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Satisfied with life, couple from the IT field commits suicide

Satisfied with life, couple from the IT field commits suicide

The deaths of a young married couple — both employed in India's information technology sector — shocked friends, colleagues, and the broader public, raising uncomfortable questions about the hidden pressures beneath the polished surface of professional success.

The couple, by all outward appearances, had achieved what their generation was supposed to want: stable jobs in the IT industry, a comfortable apartment, a life that seemed orderly and prosperous. Friends described them as close, private, and seemingly content. No one had detected anything alarming.

In the note they left, the couple wrote that they were satisfied with their life and had no complaints — that they had experienced love, companionship, and professional success, and that they were choosing to leave together at a moment of their own choosing, rather than face the uncertainties of decline.

The case defied easy categorization. This was not a story of desperation, financial ruin, or illness in any conventional sense. It was something harder to process: a deliberate philosophical decision, apparently made together, to exit life on their own terms.

Mental health professionals were quick to note that such reasoning, however coherent-sounding on paper, can reflect thought patterns that are influenced by depression, anxiety disorders, or other conditions that alter how people evaluate the future. The absence of visible distress is not the same as the absence of distress.

The case opened a wider conversation in India about the mental health of young IT professionals — a population working long hours under intense pressure, often away from extended family support networks, in a culture that still carries significant stigma around psychological help-seeking.

That conversation is ongoing, and overdue.

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