Even with headlines celebrating mental-health wins, many still walk into therapy sessions carrying myths heavier than their symptoms. These myths feel reasonable, culturally familiar, and powerful enough to delay healing. Despite greater awareness, misinformation continues to thrive, sometimes dressed as well-meaning advice or inherited wisdom.
Myth 1: Technology is the root of all mental health issues
“Yes, doom-scrolling erodes attention,” says Shruti Padhye, Senior Psychologist at Mpower, Aditya Birla Education Trust, “yet teletherapy, AI chat support, and VR exposure tools now reach villages where psychiatrists are scarce.” She adds, “The problem isnโt screens; itโs guidance.” Instead of villainising technology, she suggests that we leverage it with care and support.
Myth 2: Strong people donโt need therapy
According to Padhye, this belief is common across all demographics. “Iโve watched surgeons sob after decades of bottled grief. Therapy isnโt weakness; itโs skilled self-maintenance.” She explains that seeking help is not a sign of failure but an act of strength: โWorking on yourself is one of the brave steps one takes towards mental wellbeing.โ
Myth 3: Children are too young for mental illness
Padhye also says that many parents underestimate the emotional weight children carry today. โI treat seven-year-olds with panic attacks shaped by cyberbullying and academic fear. Early care rewires futures; dismissal cements distress.โ Early intervention, she stresses, can change the trajectory of a child’s life.
Myth 4: Medication should be a last resort
This misconception spans generations. “Modern psychopharmacology targets symptoms precisely and often prevents suicide,” says Padhye. “Pills donโt cancel personality; they create space for it to return.”
Myth 5: Burnout is just a time-management issue
โBurnout stems less from calendars and more from emotional labour, blurred boundaries, and leaders who reward exhaustion,โ Padhye explains. She urges a shift in focus from productivity apps to psychological safety.
โEach myth sounds half-true, which makes it dangerous,โ she concludes. โInside that sliver of plausibility, people postpone help, families fracture, and suffering deepens. My plea is simple: trade myth for mindful curiosity, replace stigma with science, and choose compassion over silent endurance.โ
Adding to the conversation is Ashish Pillay, psychologist, who also sees how damaging these long-standing beliefs can be. โOne of the biggest misconceptions is that therapy is only for โseriousโ problems,โ he says. โMany people wait until theyโre overwhelmed before reaching out. In truth, therapy is also for growth, clarity, and learning how to cope.โ
Myth 6: Talking about mental health is a sign of weakness
โOn the contrary,โ says Pillay, โit takes incredible strength to be honest about how youโre feeling. Vulnerability is not weaknessโitโs courage.โ
Myth 7: Medication is shameful or a shortcut
Pillay compares it to physical health treatment. โJust like insulin for diabetes, mental health medication can be life-saving. Itโs not a shortcutโitโs part of a full, compassionate care plan.โ
Myth 8: People with mental health issues โlookโ a certain way
โMany suffer silently behind smiles,โ Pillay adds. โPain doesnโt always wear a label.โ
Myth 9: You can โsnap out of itโ by thinking positively
And finally, Pillay debunks the toxic positivity trap. โWe must stop telling people to โjust be positiveโ or โsnap out of it.โ Mental health struggles arenโt about attitudeโtheyโre about care, support, and healing.โ