|
During my time in India, I noticed how many Indian and South Asian families are rich in connection, responsibility, and loyalty.
At the same time, emotional expression is often limited or discouraged. Conflict is avoided, pain is minimized, and feelings are managed quietly. What appears to be harmony on the surface often hides too much silence. Silence in Indian families isn’t accidental. It’s learned early and passed down through generations. How Emotional Silence Starts Kids quickly figure out what’s safe to show. Tears get met with parents who say things like, “Be strong.” I've watched parents tell their angry child that the kid is being disrespectful. Vulnerability and sharing of feelings is seen as drama, and not the good Bollywood kind. Even joy, pride, or affection can be muted so no one seems arrogant, needy, or attention-seeking. Over time, many Indians internalize a simple rule: keep feelings to yourself unless they protect the family’s stability or reputation. Parents usually don’t teach this on purpose. They’re passing down the survival strategies they learned themselves. Historical and Cultural Roots Emotional suppression in South Asian communities comes from real pressures: colonization, displacement, caste violence, economic instability, migration, and survival-focused living. In those conditions, holding feelings in often made sense. Showing distress didn’t always bring support. Staying in control felt safer. Collective values reinforced it. Protecting elders from discomfort, avoiding public exposure of family issues, and maintaining social reputation—these mattered more than individual emotional needs. Endurance was valued over self-expression. The Cost in Adult Relationships Unfortunately, feelings don’t just disappear when suppressed. They come out sideways. In couples, this often looks like:
Many couples blame their “communication skills,” but the real issue is emotional permission. If neither partner learned to safely feel and express emotions, both stay guarded. Redefining Strength Strength is usually seen as control, endurance, and keeping going no matter what. Relational strength is different. It’s emotional literacy: naming feelings, tolerating discomfort, speaking honestly without collapsing or attacking. I wouldn't suggest you to be emotionally exposed with everyone. You do need to recognize what’s happening inside you and communicate it clearly when it matters to your partner. Saying “I feel hurt,” “I feel afraid,” or “I need support” isn’t a personality trait. It’s a skill most people were never taught. Why Culture-Aware Support Matters Couples work works better when the cultural context is understood. As a Western-trained couples therapist, I will never completely understand your experience of being in an Indian family and marriage. There will be things I miss. And, there are other things I can see more clearly from outside the system. For example, how emotional suppression in Indian and South Asian families isn’t just an individual issue. It’s tied to intergenerational expectations, migration stress, hierarchy, and collective identity. Ignoring that makes people feel misunderstood and guarded. Working with someone who understands these dynamics allows couples to explore honesty without feeling that their values, traditions, or loyalty to family are under attack. Moving From Silence to Connection Change doesn’t start with dramatic disclosure. It starts with small steps:
Many people were taught how to succeed, provide, and endure. Few were taught how to feel together. Emotional openness isn’t a rejection of cultural strength. It’s an expansion of it. Take Action Breaking this cycle of emotional suppression is possible. Bring your partner to therapy—for your own well-being, for the health of your relationship, and for your children. Learning to feel and express together creates a home where honesty, connection, and trust can thrive.
0 Comments
Your comment will be posted after it is approved.
Leave a Reply. |
Dr. Pavini MorayRelational LIfe Therapy (RLT) and Somatic Coach Archives
April 2026
Categories |