Rhea Chakraborty Opens Up About Life After Sushant Singh Rajput’s Death: No Film Projects
The death of Sushant Singh Rajput affected many people apart from his fans and family, it was a large storm that changed Bollywood and life of some people forever.

The death of Sushant Singh Rajput affected many people apart from his fans and family, it was a large storm that changed Bollywood and life of some people forever.
Rhea was one of them. Sushant's father's FIR mentioned that Sushant's sister learned from him that Rhea was threatening to make his medical receipts public, declare him mad, and frame him for his secretary's suicide. Besides, she was also 'booked for unlawfully confining Sushant and criminal breach of trust.
Rhea was one of them, Sushant's father's FIR mentioned that Sushant's sister learned from him that Rhea was threatening to make his medical receipts public, declare him mad, and frame him for his secretary's suicide. Besides, she was also 'booked for unlawfully confining Sushant and criminal breach of trust.
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“I feel there is still a sense of fear on that front, but I’m hoping it normalizes soon. A lot of it has calmed down, and honestly, the power of trolls is gone,” she said during the interview with Mid-day. “Life has come a long way. This year has been normal for me after three years. It’s very important for me to feel normal. I love the fact that I can be out and about, doing regular things, she added.
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“In the first few months, I was thrown into a storm, and it was a spectacle after that. But honestly, grief is something that lingers. It doesn’t go away. Your grief stays and your life grows around it. Healing is about facing our own emotions and the pain that comes with it. In therapy, I realised how to stop letting it take over my life.” she recalled
She concluded with “Are we aware enough? No. Tier-2 and 3 cities, and villages have a long way to go as far as [awareness around] mental health is concerned. Mental health is the real pandemic that we realised during the pandemic. It was sitting right there amidst all of us and we just brushed it under the carpet. I hate it when people say, ‘Pagal ho kya? Don’t waste money on doctors.’ Our parents and their parents didn’t have the awareness; they called it a rough patch. But one needs support and kindness through it.”
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