Help, but understand the situation before you must – as it is not about you helping but about the one that needs it
We often believe that helping is always a good thing.
But how and when we help matters just as much as the act itself.
Because in the end, it’s not about us feeling helpful.
It’s about what the other person actually needs.
I’ve always loved helping people.
For years, I stepped in, gave advice, tried to solve problems—sometimes even when nobody asked.
Helping made me feel good. I felt useful, energized, almost high on the happiness of others.
But over time, I realised something important:
Help isn’t really help unless it’s received in the right way.
One incident from my teenage years still stays with me.
The Morning That Changed How I See “Helping”
I was around 17, back home in Kalina, Mumbai.
Like every other day, I was on my way to morning mass at Our Lady of Egypt Church.
I left my building, walked down from the 4th floor, stepped out of the gate and started my usual 15-minute walk. It was 7:00 am, the city was just waking up, and the streets were quiet.
Halfway there, I suddenly heard a woman screaming.
“Mala maroo nakko!”
“Don’t hit me!”
I turned quickly toward the sound.
A man, maybe in his late 40s or early 50s, with his shirt half open and clearly drunk, was hitting a woman in a saree who was tugging at his arm. From the way she spoke to him, I assumed she was his wife.
He kept raising his hand at her.
She kept pulling him, trying to drag him along.
My first instinct was: I should do something.
I looked around, expecting others to rush in too.
But no one moved. People saw what was happening, but they just kept walking.
Why wasn’t anyone helping?
I started walking closer, ready to step in. Just then, an older man who was walking right in front of the couple gently tried to hold the drunk man’s hand to stop him.
And that’s when it happened.
The woman snapped,
“Don’t touch him. I know how to handle my man.”
That one line stopped me in my tracks.
The Lesson Behind That One Line
Later, when I shared this with an elder, he helped me see the situation from the woman’s perspective:
- The man was likely the sole breadwinner of the family.
- He had been out drinking all night and was not in his senses.
- She had probably searched for him and finally managed to find him.
- She was trying to take him home, protect him in her own way, and protect her family’s dignity.
In her eyes, we were strangers interfering in something we didn’t fully understand.
What looked like “help” to us might have felt like “judgment” or “insult” to her.
That morning taught me one of my biggest life lessons:
Not everyone wants to be helped, even if it looks like they need it.
Help, But First Understand
That small episode carried a big message:
- There is always more to a situation than what we can see from the outside.
- Our intention to help is not enough by itself.
- Unless the person asks for help—or gives a clear signal that they want it—we might be crossing a line.
So now, before I step in, I pause and ask myself:
- Do they actually want my help?
- Do I understand what’s really going on?
- Am I helping them… or just trying to feel better about myself?
Help is powerful.
But the right help, at the right time, in the right way—that’s what truly matters.