Gursharan has been healing people from depression
A caring daughter, a loving wife, a successful entrepreneur – no, they are not three but all three rolled into one. She is a woman with a heart of gold.
She was only 10 years old when she developed a passion for writing. “I loved to write articles or poetries,” recalls businesswoman Gursharan Kaur who hails from Faridabad, Haryana. She holds an MBA in International Marketing and a Diploma in Poetry Writing..
“Writing has been a conduit to vent my feelings. Like everyone I have had my share of struggles. That’s when I realized that the pen is mightier than the sword. I was a failure. All my start-ups failed.” Gursharan has faced some personal trauma in her life which cannot disclose on this platform which led her to the stage where her Mental Health effected brutally. “My mind started to push me over the edge but before it could throw me off it, I learnt to see the silver lining in every cloud looming over. Slowly, my failures became my teachers and hurt from people became my sword”.
They made me strong. They healed me. That’s when I decided to help the millions of people who are struggling with their Mental Health or Depression phase. I want to reach out to people and let them know that they are not alone. We will get out of this mental health situation, together.”
Since last 5 years, Gursharan has been healing people from depression. She started taking personal coaching sessions (one on one) for people who are suffering from Mental Health problems and to this date she does not charge anything. “I do this out of love and compassion for people’s suffering as I have gone through it myself. I don’t want people to suffer neither do I want money out of this. God has blessed me with enough wealth. The satisfaction I get upon knowing how well a person is doing in life after being cured from mental problems is priceless,” says Gursharan.
She also gives motivational seminars on ‘dealing with depression’ in colleges across Delhi and NCR. Gursharan shares that her goal is to help as many people as she can to overcome their mental problems. “It’s my way of “sewa” or offering selfless service to people. Just like my parents and brothers taught me.”