How to talk to someone with depression — this is the question that sits in the heart of every wife, husband, parent, child, and friend who watches someone they love disappear into a sadness they cannot reach. You want to help. You love them. And every time you open your mouth, you are terrified of saying the wrong thing. So you say nothing. Or you say something you think is helpful — and their face tells you it was not.
You are not a bad person for struggling with this. Depression is one of the hardest conditions to support from the outside, because it creates a gap between the person you know and the person standing in front of you — and every normal way of connecting across that gap seems to make it wider instead of narrower. The good news is that what you say to someone with depression really does matter — and there are specific things that help and specific things that hurt. This is not about being perfect. It is about being useful.
This is the number one thing families say and the number one thing that makes a depressed person feel more alone. Depression is not a mindset problem. It is a condition where the brain physically cannot generate the feelings of positivity, motivation, and hope that you are asking for. Telling a depressed person to think positive is like telling someone with a broken leg to just walk normally. They would if they could. They cannot. And hearing that you think they should be able to — that you believe the solution is that simple — makes them feel that either they are failing at something easy, or that you do not understand what they are going through. Both increase the isolation.
You are trying to put things in perspective. It feels logical — surely knowing that others suffer more should make the depression seem smaller. It does not work that way. Depression is not a comparison problem. It is not caused by having a bad life and it is not cured by being shown worse lives. When a depressed person hears other people have it worse, what they actually hear is your pain is not valid and you do not deserve to feel this way. That amplifies shame and guilt — which are already core features of depression.
Unless you have experienced clinical depression yourself, you do not know how they feel. And even if you have, your experience was yours — not theirs. Saying I know exactly how you feel can feel dismissive, as if their unique suffering is being collapsed into something generic and manageable. A better version is I cannot fully understand what you are going through, but I want to try. That honours their experience while showing up for them.
Gratitude lists do not cure depression. Depressed people are often painfully aware of everything they should be grateful for — and the fact that they cannot feel grateful despite having good things in their life adds another layer of guilt and self-hatred. They think what is wrong with me is that I have a loving family and a good job and I still cannot feel anything. The gratitude approach deepens the shame rather than lifting the depression.
This is one of the most powerful things you can say. It removes the pressure to perform, to explain, to be entertaining, or to reassure you that they are okay. It says — your company is enough, even in silence. For a person who feels like a burden to everyone around them, hearing that someone wants to be near them without requiring anything from them is deeply therapeutic.
Depression tells the person it is their fault — that they are weak, that they are failing, that they caused this. Hearing someone they love say this is not your fault, this is an illness, and it is not because anything you did can cut through the self-blame like nothing else. You are not diagnosing them. You are simply refusing to let the illness convince them they deserve it.
Depressed people are often overwhelmed by big questions — what do you need, how can I help you get better. Those questions require planning, decision-making, and hope — all of which depression suppresses. A better question is smaller and more immediate. Do you want me to sit with you? Do you want me to bring you food? Do you want me to handle the school pickup today? Small, concrete offers feel manageable. Grand offers feel like more pressure.
This is the sentence that changes trajectories. Naming what you see — without judgment — and offering a concrete next step — with support — is the bridge between suffering in silence and getting help. Most depressed people do not seek help on their own because the depression itself destroys initiative. Someone offering to make the call, book the appointment, drive them to the clinic, and sit in the waiting room with them can be the difference between years of untreated illness and the beginning of recovery.
Show up consistently. Depression makes people cancel, withdraw, and push you away. Keep showing up anyway — not aggressively, not with an agenda, just with presence. A text that says thinking of you, no need to reply is better than silence. Dropping off food is better than asking what they want to eat — because choosing food requires decision-making energy that depression has taken. Taking over a practical task — laundry, dishes, school runs — without being asked removes the burden without requiring them to admit they cannot cope.
Do not take it personally. A depressed person may not respond to your messages. They may seem ungrateful for your efforts. They may snap at you. They may say leave me alone and then feel abandoned when you do. None of this is about you. It is the illness speaking through them. The person underneath still loves you, still values you, and will thank you when they come through the other side — which, with treatment, they will.
Take care of yourself. Supporting a depressed person is exhausting. You are allowed to feel frustrated, sad, and helpless. You are allowed to need support too. Family therapy at Bharosa is available for exactly this — helping the people around the patient navigate their own emotional experience while learning how to be the most effective support possible. NAMI and the APA both emphasise that caregiver wellbeing is essential to patient recovery.
Q: What if they refuse to get help no matter what I say?
A: You cannot force an adult into treatment. But you can keep the door open — gently revisiting the suggestion, providing information about Bharosa, and making it clear that help is available whenever they are ready. Sometimes the seed you plant today grows months later.
Q: Should I pretend everything is normal?
A: No. Pretending nothing is wrong tells the depressed person that their suffering is invisible — which deepens the isolation. Acknowledge what you see, gently, and let them know you are not looking away.
Q: Is there a risk of making depression worse by talking about it?
A: No. Research consistently shows that compassionate, direct conversation about depression reduces risk — it does not increase it. Silence is more dangerous than any awkward conversation.
You do not need to fix them. You just need to stay. And when they are ready, Bharosa is here. Call +91 95050 58886.

Mental health struggles do not define you, and you don’t have to face them alone. If you notice any early signs of mental health disorders in yourself or a family member, take the first step today.