Nagpur-based Mental Wellness Strategist Shivangi Garg and her initiative Mind Adda are redefining psychological care — one measurable outcome at a time.

By Mind Adda | Mental Wellness Strategist & Psychometric Counsellor Shivangi Garg

Why Therapy Doesn’t Work for Many People in India — And How to Actually Improve Stress, Anxiety, Relationships & Mental Health

If you have ever searched something like “why am I overthinking so much,” “why do I feel stressed all the time,” “why is my anxiety not going away,” or “why does my relationship keep having the same fights,” then this article is not just information—it is likely your experience.

Many people today are trying to improve their mental health. They read, they reflect, they talk, and many even begin therapy or counselling. For a few days, things feel lighter. But then slowly, the same thoughts return, the same stress builds up, the same reactions happen, and the same emotional heaviness comes back. At that point, a difficult question arises: Why is nothing really changing?

Mental Health in India: Why So Many People Feel Stuck

India is seeing a massive rise in conversations around mental health. People are talking about stress, anxiety, burnout, depression, and relationship issues more openly than ever before. Awareness has improved, and more individuals are willing to seek help.

Yet, a large number of people still feel stuck. Many start counselling but discontinue within a few sessions. Many try self-help methods but see only temporary relief. Many feel that they are trying everything, but something is still missing.

This is not because people are not trying hard enough. It is because the approach they are using often lacks one critical element: clarity of progress.

Why Therapy or Counselling Feels Like It Is Not Working

Most mental health support today focuses on talking, expressing, and understanding emotions. This is important and necessary. However, when therapy is only conversation-based, it can lead to temporary emotional relief without long-term behavioural change.

A person may feel calm after a session but still react the same way to stress the next day. They may understand their problem but still feel unable to change it. Over time, this creates frustration and doubt.

People begin to think:

The answer is often not lack of effort, but lack of structured, measurable direction.

Feeling Better vs Actually Getting Better

One of the biggest misunderstandings in mental health is confusing emotional relief with real improvement.

Feeling better means you feel lighter, calmer, or understood for a short period of time. Getting better means your reactions change, your stress reduces consistently, your thinking becomes clearer, and your behaviour shifts over time.

Without a way to measure change, it becomes difficult to know whether you are actually improving or just experiencing temporary relief.

Common Symptoms of Stress, Anxiety and Mental Overload

If you are searching for help with stress or anxiety, you may notice some of these patterns:

These are not random experiences. They are patterns, and without understanding these patterns, solutions remain temporary.

Signs Your Mental Health Is Not Improving

Many people wonder, “How do I know if therapy or counselling is actually working?”

Here are some indicators that progress may not be happening effectively:

This does not mean help is not possible. It means the approach needs to be more structured.

Why Overthinking and Anxiety Keep Coming Back

People often try techniques like positive thinking, breathing exercises, or distraction. While these can help in the moment, they do not always address the underlying cause.

Overthinking and anxiety usually come from deeper cognitive and emotional patterns. These include how a person interprets situations, how they respond to uncertainty, and how they process stress. Without identifying these patterns, the mind continues to react in the same way, even after effort has been made to change.

Burnout in Students, Professionals and Daily Life

Burnout is no longer limited to workplaces. Students, college-going individuals, and professionals all experience it in different forms.

Students may feel pressure to perform, fear of failure, and constant comparison. College students may feel confusion about identity, career direction, and relationships. Working professionals may feel exhausted, unable to disconnect from work, and mentally drained even after rest.

Burnout is not just about working too much. It is about patterns of thinking and responding that keep the stress cycle going.

Relationship and Marriage Issues: Why Problems Repeat

Many people search for solutions to relationship problems or marriage conflicts. Common concerns include repeated arguments, lack of understanding, emotional distance, and communication breakdown.

In many cases, couples talk about their problems but do not see change. This happens because the underlying emotional triggers, personality differences, and communication styles are not clearly understood.

Without this clarity, conversations happen, but patterns continue.

Mental Health Stigma in India: Why People Delay Help

Even today, many individuals hesitate to seek help due to stigma. They worry about judgment, feel that they should handle things on their own, or believe that their problems are not serious enough.

However, an equally important issue is that even when people overcome stigma and seek help, they do not always receive structured guidance. This leads to disappointment and reinforces hesitation.

What Actually Works: Understanding and Measuring Your Pattern

The most effective approach to mental health combines emotional understanding with structured insight. Instead of only talking about problems, it focuses on identifying patterns and tracking change.

This is where psychometric assessment plays a role. These are scientifically developed tools that help understand how a person thinks, reacts, manages stress, and behaves in relationships. They provide a clear baseline, making it possible to track improvement over time.

At Mind Adda, this approach is used to ensure that mental health is not based on guesswork but on clarity and measurable outcomes.

Shivangi Garg
Mental Wellness Strategist | Clinical Psychologist

Her approach focuses on helping individuals understand their internal patterns and measure their progress, so that improvement becomes visible and sustainable.

What Real Improvement Feels Like

Real mental health improvement is not about becoming perfect or eliminating all stress. It is about responding differently, thinking more clearly, and feeling more in control.

Over time, individuals notice that situations that once felt overwhelming become manageable, reactions become more balanced, and relationships feel less exhausting.

Finding the Right Support (Including Nagpur-Based Counselling)

If you are searching for a psychologist, counselling support, or mental wellness guidance—whether in Nagpur or elsewhere—the key is to look for an approach that provides clarity, structure, and measurable progress.

Before starting any mental health process, it is important to ask how improvement will be tracked and what indicators will show that the process is working.

Mind Adda – Where You Are Heard. And Where Change Is Measured. 

One Question That Can Change Your Mental Health Journey

Before you begin or continue therapy, ask yourself and your practitioner: How will I know that I am improving?

If the answer is unclear, it becomes difficult to move forward with confidence.

Mental health support should not only help you feel heard—it should help you see real change.

If This Feels Like Your Experience

If you recognize yourself in this—whether it is stress, anxiety, overthinking, burnout, or relationship challenges—then what you are experiencing is not failure. It may simply be a lack of the right structure and understanding.

Change becomes possible when you move from guessing to knowing, and from feeling to measuring.

Connect for Structured Mental Wellness Support

Mind Adda
Nagpur-based mental wellness platform supporting students, professionals, couples and families
Instagram: @mindadda_psychology

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