Somy Ali Opnies, “Poverty, Violence, Illness, Injustice are Real Stressors”!
Actor and activist Somy Ali recently opened up about the growing stress of modern life, sharing thoughtful insights on why people feel overwhelmed despite comfort and stability.
“Stress today is less about what we have and more about how relentlessly we judge ourselves against an imagined ideal,” Somy said. “Circumstances matter, of course. Poverty, violence, illness, injustice are real stressors. But for many people who are materially safe, stress comes from the constant internal pressure to be more, do more, achieve faster, and never pause.”
Reflecting on modern definitions of success, she added, “We are living in an age where worth is measured by productivity, visibility, and validation. When your mind is constantly told you’re behind even when you’re safe, you stay stressed. Not because life is unbearable, but because peace has been made to feel undeserved.”
Speaking about why people who appear to have everything still feel dissatisfied, Somy described the idea of having it all as unrealistic. “Having it all is a myth sold to us without an instruction manual,” she said. “Modern society tells people to have success, beauty, love, money, influence, and do it all perfectly. But it never teaches emotional regulation, self-acceptance, or how to sit with discomfort.”
She further explained, “Many people who ‘have it all’ are exhausted by maintaining the image of having it all. They are terrified of losing it, being exposed, or slowing down. We’ve confused achievement with fulfillment, and applause with peace.”
Somy also addressed constant comparison as a major cause of unhappiness today. “Comparison is one of the quietest yet most destructive stressors of our time,” she noted. “Social media didn’t invent comparison, but it industrialized it. We now compare our behind the scenes to everyone else’s highlight reels every day.”
“Comparison steals joy because it convinces you that someone else’s life invalidates yours,” she continued. “There will always be someone richer, freer, younger, or more admired. Peace begins when you stop auditioning for approval and start living in alignment with your own values.”
Talking about the habit of always wanting the opposite of what one has, Somy shared, “That cycle exists because we confuse change with escape. When you’re home, you want to travel. When you travel, you crave stability. When you’re busy, you want rest, and when you rest, you feel guilty for not doing enough.”
She added, “The solution isn’t choosing one over the other. It’s learning to be present where you are. Ask yourself: what is this moment trying to teach me instead of what is it trying to take from me? Contentment isn’t about staying still forever. It’s about not abandoning yourself while moving forward.”
On the role of gratitude, Somy was clear that it must be genuine. “Gratitude is practical, but only when it’s honest,” she said. “Forced gratitude can feel dismissive, especially to those in pain. I don’t believe in toxic positivity. But I do believe gratitude, when grounded in reality, can recalibrate the nervous system.”
“Gratitude doesn’t erase stress, it creates emotional breathing room,” she added. “For survivors, gratitude is not about pretending everything is fine, it’s about acknowledging resilience.”
Sharing simple daily practices, Somy suggested, “Name three things that didn’t go wrong today. Pause before sleep and thank your body for one thing it carried you through. Replace ‘I have to’ with ‘I get to’ once a day. Write one sentence about something ordinary you often overlook. Breathe intentionally for sixty seconds, acknowledging that you are alive and safe in that moment.”
Concluding her thoughts, she said, “Gratitude isn’t about denying struggle. It’s about remembering you more than your stress. In a world constantly telling us we are lacking, choosing presence and gratitude is a quiet act of resistance. Peace doesn’t come from having more. It comes from making peace with where you are, while still honoring where you want to go.”
By Keerti Kadam

