She is the siren of the small screen and a undisputed queen of Kenyan TikTok, but behind the million-view videos and the high-fashion aesthetics, Trisha Khalid was a woman pushed to the brink.
In a heartbreakingly honest interview, the Becky actress revealed for the first time that a severe mental health crisis—triggered by relentless online “vultures”—nearly forced her to quit the limelight for good.
Speaking to Shiksha Arora, Trisha confessed that the negativity had become so “traumatising” that she was ready to vanish from the digital world entirely.
However, her career was saved by a secret, high-stakes mentorship with the most unlikely of allies: socialite Vera Sidika.
Trisha revealed that at her lowest ebb, she turned to the controversial veteran of the spotlight, Vera Sidika.

Known for surviving over a decade of public scrutiny, Vera didn’t offer the actress a shoulder to cry on—instead, she gave her a brutal choice.
“I used to be very close to Vera Sidika, and she told me that I had two options: face my challenges or pack up and go home,” Trisha recalled.
“By ‘pack up and go home,’ she meant closing my accounts and forgetting that I even existed online.”
The “tough love” intervention worked. Rather than retreating into the shadows, Trisha was forced to confront the reality of what she would be losing: a booming five-year empire she had built from scratch.

The actress admitted that Vera’s bluntness sparked a moment of clarity.
She realized that by deleting her accounts, she wasn’t just silencing the trolls—she was sabotaging her own financial freedom.
“I sat down and asked myself why I would do that when my content was generating income. I realized that despite the criticism, my content was creating opportunities,” she shared.
Since that turning point, Trisha has transformed her approach to fame. No longer the “sensitive” target of cyberbullies, she has adopted a surgical method for protecting her peace: she reads the vitriol, feels nothing, and hits the “block” button.

Trisha’s journey from her TikTok debut in 2019 to becoming a national superstar has been defined by grit.
She reminded aspiring creators that the “overnight success” they see on their feeds is often a mask for years of emotional struggle.
“A lot of my videos get over a million views, and much of my content goes viral. For those who wonder why they are not growing, they will get there. It has been five years of hard work,” she said.
