Trisha: Audiences Connect Far More With Authenticity Than Perfection [Fashion, 84.4k Followers, India]

 Trisha Interview


Trisha is a lifestyle and content creator known for turning everyday moments into emotionally relatable storytelling. Blending fashion, humor, spontaneity, and unfiltered authenticity, she has built a digital space where audiences connect not just with content, but with the person behind it.


Q. How did your journey into content creation actually begin, and at what point did you realize people were genuinely connecting with your personality online?

Honestly, my journey into content creation started very casually. I would post random moments from my life - little jokes, fashion content, travel clips, and things that simply felt authentic to me without overthinking them too much. There was never some huge strategy behind it initially.

Over time, I slowly began noticing that people connected far more with the unfiltered and spontaneous side of my content than with the overly polished parts. That’s when I realised audiences weren’t just consuming my content - they were connecting with my personality itself.

I think the moment it truly felt real was when complete strangers started replying to my stories and reels saying things like, “This is literally me,” or “You feel like a friend.” That kind of emotional relatability made me understand the impact authenticity can genuinely have online.

Q. Your content feels very spontaneous and “main character but chaotic” -  how much of that is the real Trisha off-camera too?

Honestly, it’s very real.

I’m genuinely quite chaotic in real life too. I’m emotional, impulsive, dramatic, overly expressive, and sometimes unintentionally funny without even trying. I also tend to overreact to the smallest things, so the energy people see online is actually very close to who I am offline as well. Of course, there are certain personal aspects of my life that I choose to keep private, but overall, the personality audiences see on-screen is not manufactured. It’s essentially just me with a camera switched on.

I think that’s also why people connect with my content so naturally - because it never feels heavily filtered or performative.

Q. You’ve lived between Andaman and Bangalore - do you think these places shaped your personality or creative vibe in different ways?

Absolutely. Both places shaped me in completely different but equally important ways.

Growing up in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands gave me a softer and calmer side emotionally. Being surrounded by nature, beaches, rain, sunsets, long drives, and slower island life naturally makes you appreciate simplicity and emotional connection more deeply.

On the other hand, living in Bangalore exposed me to a much faster and more dynamic environment - fashion, events, opportunities, creative culture, and all kinds of people and experiences. I think my content today reflects a blend of both worlds. Emotionally, I’m very soft and sentimental, but mentally, I’m also chaotic, energetic, and constantly stimulated by fast-paced city life. That contrast honestly defines a huge part of my personality and creative identity now.

Q. Social media often pressures creators to always look sorted and aesthetic. How do you personally deal with bad days, burnout, or moments where you don’t feel like showing up online?

In the beginning, I definitely pressured myself a lot because social media can make you feel like you constantly need to stay visible, productive, and aesthetically “put together.” But over time, I’ve realized that audiences connect far more with authenticity than perfection.

Now, whenever I’m having bad days or experiencing burnout, I allow myself to step away for a while instead of forcing myself to perform online. Sometimes I’ll disappear briefly, spend time alone, watch random videos, listen to music, or simply talk to close friends. I’ve learned that forcing creativity while mentally exhausted usually only makes things worse. Taking a step back helps me recharge emotionally and eventually return to content creation in a much healthier and more natural way.

Q. Your bio literally says “stfu ho jao” - what’s one thing online or in real life that instantly annoys you?

People who try too hard to appear “effortlessly cool.”

Also, unnecessary negativity and people who constantly judge others for enjoying simple things. The internet already feels exhausting enough at times, so I genuinely don’t understand why people feel the need to act superior over harmless interests, emotions, or personalities. I think life becomes much lighter and more enjoyable once you stop overanalyzing how people choose to express themselves. Let people be cringe, emotional, dramatic, funny, chaotic - whatever makes them genuinely happy.

Q. What does a typical day in your life look like when you’re working on content versus when you’re completely offline and just relaxing?

When I’m working, my days are honestly complete chaos in the best possible way.

It’s usually a mix of shooting content, editing reels, replying to emails, planning collaborations, attending events, changing outfits repeatedly, and sometimes even recording voiceovers at 2 AM. There’s always something happening. But when I’m offline, I become the complete opposite. I’m extremely low-maintenance in my personal space. I genuinely enjoy simple and peaceful moments - wearing comfortable clothes, eating good food, watching random videos, listening to music, or simply spending quiet time with people I feel safe and comfortable around.

I think I value calmness so much because online life can become overwhelmingly loud very quickly.

Q. What’s next for you from here - any future plans, dream collaborations, YouTube ideas, or something exciting you’d love to explore?

I definitely want to explore longer-form content in the future because right now people mostly see small fragments of my personality through short-form reels. I’d love to build more around fashion, lifestyle, travel, and storytelling while still maintaining the humor, spontaneity, and chaos people already associate with me.

More than anything, I simply want to continue growing creatively while staying authentic to myself throughout the process. I hope to collaborate with brands I genuinely resonate with, travel more, explore bigger creative opportunities, and create content that still feels emotionally honest no matter how much my platform evolves in the future.



Bio:


Blending chaos, humor, fashion, and emotionally relatable storytelling, has carved a distinct identity for herself in the digital space. Known for her “main character energy” and unapologetically real personality, her content effortlessly balances aesthetic visuals with raw, relatable moments that deeply resonate with Gen Z audiences. From lifestyle and travel to spontaneous humor and honest conversations, Trisha’s online presence feels less like curated content and more like a friend you instantly connect with.


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Interviewed by: Gunjan Joshi


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