Every Day, Someone in India Gives Up on Life. What If We Could Change That?

Some Lives Are Saved in a Single Night. Others Are Lost Forever.

I don’t know if you’ll read this entire post. But if you do, I hope it stays with you. Because this isn’t just a story. It’s reality. And for too many people, it’s their last reality before they become another statistic in the rising tide of suicides.

A few weeks ago, I came across a post on the JEE subreddit. A girl had written a suicide note. A digital goodbye, buried in the depths of Reddit, waiting for someone to notice before it was too late. Some of us did. A handful of strangers and I stayed up the entire night, trying to track her down, trying to keep her alive.

We were lucky that night. She survived. But the weight of it never left me.

What if no one had seen her post? What if she had felt just a little more alone? What if the next person who felt like giving up had no one to turn to?

That’s when I realized something. We needed a place—a safe space for young Indians struggling with their mental health. A place where no one would ever have to scream into the void, hoping someone hears them before it’s too late.

Because I’ve been there.

I grew up with a sad childhood, a heavy heart, and a mind that never seemed to find peace. I spent years fighting my own demons, trying to stay afloat, trying to stay alive. I know what it’s like to have no one to turn to. I know what it’s like to suffer in silence.

My best friend was suicidal. I saw the darkness in her eyes. I knew what it meant to be terrified of losing someone you love.

And the worst part? Most of the suicides happening in our country could have been stopped.

Not with therapy—not everyone can afford that. Not with family support—not every Indian teenager has parents who take mental health seriously.

But simply with someone who can listen. Someone who can say, "I see you. I hear you. You are not alone."

Every young person who takes their own life leaves behind a story that should have been rewritten. A future that should have been lived.

So I created something.

I created a place where no one has to feel invisible. Where no one has to hide their pain. Where no one has to suffer alone. A place where young Indians become a family, holding each other up when life tries to bring them down.

Because I never had anyone to help me. But I want to make sure you do.

This is my mission. To provide love, support, and understanding to every single young person who feels lost. To build a community where we stand together, lifting each other up, reminding each other that life is worth fighting for.

This is my vision for India. A country where no young person ever feels alone in their pain again. A country where we are not just strangers, but a family—strong, loving, and unbreakable.

If you’re reading this and you’re struggling, please—stay. You are not alone. You never have to be alone again.