Living with anxiety in a third-world country often feels like fighting a silent war in a place where no one believes the battlefield is real, its like your shadow boxing to people. Here, anxiety isn’t seen as a condition, or even a valid experience it’s dismissed as weakness, or if you have fortunate its simply “thinking too much.” In societies where survival is the primary focus, anything that isn’t visibly bleeding or doesn’t associate with physical pain is treated as a luxury problem, as though mental suffering cannot coexist with real hardship and even make it worse. Because of that, thousands of people walk around with tight chests, racing thoughts, and heavy heartbeats, yet they learn to hide it just to avoid being told they’re dramatic or ungrateful because they don’t fit a particular type of struggle. The most painful part isn’t even the anxiety itself it’s the loneliness that comes with it. When your environment doesn’t recognise what you’re going through, you begin to feel isolated and you start to question yourself thinking “Maybe everyone else is right. Maybe I’m just weak.” Over time, shame grows where understanding should be. People stop reaching out for help because they know the help won’t come. They shrink into themselves, carrying burdens that shouldn’t be carried alone and depression sets in. Socially, the impact is devastating. Anxiety makes relationships harder to maintain and turns crowded environments into suffocating spaces. You find yourself avoiding gatherings, skipping opportunities that could’ve made you excel, or withdrawing from community life not because you don’t care, but because your mind is constantly telling you you’re, unprepared, or unwelcome. And in societies that depend heavily on social interaction and communal connection, this isolation becomes even more frustration, because at the end of the day if there is one thing im sure of its that humans were never meant to be solitary beings. But at the end of the day acknowledging the struggle is the first step toward changing the narrative. People need to understand that anxiety is real, and deeply impactful not a sign of weakness or a spiritual flaw. Only then can those who suffer stop living in silence and start living in understanding.