Somy Ali – A Voice That Refuses to Look Away
On World Environment Day, actress, activist, and founder of No More Tears, Somy Ali delivers a powerful message to TheGlitz that is both deeply personal and globally urgent. For her, the environmental crisis is not just about data, policy, or distant warnings… it is about a collapsing relationship between humanity and the natural world.
She speaks with clarity and conviction about what she believes is the most dangerous problem of all: not just pollution or climate change, but human indifference.
“The biggest problems are the ones we can no longer ignore… climate change, plastic pollution, deforestation, and the rapid loss of biodiversity,” she says. “But the deepest crisis is the disconnect between humanity and nature.”
In her view, every flood, every heatwave, and every disappearing species is not an isolated event but part of a larger pattern of neglect… one that ultimately comes back to harm the most vulnerable communities first and hardest.

Plastic: The Silent Poison of Modern Life
Among all environmental threats, Somy Ali identifies plastic pollution as one of the most devastating. Her concern goes beyond visible waste… it extends into the invisible contamination of ecosystems and human life itself.
“Plastic doesn’t just sit in landfills,” she explains. “It breaks down into microplastics that enter our soil, rivers, oceans, and even our bodies.”
She paints a haunting picture of marine life mistaking plastic for food, birds dying with stomachs full of waste, and ecosystems slowly suffocating under the weight of convenience-driven consumption.
“It gives us convenience for five minutes, but destroys life for hundreds of years,” she says. “We are literally poisoning the Earth that sustains us.”
Living Consciously in a Disconnected World
For Somy Ali, environmental responsibility is not theoretical… it is practiced in the smallest details of everyday life. She believes change begins at home, through consistent and conscious habits.
She switches off lights and air conditioners when not in use, grows plants on her balcony to stay connected to nature, and refuses single-use plastic by carrying reusable jute bags from her foundation.
Even water conservation, she says, is a daily discipline rather than an occasional effort.
But her philosophy extends beyond personal habits into a deeper ethical belief—that life itself should be about giving back to the Earth, not just taking from it.
“I believe in cremation and organ donation,” she shares. “Even after I am gone, I want my body to give back.”
A Warning About 2050
When she looks ahead, Somy Ali does not hesitate to speak about the consequences of inaction. Her vision of the future is stark and unsettling.
“If we continue like this, 2050 will be a very different and painful world,” she warns. “Coastal cities will be underwater. Extreme heat waves will become normal. Clean drinking water will become a luxury.”
She fears a world where children grow up knowing tigers, coral reefs, and rivers only as stories from the past.
“The inequality gap will widen,” she adds. “The rich may survive, but the poor and vulnerable will suffer the most.”
For her, this is not speculation… it is a trajectory already visible in today’s climate patterns.
A Call for Consistent Action, Not Perfection
Despite the urgency in her words, Somy Ali’s message is not one of despair but of responsibility. She believes transformation does not require perfection… only persistence.
“Stop treating the Earth like it owes us everything while we give it nothing in return,” she says. “Every small choice matters.”
She urges people to see environmental care not as a one-day observance but as a lifelong commitment—one built on consistency rather than grand gestures.
No More Tears, her humanitarian foundation, works to protect vulnerable lives. But for Somy, protecting people and protecting the planet are not separate missions… they are deeply interconnected struggles.
“If we can protect one life, one child, one woman,” she says, “we can also protect the planet that gives all of us life.”
A Message for TheGlitz Readers

In her closing message, Somy Ali extends a heartfelt appeal to readers of TheGlitz Media, reminding them that the environment is not distant… it is intimate, personal, and essential.
“The air we breathe, the water we drink, the forests that sustain life, all are deeply interconnected,” she says. “Protecting them is not just a responsibility of governments. It belongs to each one of us.”
She acknowledges that the challenges… climate change, deforestation, pollution, and resource depletion… can feel overwhelming. But she firmly believes that real change begins with simple actions: reducing waste, saving water, avoiding plastic, and living with awareness.
“Let us not think of environmental protection as a one-day observance,” she concludes. “Let us make it a way of life.”
For Somy Ali, World Environment Day is not a celebration… it is a reminder. A reminder that the Earth is not separate from us. It is us.




