5 Things People Get Wrong About Depression

5 Things People Get Wrong About Depression

In my practice in Delhi, I hear certain phrases again and again. From families. From colleagues. Sometimes from the very people who are suffering.

“Ye sirf sadness hai.”   “Bas khush rehna seekho.”   “Aapke paas toh sab kuch hai.”

These are not simply unhelpful things to say. They are beliefs so embedded in Indian families that they actively prevent people from seeking support. In a country where nearly 56 million people are affected by depression, the cost of these misconceptions is enormous.

“The most dangerous thing about these myths is not that they are wrong — it is that they are believed by the people who love you most.”
Myth 01 “Depression sirf sadness hai — bas khush rehna seekho”
WHAT PEOPLE SAY
“Everyone feels sad sometimes. Just think positive, exercise more, count your blessings.”

Depression is not an emotion. It is a clinical condition that affects the entire body — sleep, appetite, energy, concentration, and physical health. Many people describe it not as sadness but as numbness, or a weight so heavy that getting out of bed feels impossible.

You would not tell someone with a fractured bone to “just walk it off.” The brain is an organ. When it is unwell, willpower alone is not the answer.

THE TRUTH:
Depression is a clinical condition involving neurological, biological, and psychological factors. It is not a mood, a mindset, or a character flaw. It cannot be resolved by choosing to be happier.
Myth 02 “Wo toh hamesha smile karta hai — depressed kaise hoga?”
WHAT PEOPLE SAY
“But they seemed completely fine. Always laughing, doing well at work, going out with friends.”

High-functioning depression is real. Many people who are living with severe depression appear entirely well on the outside — productive, social, warm, even funny. The performance of wellness can be exhausting in itself, and it prevents people from reaching out because they fear they won’t be believed.

Depression does not have a single “look.” The absence of visible distress is not evidence of the absence of distress.

THE TRUTH:
High-functioning depression is real. Many people appear completely fine — to their colleagues, their families, even to themselves — while experiencing severe depressive episodes internally. The smile you see is not always the full story.
Myth 03 “Aapke paas toh sab kuch hai — depression kyun hoga?”
WHAT PEOPLE SAY
“You have a good job, a loving family, a roof over your head. What do you have to be depressed about?”

Depression does not check your circumstances before arriving. This myth is particularly painful because it adds guilt to suffering — the person already struggling must now also feel their suffering is unjustified.

Gratitude is a valuable practice. But it is not a cure for a neurological condition. You would not tell a person with diabetes to count their blessings instead of taking insulin.

Myth 04 “Depression ki dawai lena matlab aap weak ya pagal hain”
WHAT PEOPLE SAY
“If you go on medication, you’ll be dependent on it forever. It changes who you are.”

The stigma around psychiatric medication in India is enormous — and it prevents many people from accepting treatment that could genuinely transform their quality of life.

Antidepressants work by correcting neurochemical imbalances — in serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine systems. They do not change your personality. The decision to use them is a medical one, made between a patient and their psychiatrist. It is not a moral failing.

THE TRUTH:
Antidepressants correct neurochemical imbalances — the same way insulin manages diabetes. Taking medication for a medical condition is treatment, not weakness. Your brain is an organ. It deserves the same care as any other part of your body.
Myth 05 “Ye phase hai — apne aap theek ho jaayega”
WHAT PEOPLE SAY
“Give it time. Everyone goes through difficult phases. You’ll come out of it.”

Time is not a treatment plan. This is one of the most clinically consequential myths, because it leads to delayed intervention — and the longer depression goes untreated, the more entrenched it tends to become.

Research consistently shows that early support — therapy, medication, or both — significantly improves long-term outcomes. Waiting it out is not patience. It is a missed opportunity to help someone at their most reachable.

THE TRUTH:
Untreated depression rarely resolves on its own and commonly worsens over time. Early intervention significantly improves outcomes. Time heals many things. Untreated depression is not reliably one of them.
What can you actually do?
Whether for yourself or someone you care about
💬 Start the conversation. Ask directly — not just “are you okay?” but “I’ve noticed you seem really low lately. Do you want to talk?”
🧠 See a professional. A psychologist can assess what you are experiencing and guide you toward the right support. Seeking help early is not overreacting.
📖 Educate the people around you. Share this article. Every family that unlearns one of these myths makes it easier for someone to ask for help.
🕐 Don’t wait for a crisis. You do not need to be at your worst before you deserve support. Therapy is not only for people in acute distress.

Depression is not a character flaw. It is not ingratitude. It is not weakness. It is a condition — and like most conditions, it responds to care.

If even one person reads this and finds the language to ask for help — or finds the courage to offer it to someone they love — then this conversation was worth having.

If you or someone you know is struggling, please reach out to a mental health professional. Help is available — and it works.

Book a consultation. Send an email to dr.harshmeet@gmail.com or WhatsApp me @ +919872788768

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