Anxiety rarely arrives with spectacle. It does not always announce itself in panic or collapse. More often, it settles quietly into the ordinary into conversations over tea, the silence of a commute, the pause before replying to a message. It is a feeling of dread, fear, and uncertainty that lives in the near future: close enough to be felt, distant enough to remain unresolved. In that space, the mind begins to work overtime predicting, rehearsing, bracing and mistaking constant alertness for control.
In India, this quiet persistence is far more common than it appears. According to the National Mental Health Survey, nearly 3.6 percent of the population lives with anxiety disorders. More recent estimates from the World Health Organization suggest that anxiety disorders are among the most prevalent mental health conditions worldwide, with a significant and growing burden in countries like India. Among young people, the numbers are even more telling. A 2022 UNICEF report indicated that one in seven adolescents in India experiences poor mental health, with anxiety forming a large part of that invisible crisis.
And yet, anxiety remains largely unseen.
Part of this invisibility comes from how we expect distress to look. We are conditioned to recognize breakdowns, not endurance. We expect visible signs like withdrawal, tears, disruption. But anxiety often does the opposite. It integrates itself into routine. It coexists with productivity, with social interaction, with the appearance of normalcy. A person may show up to work, meet deadlines, laugh with friends and still carry a constant undercurrent of unease.
This is especially true in urban India, where rising academic pressure, precarious employment, social comparison amplified by digital life, and shifting family structures have created new psychological terrains. Mental health professionals have noted a steady increase in patients presenting with chronic anxiety, often masked as fatigue, irritability, or overwork. Despite this, stigma and lack of awareness mean that many never seek help. The treatment gap, as highlighted by the National Mental Health Survey, remains as high as 70–80 percent for common mental disorders, including anxiety.
What makes anxiety particularly difficult to grasp is its ability to blend in. It does not always interrupt life; it accompanies it. It exists in the “in-between” spaces i.e the moments where nothing seems to be happening. A walk that feels restless. A quiet evening filled with racing thoughts. A conversation where attention drifts inward, toward imagined futures.
This is where the language of cinema becomes crucial.
Rather than focusing on dramatic breakdowns, this film turns its gaze to stillness; to pauses, silences, and everyday movements. It captures the subtle ways anxiety occupies a person: not as an event, but as a condition of being. The camera lingers where the eye usually moves on, revealing the tension beneath routine, the unease beneath calm.
In doing so, it challenges a fundamental assumption: that what matters must be visible.
Because anxiety does not always stand out. It does not demand attention in obvious ways. It is repetitive, persistent, and often quiet. It is carried in the body, in thought patterns, in the spaces between actions. It is, for many, not an interruption of life but a continuous presence within it.
And perhaps that is why it is so often missed.
This film is not about what anxiety looks like at its loudest. It is about what it looks like when it stays.