Bharosa Neuropsychiatry Hospital

What PTSD Really Looks Like in Everyday Indian Life | Bharosa

Four years ago, she had a scooter accident at a busy traffic signal. It was not a big crash. She sprained her wrist, her scooter had a few dents, and for about thirty seconds, she really believed she was going to die. She got up, went home, and did not speak about it again. It was not a big deal, she told herself.

Four years later, she still cannot cross that junction without her chest becoming tight. She flinches when a vehicle comes up behind her on the road. She dreams about the accident two or three times a month and wakes up breathing fast. She has started saying no to family functions if they are on the other side of the city. Her husband thinks she has become a nervous person. Her mother thinks she is being dramatic. Nobody has said the word PTSD, because in their minds, PTSD is something that happens to soldiers — not to a housewife who had a small accident.

If this sounds familiar, please keep reading. At Bharosa, we see and treat PTSD every week in our LB Nagar OPD. Most of our patients are not soldiers. They are normal people — accident survivors, people who have been through medical emergencies, women who have faced assault, those who lost a loved one suddenly. PTSD is far more common than most Indians think, and it is very often missed because people do not know what it actually looks like. This blog is here to change that.

The War-Movie Image That Stops Indians From Seeking Help

Most people picture PTSD as something you see in war movies — a soldier with nightmares and flashbacks. This picture is not wrong, but it is very incomplete. Because of this limited image, many Indians who have PTSD never ask for help. They think: I was never in a war, so this cannot be PTSD. But PTSD is not only about war.

The U.S. National Institute of Mental Health says PTSD can develop after any event that involved real or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violence. This includes events you went through, events you saw happen to someone else, or even events that happened to a close loved one. The World Health Organization and the American Psychological Association also agree that civilian trauma produces the same condition as combat trauma, and deserves the same care.

Studies show that between 3 and 10 out of every 100 people will have PTSD at some point in their lives. The number is even higher among people who have been through accidents, assaults, or who grew up in difficult homes.

Common Indian Triggers That People Never Connect to PTSD

Road accidents are one of the biggest causes of PTSD in India, which is not surprising given how dangerous our roads are. Medical events like heart attacks, difficult deliveries, cancer diagnosis, or long ICU stays can cause PTSD — not just in the patient, but also in family members who watched it happen.

Sexual or physical assault, including inside marriages, is another major cause. So is the sudden loss of a loved one, especially in a violent or unexpected way. Fires, floods, building collapses, and natural disasters can all lead to PTSD. Even growing up in a home with constant shouting, fear, or violence — without any single big event — can cause a related condition called complex PTSD, which we will cover in the next blog.

None of these situations look like a war movie. But all of them can produce real, clinical PTSD that needs proper treatment.

What Triggers PTSD Symptoms in Daily Life

The things that set off PTSD symptoms are often small and specific. A smell from the hospital where a loved one died. The sound of a certain kind of horn. A song that was playing when the accident happened. The pattern on a tile. The texture of a hospital bedsheet. Your brain stores these small details along with the big memory. When you come across one of them, your whole nervous system reacts as if the bad thing is happening all over again.

You may not even realise why you are reacting. You just feel suddenly unsafe, anxious, or panicked for no reason you can explain. This is not weakness. It is how the brain stores very difficult experiences.

The Four Main Types of PTSD Symptoms

Doctors diagnose PTSD by looking for symptoms in four groups. You should have symptoms in each group, and they should last for more than one month.

First group — intrusive symptoms. This means unwanted memories, nightmares, flashbacks, and strong physical reactions when something reminds you of the event.

Second group — avoidance. You try hard to stay away from places, people, or conversations that bring up the memory. You may avoid driving, crowded places, or certain topics.

Third group — changes in mood and thinking. You may feel constant fear, guilt, or shame. You may stop enjoying things. You may feel disconnected from people. You may believe that the world is dangerous or that you are broken.

Fourth group — being on high alert. You startle easily. You get irritable. You cannot sleep well. You cannot concentrate. You feel like something bad is about to happen all the time.

Many Indians with PTSD visit general doctors with physical problems — headaches, stomach pain, chest pain, tiredness, sleep problems — instead of mental health doctors. The physical problems are real, but the cause is often PTSD that is not being treated.

Why PTSD Stays Hidden in Indian Families

In Indian culture, we are told to be strong and not complain. Emotional problems are often seen as weakness. Family members who notice symptoms may tell the person to pray more, stop thinking about the past, or just be strong.

So the person stops talking about it. They hide the nightmares, cover up the flinching, and carry the whole thing alone. The condition gets worse because it is not being treated, and the silence makes things even harder. Many of our patients come to Bharosa after carrying untreated PTSD for years — sometimes decades — because no one had ever asked them if they had been through a difficult event.

How Bharosa Diagnoses and Treats PTSD in Hyderabad

At Bharosa, our consultant MD Psychiatrists and clinical psychologists check for PTSD using proper clinical interviews and tested screening tools. We ask about difficult events directly, gently, and without judgement. We explain the diagnosis clearly so you understand what is happening inside your own body and mind.

Treatment follows international best practice. This includes trauma-focused Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT), Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing (EMDR) where suitable, and medication where needed. Our trauma-informed care works with your nervous system, not just your thoughts, so the old event stops feeling like it is happening right now.

Recovery is real, and it often happens faster than patients expect once proper treatment begins. Many of our patients tell us about a specific moment — weeks into therapy — when they realised the old trigger no longer gave them the old reaction. The junction they used to avoid became just a junction. The hospital smell became just a smell. The nightmares reduced. The body finally learned that the bad event was over. This is what good PTSD care can do for you.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Do I need to have been in a war to have PTSD?

A: No. Any serious trauma — accident, assault, medical emergency, sudden loss — can cause PTSD.

Q: Can PTSD start years after the event?

A: Yes. Delayed PTSD is well-known and fully treatable.

Q: Can PTSD be cured?

A: Many patients recover fully with the right evidence-based treatment.

Q: Will I have to relive the trauma in therapy?

A: Modern treatment is slow and careful. You decide how much to share and at what pace.

Q: Does Bharosa treat PTSD in Hyderabad?

A: Yes. Evidence-based trauma care is available at our LB Nagar facility.

You do not need to have been in a war for your trauma to count. Bharosa offers confidential, evidence-based PTSD care in Hyderabad. Call +91 95050 58886.



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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.

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