It started with a film she loved. Then it became a favourite actor. Then it became a habit of checking his social media first thing every morning. Then it became a ritual. Then it became a grief she did not know how to describe — the grief of not being part of the life of a man who does not know she exists. She is twenty-six. She has a degree in economics. She has a good job. She also has a wall in her bedroom covered in photos of him, a spreadsheet tracking his public appearances, and a recurring dream in which he walks into her living room and finally notices her. Her friends tell her she is being a typical fan. They do not know that she cried for three days when he announced his engagement, and she cannot tell them because she herself does not understand why it hurt that much.
If this sounds familiar — whether you are the person in the story or you love someone who is — please keep reading. What she is experiencing is not harmless fandom. It is a recognised psychological phenomenon called celebrity worship syndrome, and clinical psychologists sometimes refer to it as parasocial relationship distress. At Bharosa, we want to say clearly that there is no judgement here. The brain mechanisms involved are the same mechanisms that create every meaningful human attachment. The problem is not the patient. The problem is that modern media has hijacked a system that was designed for people you actually know.
A parasocial relationship is a one-sided emotional bond that a person forms with a media figure — a celebrity, a YouTuber, a character in a show, a public personality — who does not know the person exists. The term was coined by sociologists in the 1950s to describe the emerging phenomenon of television audiences forming attachments to news anchors and actors. It has become dramatically more common and more intense in the social media era, because platforms are specifically designed to create the illusion of intimacy with people the user will never meet. The British Journal of Psychology, one of the world's oldest psychology journals, has published research on celebrity worship syndrome since the early 2000s, documenting a clinical spectrum from healthy admiration to pathological obsession.
The clinical scale most widely used to measure this is the Celebrity Attitude Scale, which distinguishes three levels. Entertainment-social worship, in which the fan follows the celebrity for casual entertainment and conversation with friends. Intense-personal worship, in which the fan develops strong emotional feelings toward the celebrity and thinks about them often. Borderline-pathological worship, in which the fan's life becomes organised around the celebrity and the boundary between fan and stalker begins to blur. The American Psychological Association, the leading body of psychologists in the United States, recognises the higher ends of this spectrum as clinically significant and associated with anxiety, depression, and impaired daily functioning.
In the television era, a fan could see their favourite actor in a film once a year, read an interview in a magazine occasionally, and receive no direct communication. The parasocial relationship, while real, was limited. Today, a fan can receive what feels like direct communication from a celebrity several times a day — live streams, Instagram stories, personal-sounding posts, behind-the-scenes videos, meet-and-greets, fan interaction tools. The brain cannot easily distinguish this carefully curated content from genuine interpersonal intimacy. The oxytocin-driven attachment system fires as if the connection were real, while the celebrity has no idea the fan exists.
The World Health Organization has recognised excessive engagement with digital media as a global mental health concern, particularly for young people whose identities and reward systems are still developing. Social platforms are engineered to maximise emotional engagement, and emotional engagement with a celebrity feed is one of the most powerful forms of engagement they can generate. The result is that many young people are forming deeper attachments to public figures than to the people actually in their daily lives — and this has measurable psychological consequences.
Watch for these warning signs. Daily life increasingly revolves around the celebrity's schedule, posts, or news. Real relationships — friends, family, romantic partners — begin to feel dull by comparison. Sleep is disrupted by scrolling through celebrity content. Finances are strained by merchandise, concert tickets, or travel to see the celebrity. Emotional responses to celebrity news — engagements, breakups, public statements — feel disproportionate to the relationship's actual reality. The fan begins to experience jealousy, possessiveness, or anger when the celebrity shows interest in someone else. Thoughts of the celebrity intrude into work, study, and everyday tasks. In the most serious cases, the person considers traveling to meet the celebrity or engages in behaviours that cross into stalking territory. If three or more of these apply, you are no longer looking at fandom. You are looking at parasocial distress that responds to treatment.
At Bharosa, our consultant MD Psychiatrists and clinical psychologists treat celebrity worship and parasocial distress with the same respect we offer any other patient. Nobody is laughed at. Nobody is told they are being silly. We assess underlying loneliness, depression, social anxiety, and attachment difficulties, because these are the conditions that most often fuel pathological fandom. We use evidence-based Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) to help the patient identify the beliefs and behaviours that keep the attachment running, and gradually redirect the emotional energy toward relationships that can actually love them back.
Treatment is not about making the patient stop enjoying the celebrity. It is about restoring balance, healing the underlying loneliness or depression that made the parasocial bond so powerful in the first place, and helping the patient rebuild a life in which real people feel as important as the ones on the screen. Many patients tell us, weeks into treatment, that the celebrity still matters but no longer dominates — and for the first time in years, they are spending real time with real people who care about them.
Q: Is celebrity obsession a real diagnosis?
A: It is a recognised clinical spectrum associated with anxiety, depression, and impaired functioning.
Q: Is it common in India?
A: Yes, and growing rapidly with social media exposure.
Q: Will therapy make me stop being a fan?
A: No. It will help you enjoy fandom without it running your life.
Q: Is this the same as stalking?
A: Not always, but severe cases can move in that direction. Early help prevents this.
Q: Does Bharosa treat this in Hyderabad?
A: Yes. Judgement-free care is available at our LB Nagar facility.
Loving a celebrity is normal. Letting one run your life is not. Bharosa helps you find the balance. Call +91 95050 58886 in Hyderabad.

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