Finding a lifeline in simple acts of kindness
October 28, 2025
|Mint Hyderabad
From shared cups of tea to WhatsApp group check-ins, it is simple bids for connection that act as unseen safety nets for people in despair
On a humid evening in Mumbai, a group of women gather at their neighbourhood chai stall. The conversations drift easily between recipes, school fees, and neighbourhood gossip. To an outsider, it's just another everyday moment in India's teeming cities. But for one woman, who has been silently battling thoughts of giving up on life, that cup of tea and the warmth of familiar chatter act as a lifeline. She may never put it into words, but the casual camaraderie of these interactions keeps her tethered, reminding her that she still belongs.
Across India, countless such small, ordinary gestures such as chai breaks, shared meals, WhatsApp group check-ins, neighbours dropping by, function as quiet safety nets against despair. While therapy and helplines remain critical, experts say suicide prevention in India often begins much earlier, in the unassuming rhythms of daily life. "Small, everyday gestures such as a shared meal, a genuine phone call, or a few minutes of listening remind people that they are seen, valued, and not alone," says Arpita Kohli, psychologist and counsellor at PSRI Hospital, Delhi NCR. These micro-moments, she explains, create safe spaces where individuals feel accepted without judgement.
For Sunitha Ramachandran, co-founder of Ankahee Helpline, Mumbai, the power of small acts is deeply personal. She recalls a moment from decades ago: "I was on a train, upset after a fight with my sister. A young man next to me quietly shared his dinner and spoke to me. That act of empathy stays with me even 28 years later." To her, these everyday acts are like pressure valves, offering temporary reprieve until coping skills can return.
هذه القصة من طبعة October 28, 2025 من Mint Hyderabad.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Mint Hyderabad
Mint Hyderabad
Banks crave for deposits, but end up giving out more loans
Indian banks lent more money in 2025 than they gathered through deposits in the year, as low deposit rates and investors' preference for other instruments weighed on inflows.
1 mins
January 03, 2026
Mint Hyderabad
2026 will see a quiet correction in golf
Shorter courses are earning renewed respect. There will be less obsession with speed, more respect for trajectory
4 mins
January 03, 2026
Mint Hyderabad
The man who invented the world wide web
Heading to a mentor’s funeral in Greece in August 2001, Tim Berners-Lee found himself and a colleague flying right over the Parthenon, “the two of us peering out of the window to the Agora steps where Socrates conducted his dialogues.”
5 mins
January 03, 2026
Mint Hyderabad
Grok kicks off liability debate
Grok, the foundational AI model by Elon Musk, has kicked off a storm in India as users complained about its 'spicy mode' being used to morph photos into sexually explicit images.
2 mins
January 03, 2026
Mint Hyderabad
Scuba diving is as wide open as the waters
There's no age limit or particular fitness training needed to get scuba diving certification
5 mins
January 03, 2026
Mint Hyderabad
LUCKY'S
Lucky Dhamija, cocky in bell bottoms and shiny shirt, couldn't stop honking his brand new Maruti 800 a
8 mins
January 03, 2026
Mint Hyderabad
Big questions and hard truths at Mumbai Gallery Weekend 2026
In its 14th year, the annual Mumbai Gallery Weekend finally steps out of South Mumbai and discovers new spaces
6 mins
January 03, 2026
Mint Hyderabad
MARUTI
Chest exposed, gold chain nestling among manly hairs, at the neighbours—until he met his match in Nani
8 mins
January 03, 2026
Mint Hyderabad
'Tuver' on the menu in Gujarat
Kitchens mark the season with the green pigeon pea by preparing 'farsan', 'shaak' and 'undhiyo'
2 mins
January 03, 2026
Mint Hyderabad
The real diary is the black box of your life
Unlike social media, which holds curated snippets of the life you want others to think you lead, a good, old paper diary, to be opened by others after you are gone, records the mundane moments that give life meaning
5 mins
January 03, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

