hears “try harder” repeatedly begins to believe that effort is never enough.
Many children with ADHD grow up internalizing the feeling that something is wrong with them, not with the systems around them.
The Emotion and Mental Health Impact
Living with unmanaged ADHD is emotionally exhausting. Children are constantly correcting themselves, holding back impulses and trying to meet expectations they don’t fully understand.
The chronic stress often leads to:
- Low self-esteem
- Anxiety around performance.
- Emotional outbursts followed by guilt.
- Difficulty maintaining friendships.
- Avoidance of school or tasks.
- A sense of failure despite effort.
These children are not emotionally immature. In fact, many are emotionally sensitive, they feel deeply but lack the tools to regulate these feelings.
How ADHD Affects Daily Life
For a child with ADHD, everyday tasks require more mental energy than they do for others. Remembering instructions, transitioning between activities, waiting for their turn or staying seated demands constant effort.
This often results in:
A child who starts tasks enthusiastically but doesn’t finish them.
A child who reacts intensely to small frustrations.
A child who forgets things despite reminders.
A child who feels misunderstood and frustrated with themselves.
Over time, repeated failures can lead to emotional withdrawal or acting out, not as rebellion, but as communication.
What Helps More Than Discipline
Children with ADHD do not benefit from harsher rules. They benefit from structure, predictability and compassion.
Supportive changes often include:
- Breaking tasks into smaller, manageable steps.
- Allowing movement rather than forcing stillness.
- Using visual reminders instead of repeaters verbal instructions
- Maintaining consistent routines
- Offering calm guidance instead of criticism.
When adults adjust expectations and environments, children with ADHD begin to feel safer and more capable.
Recognising Strengths Alongside Struggles
Children with ADHD often possess remarkable strenghths— creativity, curiosity, empathy, spontaneity and passion. When these qualities are constantly overshadowed by criticism, children lose connection with their abilities.
When adults acknowledge both challenges and strengths, children develop resilience instead of shame.
ADHD does not limit potential. Misunderstanding does.
The Role of Parental Awareness
Parental awareness is the most powerful intervention. When parents understand ADHD, children feel seen rather than corrected. They learn that their struggles are not personal failures.
Simple changes, like validating effort, reducing shame-based language and offering support instead of control, can transform a child’s mental health.
Children don’t need to be told they are capable after they succeed. They need to be told they’re capable while they struggle.
Arjun didn’t become calmer overnight. But once his parents understood his brain, they stopped fighting him, and started working with him.
ADHD is not a flaw to be fixed. It is a difference that needs understanding. When adults replace judgment with curiosity and punishment with support, children with ADHD grow into adults who trust themselves instead of doubting their worth.
The most healing message for a child with ADHD is simple and life-changing: “You are not lazy. You are not broken. You are learning how to navigate the world— and we’re here with you.”
HeARTful Living
Smiling Through the Pain : Indian way of dealing with pain
In India, pain is private especially the emotional kind .We endure, downplay, and move on—until our bodies and minds quietly break.
Pain in India is generally subdued; it does not shout or demand space, but rather sits in a corner, waiting for its turn while trying not to cause inconvenience. Most individuals are taught from a young age that strength is defined by endurance rather than by the ability to express emotion. To be human is to feel pain, but to display that pain is considered to be a sign of weakness.
Therefore, individuals will smile, cope or be ‘adjusted’.
This cultural system of coping with pain (mainly emotional and psychological) exists within our culture with roots in history, family systems, spirituality and survival. As it has motivated generations to persevere through adversity, it has also imparted on individuals the ability to conceal suffering to the point that they can no longer recall or recognise that it has ever occurred.
Pain as a Private Matter
Many people in their households view pain as being a private experience, something that should not be shared (i.e. “you don’t burden others with your pain”). You do not speak about your pain unless it is unbearable – heartbreak, anxiety, depression, grief, or burnout have the same unspoken societal rules regarding how to treat them: do not bring up your pain; instead, deal with it alone.
If you are sad, people tell you to be grateful.
If you are anxious, people tell you to be strong.
If you are overwhelmed, people remind you that “we all go through pain.”
And, in some ways, those people may be correct. But when people continue to downplay pain, it does not leave – it remains underground – never to be seen again.
The Culture of Endurance
Endurance has traditionally been valued in Indian society. The sick individual who keeps going, the mother who will give up everything to help others, the person who works diligently and never complains, the student who continues studying even when they are too tired to do so; we view each of these people positively. We tend to romanticise suffering and view it as a rite of passage or an opportunity for self-growth.
Phrases like “Sab theek ho jayega” (All will be fine), “Thoda adjust kar lo” (Adjust a bit), or “Isme kya hai?” (What is the big deal) are comforting phrases. However, by using these kinds of phrases, we often shut down the conversation by suggesting that our feelings of discomfort, pain, or sorrow can be resolved quickly, easily, or in a way that is insignificant and not deserving of further discussion. After a while, we will believe this message so many times that we no longer take the time to check ourselves and how we are doing.
We learn to endure instead of heal.
Emotional Pain vs. “Real” Pain
The reason that so many individuals suffer in silence with their mental illnesses today is that people in the general public do not equate emotional distress with physical distress. You can empathise with someone who has a broken arm or take time from work to recover from a migraine, but how will you empathise with someone who is suffering from depression? You may tell them they are overthinking, causing drama, or being lazy, etc. However, you can’t see their wounds. Because you can’t see them, it is also much more challenging to acknowledge the wound.
So people function. They go to work, attend family events, crack jokes, post smiling photos while quietly battling insomnia, panic, emptiness, or constant fatigue.
Family, Shame, and Silence
The importance of family in Indian culture can also perpetuate silence within families. Fear of being vulnerable, of being a burden to parents, of disappointing family members, and of being judged by relatives can inhibit many from expressing their thoughts and feelings.
Below is how many Indians consider mental health issues:
Failure of the family
Negative reflection on the family
Destructive impact on a potential marriage
To be kept hidden “within the family”
This creates a cycle where pain is acknowledged only when it explodes—when someone burns out, falls seriously ill, or reaches a breaking point.
The Body Keeps the Score
Suppressing emotions can lead to poor physical health, such as headaches, digestive issues, chronic fatigue, muscle aches and hormone imbalances; many people in India suffer these symptoms daily without realising that they are directly linked to unresolved stress & emotional pain.
When you continually push yourself forward, your nervous system never has an opportunity to relax. Eventually, your body finds its voice and tells your mind what it needs to say.
Why We’re Starting to Crack
The old paradigm is in crisis today. Urbanity, financial burdens, social status discrepancies, isolation, and constant access to digital media have created levels of tension and frustration for people living today that did not exist when our ancestors were alive.
The tools available to our ancestors (e.g., silence, endurance, denial) do not seem sufficient for modern-day individuals.
This is evident by the spike in people experiencing burnout, anxiety, depression, and emotional disconnection: not an indication of weakness, but rather a sign that an individual has reached their threshold for continued silent suffering.
Learning to Speak Pain Aloud
To heal is not to turn against our heritage but rather to develop it further.
Talking about our experiences of suffering will not diminish our strength; it will enhance it. Being vulnerable does not reduce our potential; it enhances our honesty. Sharing does not mean whining; it means recognising the truth of what we are feeling.
Resilience has been taught to us as part of our culture. We must now learn how to combine that with showing sympathy, both toward others and ourselves.
Because pain that is seen can be soothed.
Pain that is spoken can be shared.
But pain that is hidden only grows.
And maybe the bravest thing we can do now is stop smiling through the ache—and finally ask, “What do I need?”
HeARTful Living
Autism: A Parent’s Guide to Understanding
Autism is not a parental failure or something to be corrected. Understand Autism, especially from a parental perspective.
Many parents first notice something “different” about their child long before they hear the word autism.
A child who avoids eye contact.
A child who doesn’t respond to their name.
A child who lines up toys instead of playing with them.
A child who speaks early— or not at all.
In Indian households, these differences are often brushed aside.
“He’ll grow out of it.”
“She’s just sensitive.”
“Boys talk late.”
But autism is not a phase, a parenting failure or something to be corrected. It is a neurodevelopmental difference— a different way of processing the world. The earlier the parents understand this, the better they can support their child’s emotional well-being and development.
This article focuses on parental awareness, helping parents understand autistic children with clarity, compassion and confidence.
Ishaan’s Story
Ishaan was three when his parents began to worry. He loved spinning objects, avoided crowded places and had intense meltdowns when routines changed. Relatives reassured them:
“Don’t overthink”
“He’s just naughty.”
But Ishaan wasn’t misbehaving. He was overwhelmed.
After months of confusion, his parents consulted a developmental specialist. When autism was mentioned, fear replaced relief. They worried about labels, judgment and the future.
What they didn’t expect was how much understanding autism would change their parenting.
They stopped forcing eye contact.
They reduced noise at home.
They learned Ishaan’s meltdowns were communication, not tantrums.
Slowly, Ishaan began to thrive, not because he changed, but because his environment did.
What Autism Really Is (And isn’t)
Autism is a spectrum, meaning no two autistic children are the same. Some speak fluently, others communicate nonverbally. Some seek sensory input, others avoid it. Some need lifelong support, others live independently.
Autism is not:
- A result of poor parenting.
- A disease to be cured.
- A lack of intelligence.
- A behaviour problem.
Autism is:
- A different neurological wiring.
- A difference in communication, sensory processing and social interaction.
- A lifelong condition that can coexist with strengths, creativity and deep focus.
Understanding this distinction is the first step toward meaningful support.
Why Parental Awareness Matters So Much
Parents shape a child’s earliest emotional environment. For autistic children, this environment can either buffer stress or intensify it.
When parents lack awareness, children may experience:
- Repeated invalidation (“Stop overreacting”)
- Forced compliance
- Sensory overload
- Emotional shutdown
- Low self-esteem
When parents understand autism, children experience:
- Emotional safety
- Predictability
- Respect for boundaries
- Supportive communication
- Reduced anxiety
Awareness doesn’t mean lowering expectations, it means changing the path to reach them.
Common Challenges Autistic Children Face
Autistic children often struggle not because of autism itself, but because the world isn’t designed for their needs.
They may find:
- Loud noises are physically painful.
- Changes in routine deeply distressing.
- Social rules confusing
- Emotional expression difficult
- Sensory input overwhelming
What looks like “difficult behaviour” is often a stress response.
How Parents can Support Autistic Children
Rather than fixing the child, the focus should be on adapting the environment.
Key awareness shifts include:
- Understanding the meltdowns are not misbehaviour.
- Respecting sensory activities.
- Using clear, predictable routines
- Allowing alternative forms of communication
- Valuing the child’s interests rather than suppressing them.
Small changes can significantly improve a child’s emotional regulation and sense of safety.
The Mental Health Aide of Autism
Autistic children are more vulnerable to anxiety, burnout and emotional exhaustion— especially when expected to constantly “mask” their differences to fit in.
Masking may look like:
- Forced eye contact
- Imitating peers
- Suppressing stimming
- Hiding distress
While masking helps children survive socially, it often leads to long-term mental health difficulties. Awareness helps parents protect their child from this emotional cost.
Breaking Cultural Myths
In India, autism often carries stigma. Many families delay diagnosis due to fear of judgment, marriage prospects or social labeling.
But delayed understanding often causes more harm than the label itself.
Early awareness allows:
- Access to appropriate support.
- Reduces family stress
- Better emotional outcomes
- Empowered parenting
Autism doesn’t really diminish a child’s worth, misunderstanding does
Seeing Strengths, Not Just Struggles
Autistic children often have:
- Exceptional memory
- Deep focus
- Honesty
- Unique creativity
- Strong pattern recognition
- Intense passions
When parents nurture these strengths instead of suppressing differences, children develop confidence and self-acceptance.
Ishaan didn’t need to be changed, he needed to be understood.
Autism awareness is not about labels or limitations, it’s about creating environments where children can be themselves without fear. When parents replace confusion with understanding and fear with acceptance, autistic children don’t just cope, they flourish.
The most powerful intervention isn’t just therapy alone, it’s a parent who says “I see you. I’m learning. I’m with you.”
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