There’s something deeply soothing about seeing your own awkward, anxious, or triumphantly tiny moments turned into art—and that’s exactly what Indian illustrator Yogricha Verma does best. Her comics are little slices of everyday chaos that make you laugh, sigh, and say, “Yup, that’s me.” Whether she’s poking fun at overthinking, social anxiety, or the eternal struggle between “I’m tired” and “I should be productive,” Yogricha turns the real stuff of life into hilarious, relatable sketches that hit right in the feels.
Her work feels like chatting with a brutally honest friend who knows exactly how messy adulthood can get—but still finds humor in it. Through clean lines, expressive faces, and a dash of sarcasm, her comics mirror the highs and lows of modern womanhood, from self-doubt to self-love. And what really makes her art stand out is her warmth. She doesn’t glamorize struggle or fake perfection; instead, she leans into the chaos and tells it like it is—with heart and humor.
In a world that moves too fast and expects too much, Yogricha’s comics remind us that it’s okay to slow down, mess up, and laugh about it. Here’s what makes her illustrations so painfully relatable and perfectly funny.
You can find Yogricha on the Web:
#1

#2

#3

#4

#5

Turning Everyday Struggles Into Art
Yogricha has a gift for transforming the tiniest frustrations into pure comedy gold. Missed alarms, messy rooms, awkward texts—she takes life’s mini-disasters and spins them into stories that make you smile instead of stress. Her comics celebrate imperfection, proving that the ordinary moments we try to hide are actually the ones that unite us all.
With humor as her secret weapon, she turns daily chaos into something beautifully human. It’s art that makes you giggle, but also helps you breathe a little easier, reminding you that nobody’s got it all together—and that’s totally fine.
#6

#7

#8

#9

#10

The Honest Humor of Modern Womanhood
Being a woman in today’s world can feel like juggling expectations, emotions, and caffeine all at once—and Yogricha captures that balancing act with razor-sharp honesty. Her comics dive into everything from self-image and anxiety to independence and emotional burnout, but she never lets it get too heavy.
Instead, she wraps these themes in humor and empathy, making every panel feel like a wink and a hug at the same time. Her art speaks to women everywhere who are tired of pretending, offering laughter as both comfort and rebellion.
#11

#12

#13

#14

#15

Anxiety, Overthinking, and Laughing Through It
If anxiety had a personality, Yogricha’s comics would have already drawn it a thousand times. She brings mental health into the open—not with lectures, but with laughs. Her exaggerated doodles of overthinking, self-doubt, and that weird 3 a.m. spiral are painfully relatable. But what makes them powerful is the compassion behind them.
You can tell she’s been there too. Through humor, she normalizes the mental noise most of us hide, helping readers find lightness in their own storms. It’s art therapy disguised as a meme-worthy laugh.
#16

#17

#18

#19

#20

The Art of Finding Joy in the Mundane
Whether it’s savoring chai in the morning, binge-watching shows, or battling Sunday scaries, Yogricha celebrates the beauty in boring. Her comics highlight the quiet, in-between moments that make life real—the ones we often skip over. She reminds us that happiness doesn’t need to be grand or Insta-perfect.
It’s hiding in small joys, lazy afternoons, and weird inside jokes with yourself. Her art teaches us to see humor and hope in the everyday grind, turning even the dullest day into something worth smiling about.
#21

#22

#23

#24

#25

Why Her Work Connects So Deeply
What makes Yogricha’s art hit home is how authentic it feels. There’s no pretense, no filters—just genuine human emotion told through funny lines and clever visuals. Her comics feel like diary entries we’re all secretly writing, only funnier and more forgiving.
That honesty builds community; people see themselves in her panels and realize they’re not alone. It’s the kind of relatability that heals through laughter. Yogricha doesn’t just draw comics—she draws connection, and in doing so, turns the internet into a kinder, funnier place.
#26

#27

#28

#29

#30

#31

#32

#33

#34

#35










