India · Some things are just too hard to say out loud
Not because you didn't want answers.
But because you were afraid of what people would think.
You Googled it at 2am. You closed the tab. You carried it alone.
That silence has a cost.
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The numbers India doesn't talk about
These aren't opinions. These are real numbers from real studies — about real people in India carrying real pain in silence.
We see what India ignores
In India, we are taught to smile through everything. But some things don't go away by staying quiet.
The thoughts India keeps to itself
These aren't made up. These are real thoughts that real people in India carry every single day — because there was nowhere safe to say them.
"I have so many questions about my body and my habits. But if I ask a doctor, they'll judge me. If I tell a friend, it becomes gossip."
"I feel confused about who I am and what I feel. I can't tell my family. I can't tell anyone. So I just... pretend everything is normal."
"I replay every conversation in my head for hours. I know it's irrational. But I can't stop — and I can't explain this to anyone."
"I sleep 9 hours and wake up exhausted. I function fine on the outside. But inside I feel completely empty. People would call it drama."
"I smile all day. I make everyone laugh. The moment I'm alone — I just cry. I don't know why. I've never told anyone this."
"I don't want advice. I don't want to be fixed. I just want someone to hear me — without judging, without making it a big deal."
What stops people from getting help
That word is "dramatic." Or "weak." Or "shameless." This is the wall we're here to break.
Why we exist
The things that affect people the most — are the things nobody is allowed to talk about.
Sexual health is taboo. Mental health is "weakness." Depression is "drama." In India, suffering quietly is called strength.
You can't tell your parents. Friends will gossip. Doctors judge. Therapists cost ₹3,000 a session. So most people just Google it and suffer.
Therapy is expensive. Clinics feel clinical. Apps feel robotic. Nothing in India is truly built for the private, messy, real problems people face.
Every person in India deserves a safe place to ask, speak, and feel heard — without their identity, reputation, or relationships at risk.
Our belief
Carrying your pain alone doesn't make you stronger. It just makes you lonelier. Every question you've been afraid to ask deserves a real, honest answer.
Your body, your habits, your desires — these are not shameful topics. They are human topics. India's silence around sexual health has a real cost on real lives.
Depression is not weakness. Anxiety is not attention-seeking. Feeling broken is not "being too sensitive." These are real. And they deserve real support.
Your identity should never be the price of getting help. What you say, what you ask, what you feel — should belong only to you.